Audley Strange wrote:I think generally we can see across the political spectrum that people do recognise there is a problem, I think many on both sides consistently point to the source too before they get stuck in ideology and start blaming the part of the population they don't like. Their common complaint that Trans-National corporations have far too much influence in the legal and political shape of the globe as well as wielding almost all the economic power. The flaw in our system is that we have made them abide by rules that make them inimical to both taxation and free trade.
However, the middle and lower classes see a different problem, generally speaking, from the upper class. And the left identifies a different problem from the right, the libertarians yet another, etc. There's still a great deal of latent Social Darwinist - and Calvinist - thinking out there, particularly among the haves. Show them picture of poor, even starving people and their response (whether spoken or inward) is likely to be something along the lines of, "Of course!"
To me that is because after a certain size a corporation must work on a plutocratic model to sustain itself. That's my "why".
So the problem is how do we keep them in check, now we've let them loose? Especially since it seems dismantling them could cause chaos.
Anyway was just wondering if you had any ideas. As I say, a complex problem.
I wouldn't propose anything so drastic as dismantling them. Restructuring the tax burden would be a good start. Some of those billionaires have recognized and vocally supported the idea that they should pay a proportionately higher percentage of taxes. I also don't see any ideological problem with putting a cap on CEO salaries, as long as it's a generous one. These people are extraordinarily greedy and extraordinarily powerful, so a compromise would just be an acceptance of the way things are, rather than as we would have them be.
Also, is not taking jobs from rich westerners and giving them to poor 2nd and third world economies a more effective redistribution of wealth than any such schemes from governments of a communist or socialist bent?
Again, just wondering.
I'd be quite happy to see that happen, assuming that those jobs weren't in substandard sweatshops that employed school-age children. I don't have any bias towards or against capitalist, communist or socialist ideologies. I'm far too pragmatic for that. Whatever solves the problem, regardless of label, is fine by me.
"A philosopher is a blind man in a dark room looking for a black cat that isn't there. A theologian is the man who finds it." ~ H. L. Mencken
"We ain't a sharp species. We kill each other over arguments about what happens when you die, then fail to see the fucking irony in that."
"It is useless for the sheep to pass resolutions in favor of vegetarianism while the wolf remains of a different opinion."