Quote:
Why, We elect our government! So when do I get to elect a new CEO of Monsanto???
I contend businesses do have the power to level cities... The only factor driving buisness is profit. There are no morals in profit. Second only to Religion, wars are fought over resources.. Why are resources important? Because businesses want them to make a profit...
Additionally we frequently elect officials that are wealthy influential businessmen, those people appoint other folks with conflicts of interest to high positions... IMO one party does that more than the other..
But both are guilty of pandering to their own interests..
Wow I thought the reason we have government was taught in grade school... Were you not taught anything positive about government as a home schooler?
ON
I'm sorry, but I don't recall Standard Oil ever burning cities to make way for oil fields.
I do not include corporatists in my definition of "business." Besides, wars are indeed fought for resources, but there are many other factors. Heck, World War One was fought over nothing in particular. Resource wars are often fought by governments to give themselves an advantage rather than businesses. Corporations didn't exactly have any power in the Middle Ages and the Enlightenment. Some wars are fought for land; some for wealth; some for strategic cities; some are fought for independence and freedom; and, as mentioned above, some for no discernable reason.
As for your example of businessmen getting elected to government, government is the problem there, too! If we followed the Constitution, this would not be a problem. I have no issue with government at all, provided that it does not overstep its boundaries and infringe on rights. Businesses don't start wars; greedy governments do.
As for electing the CEO of Monsanto... No, you can't do that, but as of right now Monsanto can't march thugs into your home and arrest you for no good reason, either. Anyhow, people DO get to elect which businesses survive and which don't. Informed people vote with their feet; they don't like a company for some reason, they don't buy its product. If people are informed, they can sink any company, no matter how large. To paraphrase the great Ludwig van Mises, the purchasers make the rich poor and the poor rich.
You have the situation exactly backwards - government is the problem. Businesses on their own cannot force one to do anything. Were the government to remain within its limits, businessmen in it would be irrelevant, except that they would likely lend superior skills in leadership or management.
By the way, I am self-taught. I have said it many times; unlike in the average school, I am not spoon-fed my information. I do my own research, and come to my own conclusions. From what I've seen, government was not that much of a problem until 1861, the year the Constitution died, and even more in 1865, the year America died. Other years and events come to mind, when the government made itself more of a problem - when the 17th Amendment was drafted, when the Fed was founded, the New Deal, various 20th-century wars... Oh, and the 14th and 16th Amendments, too.
America is dead. Welcome to Amerika.