REAL WORLD EVENT DISCUSSIONS

Government and Corporations

POSTED BY: ANTHONYT
UPDATED: Friday, January 7, 2011 18:22
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Sunday, January 2, 2011 5:14 PM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


Hello,

I am starting this topic to expand on something touched on briefly in a Ron Paul thread.

I want to explore what powers corporations would have in the absence of government recognition and empowerment.

In other words- if government did not recognize corporations or work actively to protect their interests, what powers would corporations have?

--Anthony



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Sunday, January 2, 2011 6:17 PM

CANTTAKESKY


Quote:

Originally posted by AnthonyT:
In other words- if government did not recognize corporations or work actively to protect their interests, what powers would corporations have?

Money.

Just 2 examples.

Say you own a Mom-and-Pop store selling lollipops. Say GiantMart wants to also sell lollipops. GiantMart gets better prices because it can afford to buy in bulk. It undersells you. You struggle to break even, maybe even go under. That's a lot of power.

Say you want to control a town. You buy most of the land and businesses. Everyone works for you. They either have to leave or do as you say. That's a lot of power.

Can't Take (my gorram) Sky
------
Everything I say is just my opinion, not fact.

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Sunday, January 2, 2011 7:01 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Let's say you're a business and you control the media. You can disseminate any story or outlook you want.

Let's say your workers are getting uppity. You can hire Xe to beat up or kill the ringleaders.

Let's say you want to know what's going on. You can snoop on anyone, any time, any where.

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Sunday, January 2, 2011 7:03 PM

DREAMTROVE


if there were no govt, corporations with their own security would assume the role.

if there were govt, govt would take over the corporations, and each giantmart would really be a govt agent, as is true in about 80% of businesses in china.

this is why i support corporate citizenship. We need separation of corporation and state for the same reason as church and state.

The problem of corporate abuse of power does not come from them using their constitutional rights as citizens, but from doing what no citizen would be allowed to do, such as pouring 100 million gallons of toluine into the ohio river. if i did that im pretty sure that someone would say i was a terrorist, etc.

but just as there needs to be a check on corporate power, there must be on govt as well. govt actions should be also limited to those of citizens. We could not get away with doing what TSA does, etc. so why should they?

the problem is that all of this can be worked out in theory, but how do you put it into practice?

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Sunday, January 2, 2011 7:05 PM

DREAMTROVE


sig

or ditto the govt. in fact, its much more commonfor the govt to have a monopoly. how many AP stories do you see which are critical of our foreign policy?

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Sunday, January 2, 2011 8:15 PM

CANTTAKESKY


Quote:

Originally posted by dreamtrove:
The problem of corporate abuse of power ... but from doing what no citizen would be allowed to do,

My sentiments exactly.

Neither govt nor corporation should be above the law for citizens. No double standards.

Isn't that what Frem always says? No double standards for kids than for adults? Using the governing as parenting model, citizens should have the same rights as the govt/corp and vice versa.

Can't Take (my gorram) Sky
------
Everything I say is just my opinion, not fact.

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Sunday, January 2, 2011 8:59 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Except that our government is limited by the Constitution, the separation of powers and the practical necessity of getting elected. Corporations? Not so much.

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Sunday, January 2, 2011 9:14 PM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
Let's say you're a business and you control the media. You can disseminate any story or outlook you want.

Let's say your workers are getting uppity. You can hire Xe to beat up or kill the ringleaders.

Let's say you want to know what's going on. You can snoop on anyone, any time, any where.



Hello,

I want to reiterate something:


"I want to explore what powers corporations would have in the absence of government recognition and empowerment."

I'm not a no-government guy.

Absence of government recognition and empowerment does not equal absence of government or freedom from laws against killing, stealing, or invasion of privacy.

I mean to explore what corporations would be able to do if they had no special recognition, protection, or unusual rights. Precisely - what if the corporation and the people in it were held to the same standards as any John, Dick, Jane, and Harry.

The utter absence of government would certainly allow corporations to get away with all kinds of hostile acts, though so could the citizenry at large. One might recall that the Xe of the 19th century, the Pinkertons, were sometimes outmatched by the common folk and needed the Government to bail them out. But that is an anarchist position, and not one I'm comfortable with at this time.

I am interested in exploring a world where corporations had no special status or protections beyond what you and I have. A world where my Lemonade stand, the Coca Cola company, and the boy who hires himself out to mow lawns all play by the same rules.

--Anthony

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Sunday, January 2, 2011 11:24 PM

FREMDFIRMA



Well, here's one take on the subject.
The Probability Broach
http://www.bigheadpress.com/tpbtgn

I do got more to say, but alas that I am pressed for time, since apparently MOST of the clients decided in the end they didn't want people who put money over ethics doing their security, so now I gotta make do with a third of the personnel we *should* have on this, fun fun fun...

-Frem
PS. Goddamn Lucy reminds me of me, and yes, the Gabbet-Fairfax Mars really existed.

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Monday, January 3, 2011 3:58 AM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


"Say you own a Mom-and-Pop store selling lollipops. Say GiantMart wants to also sell lollipops. GiantMart gets better prices because it can afford to buy in bulk. It undersells you. You struggle to break even, maybe even go under. That's a lot of power.

Say you want to control a town. You buy most of the land and businesses. Everyone works for you. They either have to leave or do as you say. That's a lot of power."

Hello,

This is the sort of power I can imagine corporations and other large businesses holding, even if they had no special recognition or powers granted by the government.

Money grants great power in society, and even I could, if wealthy enough, create these situations.

Now, in our imaginary world, a corporation with no special powers could accomplish this.

What about in our present real world? I believe just about any large business manages the former, while places like Disney world and factory/mining towns have probably managed the latter.

Are the corporations better suited to wielding this kind of power in the real world, or the imaginary world?

--Anthony




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Monday, January 3, 2011 4:06 AM

CANTTAKESKY


Quote:

Originally posted by AnthonyT:
Are the corporations better suited to wielding this kind of power in the real world, or the imaginary world?

Real world, of course.

Take SB510, the Food Modernization Act. It is supposed to keep us safe, give us safer food. But in reality, it makes it so that large amounts of MONEY is required to stay in business legally. Who is going to survive this? Businesses with MONEY.

MONEY is power.

Can't Take (my gorram) Sky
------
Everything I say is just my opinion, not fact.

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Monday, January 3, 2011 4:06 AM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


Hello Frem,

I enjoyed that comic, though I never saw a way to 'get there from here.'

I'd have also enjoyed seeing the potential flaws of the system more thoroughly probed. (i.e. What happens when your security company goes bad? How are national disasters handled? What happens when someone tries to corner the market and push people around by limiting their choices? What is society's response to terrorism?)

And of course, we'd need to see the 'bad guys' behave in as diabolically clever a manner as possible, in order for it to be a reasonable exploration. Too bad they didn't publish a series of those and dig deep into the concept.

There are also some cheats, like the ready availability of cheap, advanced technology. It's an assumed capability, an assumed boon of the system. But a historical piece showing how these technologies came to pass in detail and despite opposition forces would've been interesting.

As for the Mars... wasn't that weapon described as "decidedly unpleasant to operate" or some such?

Maybe if it didn't fling spent cartridges at the operator it'd have been better received? Then again, the military of the time was rather stuffy and not much in for innovation.

--Anthony



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Monday, January 3, 2011 5:33 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Absence of government recognition and empowerment does not equal absence of government or freedom from laws against killing, stealing, or invasion of privacy.
Really? How do you see that working? Laws that are not recognized or enforced do what, exactly?

In any case, I was responding to DT.
Quote:

I am interested in exploring a world where corporations had no special status or protections beyond what you and I have. A world where my Lemonade stand, the Coca Cola company, and the boy who hires himself out to mow lawns all play by the same rules.
Well, if you're going to imagine a world with rules, then you have to tell us what those rules are before we can respond to your question. Rules against what? Killing? Spying? Polluting? What are the limits as you imagine them? And back to the question of enforcement. Because if you can't enforce the laws, how do you expect them to be followed? Seems a feckless imagining. But, onward...

If we are simply looking at the power of money:

Let's say you don't like what an employee said about you on the inet, so you fire them.

Let's say you own most of the media in an area, then you completely control the news.

Let's say you own an health insurance company and dominate a market, so you cherry-pick the healthiest, refuse to pay on claims, and consign a whole bunch of people to an early death or crushing debt.

Let's say someone owes you money, so you indenture their labor for the foreseeable future.

Let's say you own the telecom lines, so you control who gets to talk to whom, and when, and for how much money.

Let's say you provide the only water/ sewage/ electrical/ trash/ service in an area, and you can cut off anyone you want.

Let's say you own the schools and you will recognize only YOUR diplomas when it comes to hiring. You can sell kids all kinds of junk food, both mental and physical.

Let's say you're going to build a factory. You can get about a dozen cities to bid against each other.

Let's say you create your own currency, you pay in that currency, which is useless in the wider world.

Let's say you're the biggest road-builder, and you charge really high toll rates.

All of this has happened, in the real world.

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Monday, January 3, 2011 10:27 AM

ANTHONYT

Freedom is Important because People are Important


Hello,

It seems the lesson being suggested by feedback is that it is neither business nor government which spawns trouble, but rather the accumulation of power in the form of resources. (Since any individual controlling sufficient resources can bring all these evils into being.)

Is there a way to limit the accumulation of power via resources without also altering our entire notion of freedom?

--Anthony



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Monday, January 3, 2011 11:32 AM

NIKI2

Gettin' old, but still a hippie at heart...


DT, I agree with a lot of what you said, including
Quote:

The problem of corporate abuse of power does not come from them using their constitutional rights as citizens, but from doing what no citizen would be allowed to do, such as pouring 100 million gallons of toluine into the ohio river.
Yet the Supremes just gave them the RIGHTS of citizens without any of the responsibilities...good old right-wing Supreme Court. And yes, it IS right wing currently...but of course what they did wasn't "activist", because as we're all told so often, only dem/liberal juges are "activist". Just had to mention that.

But I’m confused by
Quote:

if there were govt, govt would take over the corporations, and each giantmart would really be a govt agent, as is true in about 80% of businesses in china
There IS government, so I don’t know what you mean by this...unless you’re saying if things were ALL governmental as opposed to ALL corporational control.
Quote:

what if the corporation and the people in it were held to the same standards as any John, Dick, Jane, and Harry.
Interesting theory, but workable in the real world exactly HOW? Either the government has the power to enforce corporations AND John, Dick and Jane, or individual people do-—which individual people, exactly?

I’m with what I think Sig said in another thread; we made a contract to operate as a society and be governed the way we are...it don’t work for shit a lot of the time, but it’s better, to me, than giving the power to individuals OR corporations exclusively.
Quote:

I am interested in exploring a world where corporations had no special status or protections beyond what you and I have. A world where my Lemonade stand, the Coca Cola company, and the boy who hires himself out to mow lawns all play by the same rules.
CTTS’ response addressed those, as I see you recognized, but there are more. Corporations would have the right to pollute anything they want...sure, it wouldn’t be any more legal than a citizen doing it, but how many citizens, struggling to make a living, have enough money/time/energy to stop them? How many Erin Brokoviches do you think would be around, not to mention the law firm she worked for?
Quote:

What happens when your security company goes bad? How are national disasters handled? What happens when someone tries to corner the market and push people around by limiting their choices? What is society's response to terrorism?
Let’s see. I’m not sure what you mean about a security company “goes bad”. National disasters WOULDN’T be handled by anyone outside the areas affected; ergo insurance companies would duck claims, people with money would replace those who lived there before, and with no government, if there was nobody willing to fix whatever caused the disaster in the first place, it wouldn’t get fixed.

As to terrorism, there are all sorts of potentials. People would become xenophobic (or more than they are NOW anyway), I would guess, and keep anyone they considered “undesirable” out of their area, and there would be deaths, hangings, etc. of people considered “other”. People would take up arms to defend “their own” and would define "their own" in ways...well, you get it.

Hey, Sig; I WAS fired for pissing someone off by what I wrote about them on the internet, on a private website, no less! Of course, they had to justify it some other way, because the way things are (i.e., WITH government), if I’d made a stink, they couldn’t have fired me for that. Your points are well made, in my opinion, and without any form of government, they could all be true; admittedly even WITH our current government, there are problems with many of those, but better half a loaf than none, in my opinion.

Anthony,
Quote:

Is there a way to limit the accumulation of power via resources without also altering our entire notion of freedom
My answer is: Not completely, but with the form of government we have: To a degree. Nothing’s perfect, corporations have WAY too much influence in our current government, and government abuses way too much of its power. But either in complete control, or no government, or individuals and corporations having the same "rights"? Not for me.


Hippie Operative Nikovich Nikita Nicovna Talibani,
Contracted Agent of Veritas Oilspillus, code name “Nike”,
signing off




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Monday, January 3, 2011 11:46 AM

WULFENSTAR

http://youtu.be/VUnGTXRxGHg


"My answer is: Not completely, but with the form of government we have: To a degree. Nothing’s perfect, corporations have WAY too much influence in our current government, and government abuses way too much of its power. But either in complete control, or no government, or individuals and corporations having the same "rights"? Not for me. "

Until someone whispers "Apple"...

Then the nerds and hippies have a collective orgasm and riot over who can be the first to give them their money...



"Hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies"

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Monday, January 3, 2011 12:40 PM

DREAMTROVE




Anthony,

Corporations require an anti-trust in order to prevent monopolies. Ours was officially taken down in the 1990s by Clinton under what was called "De-regulation"

Without govt? Sure, I guess it's possible, if you could make in inherent in the system.

Ultimately the snag you have is not that you need a deliberative body called govt., you don't. Ultimately, someone in going to be in control of currency, even if that control is only to maintain that no one is in control of currency. Whomever holds that power would inherit the onus of maintaining the anti-trust.




Niki

Today? This was in 1886.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Santa_Clara_County_v._Southern_Pacific_Ra
ilroad


And I say to you what I said to CTS: Do you mean to say that you do NOT support the right of the Southern Pacific Railroad to travel untaxed through Santa Clara County?

The point here being that the citizens acting collectively as a corporation are still the citizens, ergo, the Southern Pacific Railroad is a citizen of the United States

This idea that villainy springs forth from the fourteenth amendment is nonsense, it's a talking point of the independent center.

All of the rights and none of the responsibilities? I don't see anywhere where we are given responsibilities. If anything, there is far more regulation of corporations than citizens.

Quote:

Quote:

if there were govt, govt would take over the corporations, and each giantmart would really be a govt agent, as is true in about 80% of businesses in china


There IS government, so I don’t know what you mean by this...unless you’re saying if things were ALL governmental as opposed to ALL corporational control.



Where'd I lose you? In China? It's common practice in China for govt. officials to infiltrate, take over, etc. corporations, and give preferential contracts to companies they control. True, this nonsense happens here too, now, but in China it's about 80% of the economy.

The private sector, I'm not even talking about the 400,000,000 workers in the communist public sector economy in China.

Anyway, the result is a pretty radical corruption, and a resulting loss of competition, to say nothing of rights, responsibilities, accountability and regulation.


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Monday, January 3, 2011 12:43 PM

DREAMTROVE


Quote:

Originally posted by AnthonyT:
Hello,

It seems the lesson being suggested by feedback is that it is neither business nor government which spawns trouble, but rather the accumulation of power in the form of resources. (Since any individual controlling sufficient resources can bring all these evils into being.)

Is there a way to limit the accumulation of power via resources without also altering our entire notion of freedom?

--Anthony



Assured by friends that the signal-to-noise ratio has improved on this forum, I have disabled web filtering.




Anthony

Back to Burke's "All that is necessary for evil to flourish is that good men do nothing," I think that one of the main instruments of tyranny is to institute mechanisms to make it impossible for good men to do anything.

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Monday, January 3, 2011 12:45 PM

WULFENSTAR

http://youtu.be/VUnGTXRxGHg


"Back to Burke's "All that is necessary for evil to flourish is that good men do nothing," I think that one of the main instruments of tyranny is to institute mechanisms to make it impossible for good men to do anything."


Goodness Gracious... strange how the term RESPONSIBILITY keeps popping up....

"Hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies"

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Monday, January 3, 2011 1:48 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by AnthonyT:
Hello,

I am starting this topic to expand on something touched on briefly in a Ron Paul thread.

I want to explore what powers corporations would have in the absence of government recognition and empowerment.

In other words- if government did not recognize corporations or work actively to protect their interests, what powers would corporations have?

--Anthony



Corporations are just another entity of power, much like governments. They are neither inherently good or bad.

Entities have a tendancy to grow in their power and or wealth, eventually aiming to monopolise the market, unless otherwise checked.

Any organisation or entity should, in my opinion of course, have limits to how much power they are able to wield. Power often is sourced through great wealth, and yet to limit of even suggest limiting wealth making capacity is to kill the sacred cow of capitalism.

Lawshave that capacity, to limit power and sometimes wealth. They can protect workers from being exploited and consumers from being ripped off. They can prevent (or attempt to prevent) corporations and governments from having too much power. I think that's what we should aim for, preventing too much power in the hands of the too few, regardless of whether that power is wielded by corporations or governments.

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Monday, January 3, 2011 1:48 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER



move along...

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Monday, January 3, 2011 2:46 PM

FREMDFIRMA



Well, Anthony...

Yes, the Gabbett-Fairfax Mars was indeed decidedly unpleasant to operate, and kicked its spent brass right back at the operator, which made aiming it conventionally just about impossible, it has to be hip-shot(1), or not at all... of course, Lucy likely carried it because at the time she initially required a firearm it was the biggest, nastiest one available, and over time a specific type of weapon, via familiarity, becomes more potent in your own hands than even "better" alternatives.

That's why I still use a puny little .380Auto popgun, because I know where that bullet is going to go, or at least I used to, with my eye wandering off on it's own through, my accuracy has plummeted drastically to the point where if I ever DO have to use it, the range I intend to will be measured in inches.

(1)Hip-shooting wouldn't be a problem, since my firearms training was via the Applegate/Bryce/Jordan style of firing, left-handed.
http://www.bobtuley.com/pointshooting.htm

And I'll make the second bit another post, cause that's more to the topic at hand.

-F

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Monday, January 3, 2011 2:47 PM

FREMDFIRMA


Well, herein comes a problem Anthony, and I rather doubt you're gonna like it, but reality never does seem to care what we think of it...

One problem I got with most stories is the large level of inherent conditioning via one of two things.

Firstoff - forgive and forget, or cast down and dismiss, Avatar: The Last Airbender suffers from this, an obviously and intentionally contrived ending that's hacked in there to avoid the goddamn obvious solution to the problem.

Select to view spoiler:


Do you really THINK simply removing the guys ability to Firebend would rob him of POLITICAL power ?
You really think that Azula might not get loose, or even be freed by partisans who were enjoying the power and domination of the Fire Nation when they were on top, who won't be pleased with the discrimination and hostility they're gonna face - goddamn if that's not gonna go EXACTLY how the end of WWI downright caused WWII...


And here's the rub of that, how so many stories are twisted, turned, contrived, hacked up, all to avoid that whole idea that IF YOU MAKE THE BAD GUY DEAD, well golly gee, he never comes back to power, never sticks a knife in your back, never has to be thrown down ever again...

And you know WHY they do this ?
Cause the bastards at the top of our society, in control of most of it, wanna plant the seed of that forgive-forget dynamic in fertile soil, so when they ARE caught out on their bullshit, no one puts a fucking bullet in their brain - allowing them to come back into power and fuck us all over again, look at how much of Nixons cadre came back to haunt us under Bush, and tell me, GO ON AND TRY TO TELL ME that shooting them dead at the time would not have been a better friggin idea, morals be damned.
How many times does it have to bite us on the ass, before we learn this?

I mean when you know, even have their own *admission* they mean to do it to you again, why let them, Anthony, again, we've had this discussion before, at what point does offing them stop being aggression and start being self-defense ?
But again, the powers that be don't want future generations getting "ideas" about how to respond to being abused by them, other than forgive and forget and let it happen some more...

Select to view spoiler:


Although it sure didn't take with my Niece - when Zuko confronted the Fire Lord during the eclipse her response was "What?! I would have chopped his head off!" - all cause Zuko cared what other people thought of him, how nice - condemn that many more people to die for the sake of appearances, screw that, you have a chance to throw down a monster, YOU DO IT - so what if you, personally, are hated and reviled for it.
The only place I've seen that theme done properly is Final Fantasy: Tactics in the person of Ramza Beoulve, who winds up despised and forgotten by history in doing the right thing, whereas Zukos need for acceptance blinds him to that path.


But that isn't the worst of how we blind ourselves, would that it were.


You know, I hated the ending to V for Vendetta too - cause for a fact in *every* police state goon squad you got at least one rabid wacko who's gonna lose his cool at the "damn hippie-libs" and fire, figuring he can blame someone else, and it's easier to cover it up than bother asking permission, they WOULD have fired, and then been swarmed and ripped limb from limb by an enraged and angry mob, but of course the producers didn't wanna SHOW that, which I felt was a tremendous disservice because that particular dodge is so freakin common that it takes someone like me coming along and saying "Oh yeah, and THEN what?!" for people to realize that when caught out and cornered, the powers that be will *not* meekly ground arms and submit, oh hell no, in fact one reason you NEED to blindside them or subvert them quickly before they realize it is because without an ounce of doubt when things turn desperate they WILL resort to Nuke-Chem-Bio weapons, preferring to destroy the world entire than see it under the control of anyone but them.

David Drake sums it up in the final afterword of The Voyage, in fact that sentiment, and the will to address it, is probably the best part of a work that was overall, badly done.
Quote:

Appalonius ends his poem just as the Argo comes back home to harbor. There's a reason for his decision-the same reason that Eisenstein halts the action of The Battleship Potemkin where he does: what comes next is pretty horrifying. I went on and described the return as well; partly because it is a major part of the myth, but primarily because I find it morally necessary-for me-to show precisely where certain courses of conduct and tricks of thought lead.
The use of force is always an answer to problems. Whether or not it's a satisfactory answer depends on a number of things, not least the personality of the person making the determination.
Force isn't an attractive answer, though. I would not be true to myself or to the people I served with in 1970 if I did not make that realization clear.
-David Drake


Cause, you see...

In the end, that *IS* what it will come down to, somewhere, somehow, on a scale small or large, either you submit to whatever/whoever in power intends for you, or you resist, and if you resist, eventually there WILL be use of force - AND THEN WHAT ?

Do you bend the knee, send the message that mere force or threat works ?
Do you return the threat or subvert those attempting to carry it out ?
If that fails... THEN WHAT ?

My ancestors had an answer to that, as you are no doubt aware, they carried their answer to power at Matewan, at Blair Mountain, and the only reason it was not carried through was that the entire weight of the US Government and Military came against them - the very forces supposed to be protecting them stood in defense of their oppressors.

What if that had not happened ?
Cause this is essentially the question you are asking, what if, ANY of those dozens of times that a corporation pushed people to the limit, and they took matters into their hands when the Government would not, what if the Government had not stepped in to assist in their oppression/suppression ?

Well, you'd have seem a damned lot of corporate flunkies and bastards lynched, for one - morals be damned, you really think the thugs carrying out the orders were any kind of innocent ?
And if they got their hands on any of the bosses, I suspect some concessions would have been made, cause the IWW, UMWA and other affiliations weren't stupid enough to kill off the guys writing the check, that's WHY they never assassinated them in fact, every time the idea was raised it was shot down because it was like slitting their own throats, you see.
And of course, having proven their ability to enforce a solution, there'd be a certain incentive against reneging on the deal, obviously - as said in Jaynestown "If we're all together on a thing, there's too many of us..."

Eventually a balance woulda been struck - the workers need the business to survive and prosper, the business needs the workers to survive and prosper, and without the interference of a Government, cannot reduce them to serfs without facing the very real possibility of a revolt, in fact, how many revolutions that *DID* topple Governments came out of a workers revolt, and then when the military involved itself, became a popular revolution.. you see my point ?

So a balance would have been found, one more equitable, and things like profit sharing and stock options would have come into play much earlier since it would be of great value to the company to give the workers a strong incentive towards making the company profitable and prosperous - with much less of a "leash" aspect to it than there is now, because corruption or abuse of such a thing would risk the same threat from the workers.

But that did not happen - and the reason it didn't happen is because whether or not anyone wants to admit it, the US Government is, currently, historically, THE most Fascist-Friendly one on the planet.
Don't believe me, make a list of every single fascist dictator from 1900-2000...
And then count every one we supported.

I am favorable to the idea of holding a corporation legally responsible for it's actions, but logistically that's quite difficult because of the layers of legal protections, dodges and chicanery one would have to chew their way through - rather more effective would be to hold those PERSONALLY responsible, legally responsible.
The guy who authorised the dumping, the workers who carried it out, the guys who drove the trucks, all of them, STARTING at the top as the primary offender, and charging with accomplice/abetting down from there.
Hell, our current legal system allows for it, just that no one has the balls to *DO* it.


Anyhows, the white elephant in the middle of the room you're all pretending not to see, dancing around, is the simple fact that in lieu of a Government to protect them from it, if a Corporation transgressed overmuch on its workers or a community, via abuse, pollution, exploitation, what have you - there WOULD BE VIOLENCE, if the matter could not be resolved, or if the Corporation refused to negotiate and brought in thugs.

The fact that the Government prevents this is in part WHY there is exploitation, but even if the Government chose to protect both sides from each other, as intended (but somehow almost never happening that way) if a Corporation refused to comply there would still be force, and potentially, violence.

But what price to pay to prevent it, the loss of everything it would be used in defense of ?
That, is a much better question.
Sometimes, it really might be for the best if the Government stayed the hell out of it, especially if they cannot be an honest broker.

Just my thoughts on it, with a side order of flaming the lies we tell ourselves about how problems are resolved.

-Frem

I do not serve the Blind God.

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Monday, January 3, 2011 3:23 PM

DREAMTROVE


Endings always suck, I've just learned to ignore them. In the case of Azula

Select to view spoiler:


They had created a villain that their heroes were simply not smart enough to defeat.



And so of course it would end as you said.

As for a bullet being the simple solution, no one ever brings up, except me, that this is what *did* happen to Hitler eventually, Goering put a bullet in his brain, something he had wanted to do for a decade or so. And sure, he should have done it earlier, but Rommel tried, and you saw what happened to him. Once you have the motive and the means, all you need is the opportunity, but it ain't always forthcoming.

I also have to saw that no way do I buy

Select to view spoiler:


Ty Lee and Mei just abandoning Azula. They're clearly a lifelong virtual family, so there's no way that they're going to abandon her.



But yes, you have to be able to give a corporation its comeupance. Govt. is the only reason that the fracking companies can frack, because as a rednecked hillbilly I can tell you if it were not for the long arm of the law protecting these bastards exactly what would happen to anyone from one of these companies when they came up onto someone's land and started dynamiting the landscape and pouring chemicals in the water.

Hey, that's what we have woods for. Infinite in size and filled with very soft earth that you can dig a 6'x8' hole just about anywhere you want and ain't nobody ever gonna find it.

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Monday, January 3, 2011 3:40 PM

FREMDFIRMA


Quote:

Originally posted by AnthonyT:
I'd have also enjoyed seeing the potential flaws of the system more thoroughly probed. (i.e. What happens when your security company goes bad? How are national disasters handled? What happens when someone tries to corner the market and push people around by limiting their choices? What is society's response to terrorism?)


I can actually answer some of that, because some of those answers are part and parcel of Anarchist philosophy itself.

A security company gone bad would get thoroughly thrashed by not only pissed off former clients, but everyone else in the business because their mere existence, if allowed to continue, would undermine the credibility and trust a security firm depends on in order to exist - hell, that kind of thing happens even in OUR world, there's a reason Wackenhut doesn't exist under that name any more...

As for attempts to corner and exploit a market, not only is the very notion anathema, the mere attempt to do so would face ever-increasing resistance due to the very nature of how obvious the intention behind it happens to be, Anarchists might be a lot of things, crazy included, but never ever stupid, and when someone makes an obvious play like that, it's as much a threat as pointing a gun and thumbing the hammer back, you see ?

The other two, well, while a natural disaster response would be far less organized than us sending in the army engineers or whatnot, the general concept of civil responsibility is a much larger part of that philosophy - you wouldn't HAVE to send anyone, everyone that felt they could help in some way would feel a moral obligation to go do so, as immediately as possible - certainly they wouldn't have to worry about being shot by the national guard or arrested by FEMA goons, anyhows.

As for terrorism, it's right damn hard to aggress on folk who will respond aggressively to a threat INSTANTLY - time and time again I've tried to explain just how instantly and rabidly an Anarchist will respond to a threat of that nature, as opposed to people so strongly conditioned to instantly submit, but most people don't get it, don't comprehend it...

Besides which, it's kinda hard to forment terrorism if you aren't really oppressing someone, although you could call the Hamiltonians in-story on it a bit, even so, they tend to get called out and shot on a regular basis, as noted at several points in-story as well.

-Frem

I do not serve the Blind God.

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Monday, January 3, 2011 3:45 PM

CANTTAKESKY


Quote:

Originally posted by AnthonyT:
Is there a way to limit the accumulation of power via resources without also altering our entire notion of freedom?

That is such a good question.

Here is just my opinion on it.

1. Small communities. Like monkeysphere small.

2. A culture with little notion of wealth and land ownership. Like some Native American cultures.

Put the two together, and you have low-tech, anarcho-communist tribal communities where wealth (or lack thereof) is roughly the same for everyone--the kind of community that Derrick Jensen would probably like to live in.

There's been plenty of those throughout history.

Can't Take (my gorram) Sky
------
Everything I say is just my opinion, not fact.

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Monday, January 3, 2011 4:14 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Anyhows, the white elephant in the middle of the room you're all pretending not to see, dancing around, is the simple fact that in lieu of a Government to protect them from it, if a Corporation transgressed overmuch on its workers or a community, via abuse, pollution, exploitation, what have you - there WOULD BE VIOLENCE, if the matter could not be resolved, or if the Corporation refused to negotiate and brought in thugs.

I'm afraid history doesn't demonstrate that will always happen, hence the generations of exploitation that peasants and slaves have endured...and if there were revolts they were crushed by the might of the powerful.

And even if there was a successful violent revolt, well I guess I'm kind of cynical about the outcome of such violence, whether it really only ends in one ruling class being ousted by another class who end up taking on that role.

Frem, I'm interested in your take on storylines and how they support the current paradigm. I read a really interesting book on screenplays, I think it might have been called 'Screenplay' in which they talked about common story arcs in US compared to European cinema, which I found fascinating.

I agree with you about Avatar (the Cameron movie) - talk about leave your self open for retribution and a sequel of course.

I also find that Hollywood generally supports the idea, the false premise in my view, that 'if you want something enough it will come to you eventually, if you are deserving'

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Monday, January 3, 2011 4:19 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Is there a way to limit the accumulation of power via resources without also altering our entire notion of freedom?
Not if you view accumulation of wealth as an inherent freedom. That forms an inherent contradiction.

Oh BTW, I had a few more examples of corporate power:

Let's say that I clearcut a million acres, and ruin the watershed downstream, forcing water districts to spend more money filtering out the mud, and ruining salmon fishing for the foreseeable future. (EBMWD)

Let's say I pump an aquifer dry to water my mega-acre farm, making it impossible for anyone else to draw water.

Let's say I take my fleet of trawlers out, and strip-mine the ocean so nobody else catches much fish.

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Monday, January 3, 2011 4:23 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by canttakesky:
Quote:

Originally posted by AnthonyT:
Is there a way to limit the accumulation of power via resources without also altering our entire notion of freedom?

That is such a good question.

Here is just my opinion on it.

1. Small communities. Like monkeysphere small.

2. A culture with little notion of wealth and land ownership. Like some Native American cultures.

Put the two together, and you have low-tech, anarcho-communist tribal communities where wealth (or lack thereof) is roughly the same for everyone--the kind of community that Derrick Jensen would probably like to live in.

There's been plenty of those throughout history.

Can't Take (my gorram) Sky
------
Everything I say is just my opinion, not fact.



they wouldn't happen naturally though, and you'd have to engineer them, which seems to be against the philosophy that you've espoused.

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Monday, January 3, 2011 4:43 PM

BYTEMITE


Quote:



they wouldn't happen naturally though, and you'd have to engineer them, which seems to be against the philosophy that you've espoused.



What?

If you agree with the premise that such societies have existed before, and you didn't dispute that in any way I can see, then obviously they'd have to somehow happen naturally.

The main problem really with forming anarchic communities at this point is that for such an outcome to occur, the powerful would have to fall themselves, which means the setting and situation at large would have to become REALLY bad.

I won't actively help along that crash because I know how bad it would be, but I'm so world weary and cynical that hell, at this point I almost just want it to happen already, get it over with. I ultimately feel like we might be better off.

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Monday, January 3, 2011 4:47 PM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

If you agree with the premise that such societies have existed before, and you didn't dispute that in any way I can see, then obviously they'd have to somehow happen naturally.
Small societies existed in the past because that was what was the technology could support. But if you look at the vast sweep of human history, societies/ economies generally seem to get bigger and bigger as more and more people and resources are integrated into them. The only thing that seems to collapse these structures is natural catastrophe: volcanoes or drought.

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Monday, January 3, 2011 5:24 PM

CANTTAKESKY


Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
But if you look at the vast sweep of human history, societies/ economies generally seem to get bigger and bigger as more and more people and resources are integrated into them.

Are you saying "society," as an entity, has a natural tendency to accumulate wealth, like a "corporation"? And once it has been big, it cannot be made smaller once again except through catastrophic force?

If I am stating your position correctly, then would a "government," as an entity, do the same: accumulate wealth until met with catastrophic force?

If not, why not?

Can't Take (my gorram) Sky
------
Everything I say is just my opinion, not fact.

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Monday, January 3, 2011 5:25 PM

CANTTAKESKY


Quote:

Originally posted by Bytemite:
I won't actively help along that crash because I know how bad it would be, but I'm so world weary and cynical that hell, at this point I almost just want it to happen already, get it over with. I ultimately feel like we might be better off.

Yeah, I'm with ya.

Can't Take (my gorram) Sky
------
Everything I say is just my opinion, not fact.

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Monday, January 3, 2011 5:34 PM

BYTEMITE


Quote:

Small societies existed in the past because that was what was the technology could support. But if you look at the vast sweep of human history, societies/ economies generally seem to get bigger and bigger as more and more people and resources are integrated into them. The only thing that seems to collapse these structures is natural catastrophe: volcanoes or drought.


Admittedly true. My hope is that information technology might allow us to get around the growing pains of the currently existing structures and create potential for different social organizations; small, sustainable, and spontaneous ones.

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Monday, January 3, 2011 6:49 PM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Quote:

Originally posted by AnthonyT:
Hello Frem,

As for the Mars... wasn't that weapon described as "decidedly unpleasant to operate" or some such?



Apparently. "Most powerful handgun in the world", in a world where recoil was considered "manly"... can't have been much fun to shoot, from the descriptions I've read.

Quote:


Maybe if it didn't fling spent cartridges at the operator it'd have been better received?



I think that would likely be my biggest gripe with it. Recoil I can accept, but having the thing spit hot brass right at your face couldn't really be pleasant.

Quote:

Then again, the military of the time was rather stuffy and not much in for innovation.



It's funny, because you said the military "WAS rather stuffy"... :D

This Space For Rent!

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Monday, January 3, 2011 7:00 PM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Quote:

The point here being that the citizens acting collectively as a corporation are still the citizens, ergo, the Southern Pacific Railroad is a citizen of the United States




That's absurd, DT, and you should realize exactly why. Think of it as a logic problem.

Citizens acting as a corporation make the corporation a citizen. That's your proposition. It doesn't logically follow, though. My family are all citizens - is my family therefore allowed to act in unison as ONE citizen when we want to? I mean, we can each vote for whom we want, and give contributions, but can we ALSO, ADDITIONALLY, band together and vote AGAIN as a "family citizen" or a "collective", and give more money, unlimited money?

Of course not. Ergo, the idea that a corporation made up of citizens must necessarily ALSO be a citizen itself is pure hoakum.

A corporation is a legal construct, and nothing more.

You bring up a railroad's "right" to travel, untaxed, through a state. Would you then agree that CITIZENS have the same right to travel, completely untaxed, through states as well? Say, for instance... on a toll road? Do I have the right to just blow off the tolls, since that constitutes a "tax" on my travel? After all, if a railroad has those rights, does not a citizen have them as well?

This Space For Rent!

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Monday, January 3, 2011 7:03 PM

KWICKO

"We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." -- William Casey, Reagan's presidential campaign manager & CIA Director (from first staff meeting in 1981)


Quote:

Originally posted by Wulfenstar:
"My answer is: Not completely, but with the form of government we have: To a degree. Nothing’s perfect, corporations have WAY too much influence in our current government, and government abuses way too much of its power. But either in complete control, or no government, or individuals and corporations having the same "rights"? Not for me. "

Until someone whispers "Apple"...

Then the nerds and hippies have a collective orgasm and riot over who can be the first to give them their money...



"Hope is a good thing, maybe the best of things, and no good thing ever dies"




Or until someone whispers "Tea Party"...

And all the rednecks and fascists have a collective orgasm and riot over who can be the first to put them in power...

This Space For Rent!

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Monday, January 3, 2011 9:26 PM

MAGONSDAUGHTER


Quote:

Originally posted by canttakesky:
Quote:

Originally posted by SignyM:
But if you look at the vast sweep of human history, societies/ economies generally seem to get bigger and bigger as more and more people and resources are integrated into them.

Are you saying "society," as an entity, has a natural tendency to accumulate wealth, like a "corporation"? And once it has been big, it cannot be made smaller once again except through catastrophic force?

If I am stating your position correctly, then would a "government," as an entity, do the same: accumulate wealth until met with catastrophic force?

If not, why not?

Can't Take (my gorram) Sky
------
Everything I say is just my opinion, not fact.


I believe that many things can shape a society, if you choose to plan one. However, I do believe that your stance in the past has been that such planning would constitute social engineering, with which you disagree. I could have mistaken you for someone else, so correct me if I am wrong.

naturally, the tendancy is for people to mass where there is opportunity and work, in the bigger urban centres. I think this trend has continued for some centuries. Catastrophe is possibly the only natural way that this would be reversed.


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Tuesday, January 4, 2011 12:04 AM

FREMDFIRMA


Well Magons, no one ever said violence was an attractive, or always effective, solution - I just feel that denying the very possibility, or handing over everything in order to not resort to it, those aren't real good answers either.

The first is like wiring shut the blowoff valve on a boiler, and the second makes the whole concept pointless.
You ain't the only one cynical about the outcome of such violence either, it forever escapes me why rioters burn down the drugstore instead of city hall, I mean I do understand the crowd-dynamics that make that happen, I just fail to see why someone with a brain doesn't take charge at a critical moment, it's easy enough...
Of course, the idea of me doin that offends and frightens even my best allies cause once you start a fight of *that* nature you limit your options quite severely, since you HAVE to carry it through, which is why I haven't tried it, think it down the line, all you'd be doing without support is offering an excuse for a clampdown while getting a whole bunch of folks killed, and for what ?

As for storylines and how they support the current paradigm - not only do they, it is entirely deliberate, and intentional, I've been sharing some examples with Anthony here and there, but easy enough to start your own research with American "conditioning" of that nature by looking up the Hays Code, and Comics Code Authority.
And those, mind you, are only the most obvious, public, and extreme examples.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motion_Picture_Production_Code
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comics_Code_Authority

Multiply that tenfold and you start to get an idea of how MUCH "conditioning" goes into american media.

I've mentioned it in a couple threads before..
(search brings em up in the beta site)
http://beta.fireflyfans.net/mthread.aspx?bid=18&tid=44712

http://beta.fireflyfans.net/mthread.aspx?bid=18&tid=46401&p=1
(look for the spoiler tagged part Nov 29 2010)

But here's some other examples from the same guy, just for overview.
http://www.povonline.com/cols/COL145.htm
Quote:

The kids were all heroic — all but a semi-heroic member of their troupe named Eric. Eric was a whiner, a complainer, a guy who didn't like to go along with whatever the others wanted to do. Usually, he would grudgingly agree to participate, and it would always turn out well, and Eric would be glad he joined in. He was the one thing I really didn't like about the show.

So why, you may wonder, did I leave him in there? Answer: I had to.

As you may know, there are those out there who attempt to influence the content of childrens' television. We call them "parents groups," although many are not comprised of parents, or at least not of folks whose primary interest is as parents. Study them and you'll find a wide array of agendum at work...and I suspect that, in some cases, their stated goals are far from their real goals.

Nevertheless, they all seek to make kidvid more enriching and redeeming, at least by their definitions, and at the time, they had enough clout to cause the networks to yield. Consultants were brought in and we, the folks who were writing cartoons, were ordered to include certain "pro-social" morals in our shows. At the time, the dominant "pro-social" moral was as follows: The group is always right...the complainer is always wrong.


http://www.newsfromme.com/archives/2006_12_11.html#012563
Quote:

I don't think it happens as much these days but those of us who do cartoons have been occasionally pressured, in much the same way a guy with a gun pressures you to hand over your wallet, to include certain "social messages" into our work. There's nothing wrong with trying to include a benevolent moral in a cartoon if — and here come a couple of big IFs — it doesn't despoil the entertainment value and it can be done without a condescending, lecturing tone...and especially IF the message is a sound one.

http://www.newsfromme.com/archives/2008_12_11.html#016337
Quote:

One time, a writer friend did a script (a pretty good script, I thought) where the climax depended on the hero cutting a rope at a precise moment. The hero, it had been established, was a former Boy Scout...so my friend had the hero whip out his Boy Scout pocket knife and use it to cut the rope.

Well, that couldn't be allowed. Encouraging children to carry knives, even though the Boy Scouts do? You might as well have them packing howitzers and blowing bodies away on the playgrounds of America. There was much arguing and the scene ended up being staged with the rope being cut by the edge of a sharp rock, which was just silly. The rope was being used to lower a car. Given how sturdy it would have to be to do that, it was already stretching reality for it to be cuttable with a pocket knife. A sharp rock was ridiculous.

At times though, the bickering went beyond Broadcast Standards trying to prevent the network from being sued or having its advertisers shrink from advertising. Every so often, someone there got it into their heads that childrens' television could mold the youth of today into the good citizens of tomorrow. That's a questionable premise but let's say it's so. The question then becomes what you teach, how you mold. I found that those who approached the arena with that in mind had some odd ideas of what we should be trying to impart to impressionable viewers. Acts of extreme violence — like carrying a pocket knife — weren't as big a problem as what they called "anti-social behavior" and what I called "having a mind of your own."


Which of course, ain't even the half of it.

Mind you, even as a small child I hated most cartoons, my two un-favorite shows were Mighty Mouse (same plot, every single time) and Mister Rogers, who I felt was MOCKING me, holding up what the world could be, should be, in the same way one torments a hungry animal by holding a bit of food juuust out of reach, grrr..
Hell, one time I sent my mother from the chair in hystericals by shouting at Popeye "Eat the spinach NOW you dumb shit!"... I was, err, considered kinda merciless, even as a child.

Wasn't till Star Blazers showed up that I considered any of that drek worth watching, and the TV networks, still under the myth that children were too stupid to follow a plot, were pissed that the episodes actually had to be shown in order - even as watered down as it was from the original material, it was far and away better than anything else kids had to pick from.

Anyhows, what I am saying is that the sociopaths in charge of this society have, quite intentionally, strived to install social paradigms that directly benefit them into it, to the point of distorting folks perceptions of social dynamics entire.

Although this doesn't always take, some kids seem to learn a defense mechanism, probably via being repeatedly lied to as children and catching it out, to where their instinctive and reflexive response goes the OTHER way, like when I heard "Healthy Forests Iniative" or "Clean Air Act", my FIRST response was "BULLSHIT!" and gets held till I see substantial evidence to the contrary, Mikey's like that a bit too, far as I can tell.
Still most kids succumb, and this does wind up doing damage.

Imma throw in two adult show examples in either direction, and follow with one from actual events based on the same theme as an example of how much harm this can cause.

The first comes from a cancelled TV show called Jericho - which is actually quite good, the main character has a chance to take out a really, REALLY bad guy, without the bulk of his forces to back him up, who has blatantly and unrepetantly announced both the desire and intention to come back and do harm unto them, he chooses to let Goetz go because he was unwilling to pay the butchers bill it would cost to take him out then and there...
And countless people suffer for it, and AGAIN, after all that, they were going to let him walk, or at least hand him over to "authorities" who showed little intent to rein him in, till Stanley took upon himself to do what *I* would have done at the first goddamn opportunity.
All those deaths and broken lives rest squarely on Jakes head as well as Goetz, if you ask me.

Conversely, the other example comes from Space: Above and Beyond Ep3, Dark Side of the sun.
After a bitter battle with substantial casualties on both sides, the Silicates are escaping with a load of stolen HE3 fuel - most of the protagonists want to cut their losses, bunker down, and wait for reinforcements, but Vansen, and not entirely for all the right reasons, decides "They don't get off this rock!" - not just cause it was personal, but also because if they get away with that fuel, many more will suffer, and she could *NOT* abide that when the chance existed to stop it, a chance she takes, and wins out.
Despite a lame and half-hearted attempt to portray this as a "bad" decision, it sure didn't come across this way, and I was most certainly cheering at a rare depiction of something OTHER than the usual dumbassery.


Where this kinda thing hurts people in the real world though ?
Look no further than Palestine - time and time again Israeli "settlers" seize their land, stage a terror campaign, and then when the Palestinians try to defend their turf, call in the IDF for support, who obliges cause they're in on the game, of course.
And how many times has Israel promised to stop that shit, and broke that promise before the sun even went down, twenty times, thirty, FIFTY?!, more ?
And we forgive and forgive and forgive and forgive and forgive...
And Palestinians keep dyin - tell me, if Israel finally succeeds in this outright genocide right under our gullible noses, will we forgive that too ?

YURUSENAI! I say to it.
I say we park a couple missle cruisers off the coast with enough air defense to prevent another USS Liberty "accident" (and we forgave that TOO, didn't we ?) and the next time those "settlers" take some land, we put a fucking tomahawk into em, and we KEEP doin that till they get the goddamn message.
"But they're civilians!" - you might say ?
I say bullshit, they're terrorists, armed/enemy combatants, and if we're gonna apply those rules to everydamnbody else including our own citizens, it applies to them damn "settlers" too, and maybe they shoulda thought of that before trying to take someone elses land by force.

See, that's where all this bites us, keeps us playin by their rules, their game, despite that being a prelude to failure and disaster, we're expected to, they plan on it cause that is what we have been taught.
But I don't play by their rules, I don't DO the expected things, and this tends to catch the bastards out, in fact look how many times a robbery, mugging, what have you has been foiled by someone NOT playing by the established "rules" of the game, and the bad guy having no clue how to deal with that, hmmm ?

It's like three card monte, you play by the "rules", do the expected thing, might as well just hand over your cash as that - but do the unexpected thing, cheat back, and you can pull the take, only you better have two guys watching your back against his goons, and a weapon if you wanna get away with it, nor should you let him get his hands out of sight under that table unless you wanna bet your pistol against his sawed off shotgun.
Still, to have any chance at all - you can NOT play along, see ?

But that is what they "teach" us, from the cradle to the grave, in every way they can, to play by those "rules", to bend the knee on command, to bow to force, to go along to get along, to let it slide, to forgive and forget... because that BENEFITS them, at our cost.
And you'd damn well best better believe it's completely intentional.

Only some of us don't play that way - were I to find myself with a monster at my mercy, there wouldn't BE any negotiation, no speeches, no handing him over to so-called authorities, hell, I wouldn't even torture em.
Just one quick kick to the back of the knee and two bullets through the braincase, pop, pop - quick, clean and done.
That very notion has sent more than one punk throwing themselves at the oh-so-forgiving "authorities" rather than potentially wind up in our hands.

Ruthless, you say ?

You know who else was ruthless in that way, who broke the paradigm by introducing his own set of rules ?
Who KNEW, completely, the potential cost, and was willing to pay the toll ?
Who put his OWN ass on the line FIRST, in order make the friggin point ?

Matahama Ghandi.
Quote:

The Board of Governors: This seems a steep price for so small a service: to crush a powerless cripple.
Tan'elKoth: Doubly fools. He does have power. One power: the power to devote himself absolutely to a single goal, to be ruthless with himself and all else in its pursuit. It is the only power he needs - because, unlike the great mass of men, he is aware of this power, and he is willing, even happy, to use it.
- Blade Of Tyshalle


Cause, see, most folk, you bring enough force, threat and trouble down on em, they cave in, go right back to being good little boys and girls, playing by the rigged "rules"
(This specifically includes you, Wulfenwhiner, as you have so aptly demonstrated, so I dun wanna hear it.)
And that folks, is why I *don't* support most folks efforts, cause they are unwilling, or unable, to pay the toll to travel down that road.

But then again, that ain't an either-or/black-white/yes-no kind of thing either, there's ways and ways, but first thing for damn sure, is discarding the learned defeatism that is taught to us from the moment anyone is willing to teach us anything - and that means lookin at ALL the options.

Oh, and btw - I was referencing Avatar: The Last Airbender re: the animated series...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Avatar:_The_Last_Airbender

But in reference to Camerons Avatar - same essential premise holds, you see.

I woulda sent that damn ship into the sun, then when the followup mission arrived, played dumb native and told those fools "They got stupid and the jungle ate em." then let em settle in, get complacent.
And wipe them out too.
At which point some corporate bean counter is gonna look at this somebodys-pet-project and shitcan it as a waste instead of throwing good money after bad, and it's all good...

But *if that ship gets back to earth*, if those folks survive to tell the tale...
They're dead meat - all of em.

Cause then it'd be tales of how those hostile bloodthirsty natives mercilessly attacked em, and how they spurned the benevolent hand of corporate enlightenment and how dare they impugn the might of the military-industrial-corporate empire, why we'll show those big blue heathen bastards who's in charge here, hoo-rah!
And then it's genocide time - won't be the first natives we've done it to either, will it ?
Natives who, mind you, kept forgiving us when we broke treatys with em, and look what it got em, eh ?
Add in the corporate notion that if the biosphere is a problem, well, bye-bye biosphere, after all, the unobtanium is still gonna be there, right ?

And if the Na'vi don't figure that out themselves, Jake damn sure knows, and he *will* tell em.
So you might say their whole survival rests upon whether they're smart enough to know when *NOT* to forgive and forget.

And in the end of all things, you might say ours does, too.

-Frem

I do not serve the Blind God.

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Tuesday, January 4, 2011 4:17 AM

MALACHITE


Quote:

Originally posted by AnthonyT:
I want to explore what powers corporations would have in the absence of government recognition and empowerment.

In other words- if government did not recognize corporations or work actively to protect their interests, what powers would corporations have?

--Anthony






Not to tangent too much, but it sure would be nice if we could have seen the interaction between government and the Blue Sun Corporation fleshed out a bit in Season 2 of Firefly...

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Tuesday, January 4, 2011 4:54 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


Quote:

Admittedly true. My hope is that information technology might allow us to get around the growing pains of the currently existing structures and create potential for different social organizations; small, sustainable, and spontaneous ones.
At a lower technology and a lower population.

We (as a population of 7 billion) depend on a lot of non-human, non-animal power to make our lives less than a grueling endurance test. "Back in the day" (colonial times) people toiled endlessly from sunup to sundown, and mostly lived short brutal lives. The iron plow was a huge invention, as was the self-propelled vehicle, the water-powered loom, and antibiotics.

It's easy to dream of a knowledge-based future, but.... who's gonna create those solar panels? Whose gonna make those tantalum capacitors and hard drives for your PC? Knowledge is a wonderful thing, but in this envisioned future we would also need distributed manufacturing which depends ONLY on locally-supplied resources. How does that come about, w/o major loss of life? Once you start thinking about giving up technology, and tracing where these things come from, you will find them inextricably intertwined.

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Tuesday, January 4, 2011 5:03 AM

DREAMTROVE


Frem,

Rogue security firm would try to establish itself as govt. anarchy would need a defense against that.


Cts

They have that sort of societ in the amazon, and they are getting thrashed just as our indians were. any society needs the ability to defend collectively against massive imperialism.


Magons

Quote:

it really only ends in one ruling class being ousted by another


i think you nailed it.

Re Avatar, the show, not the mlvie. they are unrelated


Sig.

ecocide can also be done by govts. lime in brazil, or for the last two centuries, the US, but statistically most of it is done by individuals with no formal organization.

while govts always regulate against it, this regulation is for show, to make the people feel protected, and is no more meaningful than the war on terror. the same govts. are generally out there doing it and encouraging the greedy to do it.

in the absense of govt, such environmental abusers would be killed.outright because the number of people who oppose destroying the world is always going to exceed those in favor.

Mike,

it wasnt a random case, its the case that corporate citizenship is based on, so you should know it if arguing the topic or youll end up sounding like that guy who insisted that we must have the ten commandments in every govt buikding, whatever the hell those commandments were.

you are correct though, toll roads are potentially a violation of the 14th.youd have an interesting case


byte. and all,

what i said to everyone else, i think that people are.missing soke points on how to make ssuch a society sustainable


frem,

that was a very long post

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Tuesday, January 4, 2011 5:08 AM

SIGNYM

I believe in solving problems, not sharing them.


DT
Quote:

while govts always regulate against it, this regulation is for show, to make the people feel protected, and is no more meaningful than the war on terror. the same govts. are generally out there doing it and encouraging the greedy to do it.
I work in a environmental regulatory agency. Governments do what they can, given the economic restrictions of the current system. But I can't tell you the number of times (hundreds, at least!) that some business brought up China as the competitive standard which they must meet in order to survive, and why regulations will kill them. As long as we've bought into the "free trade" model, we will be stuck competing against nations which have no environmental regulation, etc. Nonetheless, the air and water really ARE cleaner than before.

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Tuesday, January 4, 2011 5:23 AM

BYTEMITE


Quote:

Knowledge is a wonderful thing, but in this envisioned future we would also need distributed manufacturing which depends ONLY on locally-supplied resources. How does that come about, w/o major loss of life? Once you start thinking about giving up technology, and tracing where these things come from, you will find them inextricably intertwined.


...? Two ideas are at odds with each other here. First you agree with me that technology is wonderful, then you say I'm suggesting we give up technology. Confusion ensues.

The way I see it, if manufacturing is a concern, information technology opens up the possibility for multiple smaller communities in cooperation to produce a good or service. You no longer need big cities or urban sprawl to eat up perfectly good land that could be wild ecosystem in order to support a certain level of technology. The next thing we need to figure out is how to do the same to farmland, and boost productivity per acre while at the same time allowing much of the land to return wild or even farmland and wild to cohabit the same area.

Solar panels and microchips are silicon, I find myself not overly concerned about about taxing the local resource supply of it. And that's assuming we don't eventually generate plant-based electricity and computing without harming the plant; the worlds best and most efficient voltaic solar cell is a plant cell, and I know there are people out there working on organic microchips. We may not need to build a whole lot anymore once we figure out we can GROW our tech, eliminates the need for large-scale distributed manufacturing.

As for the rest, that's covered by sustainability... and possibly space travel. Biodiversity will also be pretty important, and renewed interest in environment health.

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Tuesday, January 4, 2011 5:51 AM

BYTEMITE


Quote:

Nonetheless, the air and water really ARE cleaner than before.


I'll give you air, though I'm not as sure about water... People are still dumping stuff in water. Gas stations and dry cleaners leak by rule, and they go up faster than the old ones can be remediated. And that's not taking account intentional spills from corporate entities.

The best possible outcome, even better than regulation, is to simplify production so that most anyone can produce something themselves from start to finish. People then can still have whatever market and economic organization they want at a local level. Local scale organization makes instances of corruption, pollution, and civil damages more accountable, and various social organizations at a local level can reduce or even negate the impact further.

The best way I can think of to return production to the hands on individual consumers and families is to have an entrepenuerial boom, most likely associated with brand new tech with wide-scale ease of use and appeal that renders all current business and distribution models and obsolete. But failing that, the likelyhood is that corporations, banks, and governments are on the verge of collapse anyway, because they keep breaking the limitations of the system. Because urban areas would not do well in an economic collapse, this is a less favourable option than the technological revolution. Violent revolution is the least favourable option.

A different kind of fuel, that doesn't dump lots of oil and benzene related products into drinking water or pump soot particulate into the air would also be nice. One that doesn't kill us outright if mishandled.

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Tuesday, January 4, 2011 8:49 AM

HKCAVALIER


Quote:

Originally posted by Fremdfirma:
You know, I hated the ending to V for Vendetta too - cause for a fact in *every* police state goon squad you got at least one rabid wacko who's gonna lose his cool at the "damn hippie-libs" and fire, figuring he can blame someone else, and it's easier to cover it up than bother asking permission, they WOULD have fired, and then been swarmed and ripped limb from limb by an enraged and angry mob, but of course the producers didn't wanna SHOW that, which I felt was a tremendous disservice because that particular dodge is so freakin common that it takes someone like me coming along and saying "Oh yeah, and THEN what?!" for people to realize that when caught out and cornered, the powers that be will *not* meekly ground arms and submit, oh hell no, in fact one reason you NEED to blindside them or subvert them quickly before they realize it is because without an ounce of doubt when things turn desperate they WILL resort to Nuke-Chem-Bio weapons, preferring to destroy the world entire than see it under the control of anyone but them.

So, why did the British quit India? And why does India still even exist?

I think M'sD kinda got to this, but I gotta ask: hasn't the "kill the bastards" strategy been tried throughout history and we're still right here in the thick of it? You really think assassination is the answer, as long as the assassin is a decent fellow otherwise? You think if we killed Cheney and Rummie, I guess executed them along with the whole Nixon hunta (no G. Gordon Liddy radio show), we would have the peace and prosperity we all long for?

I recognize that armed resistance is a real option and sometimes somehow managed not to screw things up worse than before (American Revolution), but I don't see it as the panacea you're making it out to be here. Quit romanticizing this shit--it's blood and waste and mostly failure down that road--but I do recognize that sometimes that's the only avenue left to folk. And sometimes people luck out.

And hey, as far as A:TLAB goes, the cost of the kind of violation you're advocating is much worse than public opprobrium (jeez, give the fairy tale some credit, the "being hated and reviled" thing is a metaphor for the damage Zuko would be doing to his own soul, right?).

Me, I focus on the fact that the Azulas and the Hitlers of the world are always batshit crazy and that stuff can't last.

Also, I focus on getting the truth out. Do you think that Cheney and Rumsfeld would have half the success they had over the past 30 years, if they started up now going into the next 30 years? You don't think that the revolutions happening today in information access and dissemination are the best, truest weapon against tyranny? The lap dogs are a dying breed. Ten year old kids know more about politics today than our parents ever did. What's gonna take the place of FOX News when the old folks who still watch that nonsense pass into the infinite?

HKCavalier

Hey, hey, hey, don't be mean. We don't have to be mean, because, remember, no matter where you go, there you are.

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Tuesday, January 4, 2011 8:59 AM

KANEMAN


Quote:

Originally posted by AnthonyT:
Hello,

I am starting this topic to expand on something touched on briefly in a Ron Paul thread.

I want to explore what powers corporations would have in the absence of government recognition and empowerment.

In other words- if government did not recognize corporations or work actively to protect their interests, what powers would corporations have?

--Anthony



Assured by friends that the signal-to-noise ratio has improved on this forum, I have disabled web filtering.




Not sure what you mean when you say "government recognizing corps"....But I still think most people see the value in an entity that can mass produce products cheeper and faster, distribute them better, and are owned by the people. See, businesses are owned by one individual. I think the corps you are talking about are mostly owned by those that use , make, or sell their products. And are owned by tens of thousands of people.....see corps should be the most democratic of institutions, however no one shows up to the annual shareholders meetings let alone vote. Now a small business is a dictatorship and should be. The two keep each other in check.


Remember that we would not have our quality of life, or that laptop in our hands if not for those evil corporations......

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Tuesday, January 4, 2011 9:59 AM

BYTEMITE


While you have a point about our current quality of life, distribution, and computers being thanks to corporations, I think corporations are probably the worst world of both the hierarchal organization of a small business and the inefficiency of a democracy. Yes, you have shoreholder meetings at the top, which is fine, but the concentration of decision makers is small. So the corporation ends up requiring lots of middle management and laborers, which results in bureaucracy, waste, and inefficiency. But then, that depends on how you define efficiency; if you want lots of something, then a big group will do that for you.

EDIT: I guess where I stand is I'm pretty sure government is evil. I recognize that maybe corporations have some merits, but a lot of corporations also seem evil, and are in too close with the government.

I know there's some honest businessmen and women out there, but we seem to mostly hear about the dishonest ones. I'm willing to say that "let the buyer beware" is an inherent risk in the market system, and that people should be free to have a choice to take that risk, and engage in a market system, and some people might take advantage and get filthy rich and there might be corruption. Maybe on an individual level that's bad and unethical, and maybe on a social level that's something that has to exist just on a personal freedom consideration. That's why you'll always hear me when I talk about my small communities idea, that I don't ever rule out that they might choose mercantilism or capitalism.

My concern is always the corruption. The dishonest guys who keep getting away with hurting people. The bigger an organization is, the harder it seems to stop the bad people in it, and the more money/power someone has, the harder it is to get at them if they've done wrong. I guess I just don't like hierarchal organization, and I really don't like it when it starts to get big enough to threaten other people's livelyhood without consequence.

It's not that people couldn't have a business or corporation in my world, but rather when they turn abusive they're toppled by the very people they piss off. Seems fair to me.

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Tuesday, January 4, 2011 11:06 AM

FREMDFIRMA



Excellent arguments, HKCav, but I do have answers to them.

The British quit India because Ghandi was a SMART fellow as well as a ruthless one, he knew, absolutely, that the British society and mentality of the time could not sustain itself against what they would *have* to do in order to keep India - the key to winning out against a larger and more powerful force isn't logistics but psychology, breaking their will to fight, and while the British of the time could not stomach beating down civil disobediance, the jackboots of todays america on the other hand, would practically come in their pants at the notion.

So one must always tailor such campaigns against the specific power you wish to oppose, and Ghandi did do that.
And as I am fond of pointing out, and you are well aware, he did allow for the reality and possibility of violent resistance, his primary *point* was that one should avoid violence if possible, offer the open hand, the civil refusal, FIRST - but if the choice came down to violence or submission, then violence was preferable.

But he did know what the toll *could* be, if things went badly, he refused to deny it, and did not lie to his followers about it, this as much as any reason is why I have so much respect for him.

Mind you, I don't actually advocate a "kill the bastards" strategy, so much as NOT simply forgiving them and setting them on their merry, or handing them BACK the reigns of power after a mere chastisement, come on, you have to understand my point there - how many times this has bit us on the ass within our own lifetimes ?

And no, I don't think assassination is "The" answer, it's AN answer, certainly not the best one - the primary reason I acknowledge it as a viable one is because of the perception that "this is not done" - an asinine philosophy when you think how many times officers sent hordes of troops to die from their comfy little HQs, secure in the knowledge that only the peons would die...
Ask Ferguson if the Overmountain boys checked their fire when they realized he was one of those "better men", oh, yeah, that's right, they DIDN'T - shot him seven times too, while he was frantically trying to get that coat off when it became clear this wasn't gonna get played by HIS rules.
Or would you rather they'd left him be, and went on and shot a hundred or so more of his men instead ?

Sometimes minimum-harm-possible comes with ugly choices, old friend, reality is often much less pleasant than we wish it was.

While I don't believe we'd have "peace and prosperity" had we swung the Nixon cartel from a rope, I *do* firmly believe that we'd be on a better path right now than we are, if instead of rewarding that behavior with forgiveness, thus encouraging if not outright condoning it - we had shown there were serious consequences for it, especially if we'd held to the rule of law and stuffed em in prison instead of merely lynching them.

Mind you, I wasn't holding armed resistance up as a pancea, nor romanticizing it whatever, in fact my primary bitch against the ending of V for Vendetta is that they DO romanticize it, by failing to show the horrible, bloody consequences of that path, what *WILL* happen if you go down that road, what the price is...
THAT is why I think this is so important to mention - not only are their times when people wind up with no other options (admittedly rare), but AS an option, most folk who start down that path do so because they have NO IDEA what the eventual cost of that is going to BE!
Because they have been sold a glorious LIE about what that road is gonna be like, which will lead them straight into failure and disaster if left unchecked, unchallenged.
(Case in point: you think Wulfie has any idea how ugly that kinda thing can get ?)

Also, I know, full and well, to a depth and degree I would never wish upon another human being, what the cost of such a violation is, I know what it will do to a persons soul, their pysche - I know all too well...
And I would still fucking do it.
Again, sometimes minimum-harm-possible comes with ugly choices, and if the choice comes down to the self-inflicted personal trauma of the one, versus the irrevocable harm of many, dude, that ain't even a choice for me - sinner or saint is irrelevant, as are perceptions in most cases.

And sure, those kinda folk are batshit crazy, but we have a system that rockets them to the top of the heap, designed by them, run by them, enforced by folk willing to take their orders, and this is a huge problem.
I prefer to kneecap them before they get off the ground rather than wait them out, if doing some harm now prevents the damage they will inflict then imma do it - ain't gonna try to justify it neither, cause there isn't any, you fall into that trap of the ends justifyin the means, eventually the means BECOME the end, and you become as bad or worse than they are - but my sins are just that, MY sins, and I will pay the karma in my time.
Be damned if imma try to make excuses or justify doing harm, other than to take personal responsibility for it instead of trying to spread it onto others.

Truly though, as you say, information is the very best of weapons, and I find myself tremendously gratified at people as a whole turning the surveillence society AGAINST the very fuckers who aimed it at them in hopes of tighter control - HA! talk about blowback!
Just as I am fond of saying, it's like a handful of sand, the harder they squeeze the more slips right through their fingers, and in the end the bastards of the world are going to hand people like me all we need to finish them on a plate, unaware they're even doing so...
You might also take note that folk like me are WHY ten year old kids know more about politics than our parents ever did, aiding and abetting future generations in our responsibility as their precursors.

And one thing I refuse to do is lie to them, sell them a bullshit story about how they should forgive and forget, when I know damn well it's a trick - or spew them some siren song about how good intentions and a show of numbers will carry the day - I've actually *been* to protests where dumbasses had a total freakout over the fact that they got teargassed or kettled, it was so totally outside of their concept of reality, the bullshit stories they'd been fed, that they just more or less mentally rolled over and flopped around helplessly.

Sure, those speaking truth and standing to power need their saints.
But they need sinners like me, too.
We're all human, in the end.

-Frem

I do not serve the Blind God.

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Tuesday, January 4, 2011 2:18 PM

DREAMTROVE


Sig

I disagree: The water and air quality in the US is worse than ever. The number of toxins lacing our environment and the potency of those toxins has increased dramatically with our ability to make them.

Sure, it doesn't *appear* that way, but I'm sure I wouldn't be researching brain cancer right now if it weren't so. The thing is that both industry and govt. in the US have gotten a lot sneakier at hiding pollution. They avoid black smoke and glowing green ooze, and go for things that *look* like water and air, but are clearly not.

What the socialist govt. of China does environmentally is truly appalling, but my current pet peeve is what the Bolivarian Socialists in Brazil and surrounding countries are doing.

In the US, things like Fracking and the Gulf Oil Spill, Mountaintop Removal are not just irresponsible, I've become convinced that they are deliberately poisoning the environment as a means of killing the people, and yes, they are capitalists when they do it.

You were closest to the mark when you said corporation and govt. were both just forms in which people organize. My point in the false dichotomy is that both are truly horrid, beyond unacceptable, and that the idea that one is the solution to the other is as nonsensical as that Democrats are a solution or Republicans or Soviets are a solution to Nazis. Some choices are lose/lose.

Free Trade is the name given to the opium trade by the british empire. It is as american as our flag I do, personally, favor *a* free market system, but not the one with the name Free Trade, because I know that system, and it's not free, it's a form of global imperialism. Socialism is also a form of global imperialism and the early socialists made absolutely no bones about it, they were quite in favor of the idea. Their modern counterparts are no different.

Also, re: Europe, I'm afraid we have to call it "Europe that was" because now, under the EU, everything is a neocon oligarchy. The Eurozone is modeled on the Federal Reserve, and is no different, it is, in fact, Corporatism, the merger of corporation and Govt., or as Mussolini, who coined the term, called it "Fascim."

It's worth noting that Fascism and Elitism have the same root concept. The rule of power. Elitism would I guess be the rule of the superior, but it is the same idea. Populism would in theory be the rule of the people, but it never works out that way, just like it doesn't with Democracy.

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