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Re: "Corporations selling your ass down the road for a dollar"
Declan wrote: [to cypherpunks for no apparent reason]
> >None of this is news to Declan of course. I just get disappointed
> >when I see industry mouthpiece after industry mouthpiece without a
> >single goal in mind except maximum profit. Libertarianism in
> >action - corporations sell your ass down the road for a dollar and
> >some stock options.
>
> I'm sure Michael was upset and not typing clearly. He knows as well
> as anyone that libertarians are not pro-business; they're
> pro-individual rights.
Except, of course, that *businesses* count as individuals in a
libertarian world. Yes, the corporation, that creation wholly of
government, becomes a sort of super-individual - and of course all
individuals are equal, but some are just a bit more equal.
When I see a libertarian calling for an elimination of all forms of
corporations and a return to sole proprietorships and straight
partnerships as the only form of business, then I'll know he's
ideologically consistent. Until then, pro-business is the only
reasonable way to describe the twisted rationale behind
libertarianism.
Which brings me back to my original point - the AIM representation at
the aforementioned hearings. In Libber-land, there's nothing
reprehensible there. Corporations are lobbying for their "individual
rights", one of them being the right to make maximum profit by
eliminating/marginalizing competitors. Of course the rights they are
lobbying for may infringe on some others' rights, perhaps in schools
or libraries which receive federal funds, but hey, that's life for
you. Every individual has an equal chance. And after all, freedom
to speak and receive information is just a preference - some people
prefer to receive more of it than others.
> Libertarians spend quite a bit of time
> complaining about the Republican habit of funding corporate
> subsidies.
But very very little time complaining about the *existence* of
corporations whose primary function is to shield the important folks
who run and fund the corporation from the consequences of their
actions. Come on! This should be a primary offense! Individuals
with no responsibility!
> The pursuit of profit in the free market is not to be discouraged --
> without it, we wouldn't have the Internet we have today.
Heavens, Declan, you're right! All those companies selflessly
creating a network between universities and defense sites, not
seeking a return in five years but looking well into the future.....
Let us praise the foresight of those companies. What were their
names again?
-- Michael Sims