Executing Corporations
Oct. 16th, 2011 11:18 amTheres a meme going round "I'll believe that corporations are people when Texas executes one". But Texas "executes" hundreds or thousands of corporations per year, most famously Enron. Bankruptcy is the exact equivalent of execution for corporations -- it's the state exerting its power and causing the corporation to cease to exist. So I guess that corporations are people.
(no subject)
Date: 2011-10-16 01:44 pm (UTC)But a more serious issue is: the enterprise may be profitable, but is its continued existence beneficial to society at large? Consider the whole investment banking/subprime/CDS/CDO mess. Clearly it was beneficial to the participating organizations -- until it all collapsed in a heap -- but as far as civilization in general was concerned, it's hard to see what it produced that was of value. Again: cigarette manufacturers?
I can create lots of economic activity (and profitable activity at that!) by throwing bricks through windows (thus giving glaziers and insurance companies a lot of exercise). But that doesn't mean that doing so is good for the public commonweal. I submit that there are corporations whose business model is the equivalent of brick-throwing, i.e. it generates lots of turnover but is actively damaging to the public interest. And we don't want to turn them around and set them back up on their feet: we want to shut such activities down, permanently.
(no subject)
Date: 2011-10-16 02:03 pm (UTC)To stretch the people analogy again, you're looking at incarceration and lethal injection as if it were a good way of cleaning up a bad neighbourhood, when maybe employment and infrastructure investment would be more to the purpose.