Looks like fascism. And now they want to take the guns.
Litterally in the wikipedia description:
“characterized by dictatorial power, forcible suppression of opposition and strong regimentation of society and of the economy which came to prominence in early 20th-century Europe.”
It is prefaced by ultra right-wing but that is a misnomer. Nothing Capitalistic about German or Italian Fascists. It was an unholy union of state and industry that brutalized society with only party rhetoric allowed, kinda like we have now with the large media companies (social, movies and tv). Large corporations and congress are one and the same, interdependant and pushing politics.
Only LARGE corporations. You see, a small business cares a lot about their products and the need of its costumers, when it has grown to a certain size, its focus is shifted to sales and marketing of the existing products; when it reaches to a near monopoly size, its top priority is politics. It would spend more money on lobbying and various social programs to push their "cultural value" than on product manufacturing and development.
Even private companies have their issues. Though I see your point in public companies, where one could be toppled by just propaganda regardless if their product by scrapping their share price, and of course pressuring shareholders.
Looks like fascism. And now they want to take the guns.
Litterally in the wikipedia description: “characterized by dictatorial power, forcible suppression of opposition and strong regimentation of society and of the economy which came to prominence in early 20th-century Europe.” It is prefaced by ultra right-wing but that is a misnomer. Nothing Capitalistic about German or Italian Fascists. It was an unholy union of state and industry that brutalized society with only party rhetoric allowed, kinda like we have now with the large media companies (social, movies and tv). Large corporations and congress are one and the same, interdependant and pushing politics.
Only LARGE corporations. You see, a small business cares a lot about their products and the need of its costumers, when it has grown to a certain size, its focus is shifted to sales and marketing of the existing products; when it reaches to a near monopoly size, its top priority is politics. It would spend more money on lobbying and various social programs to push their "cultural value" than on product manufacturing and development.
Would it be large corporations or just public corporations?
I think a lot of our issues would go away if the stock market didn’t exist.
Even private companies have their issues. Though I see your point in public companies, where one could be toppled by just propaganda regardless if their product by scrapping their share price, and of course pressuring shareholders.
I’m not saying they are hypocrits, though they are that too. Just saying they are text book fascists and it’s about time to have a new Nuremberg trial