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- Newsgroups: talk.philosophy.misc
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!swrinde!emory!athena.cs.uga.edu!fuller
- From: fuller@athena.cs.uga.edu (James P. H. Fuller)
- Subject: Re: Response to Mr. Wingate (Was Ayn Rand)
- Message-ID: <1992Nov7.145234.11092@athena.cs.uga.edu>
- Keywords: Rand Religion Wingate
- Organization: University of Georgia, Athens
- References: <9V1uTB1w165w@momad.UUCP>
- Date: Sat, 7 Nov 1992 14:52:34 GMT
- Lines: 47
-
- siphon@momad.UUCP (Stimpson J. Katz) writes:
-
- >I defy Mr. Wingate to demostrate how "greed and incompetence on the part
- >of corporate executives plays a large role in the [unspecified] mess
- >we are in". A much more defensible claim is "greed, incompetence, and
- >stupidiy on the part of government plays a large role in the economic mess
- >we are in."
-
- Anyone who would throw such defiance around simply has not been
- reading _The Wall Street Journal_ for the last fifteen years. The evidence
- for American corporate idiocy during the period is *fully* equal to the
- evidence for government idiocy. I speak as a right-wing loony of twenty
- four carat credentials.
-
-
- >Any Objectivist will be happy to explain to you why incompetent government
- >officials can do much more damage than incompetent corporate officers.
- >Corporate officers can only damage what they own and are subject to being
- >thrown out if they do not do what the stockholders want. Government officials
- >damage anything and everything and are subject to being thrown out if they
- >are caught in an illegal act or lose in an election.
-
- Both Objectivists and Libertarians need to notice that large corpora-
- tions are quasi-governmental. Even President Eisenhower was aware that big
- government, big military and big industry were already largely indistinguish-
- able from one another forty years ago. A number of Fortune 500 multinationals
- are larger, richer, more powerful and control more lives than most of the
- national governments on the planet, and (speaking as a stockholder who has met
- many other stockholders) most stockholders pay no more attention to the doings
- of their corporate officers than do voters to the doings of state senators
- from somebody else's district.
-
- During the three decades when GM was making outstandingly shoddy cars and
- tossing the U.S. car market to foreigners, did the stockholders pay the slight-
- est attention? They did not. Were any GM officers or directors ever thrown
- out because of their pinheaded performance? They were not. And did this
- example of prolonged corporate idiocy (only one among hundreds that _WSJ_
- readers could cite) do government-sized damage to the country? It did.
-
-
- I believe *most* strongly in private enterprise, private property and
- all the various other privacies. I also believe that calling large com-
- panies (or indeed *any* huge organization of human beings) "private" is to
- distort the meaning of the term beyond usefulness.
-
- -- jphf
-
-