Re: The Supreme Court Corporation of America
Re. the corporate form itself, you're right, it's odd. One of those things you somehow imbibe at the breast in capitalist countries is that a social good is best approached sideways. It's like that parable about a pot of gold you can only dig up if you don't think of a unicorn while you're doing it. (D'oh.) Overall prosperity can only be a by-product of individual self-seeking advancement, not the stated goal.
This has never bothered me much, except when the self-seeking is actually not productive but destructive and parasitical and no-one, generally, seems to notice. (Like with bankers, but don't get me started on those guys!!! )
Your point reminds me of C.B. MacPherson, a Canadian political philosopher I read years back. As far as I recall his main critique aimed at liberalism was this: there is no content here, just the outline for a system with an endless pursuit of material prosperity which rules out any discussion of what any of it is for. (I think I can hear Medved's turret turning this way. ) He argued for embracing a positive, substantive goal: that of maximising every individual's potential. Sound's like a "Worthwhile Canadian Initiative," no? (He was far more interesting than I'm making out FWIW.)
But more generally regarding finance, I have a sinking feeling that the main thing I'm missing in trying to understand our current straits is the obvious insatiable demand for "capital efficiency" that the system generates. Think of the explosion of derivative products that is ongoing. This is generally bemoaned by the likes of me but I suspect that it is the most telling feature of the current landscape: debt-money systems cannot run in reverse so this endless quest for a tiny increment of "efficiency" is all that's keeping the collective bike up. I suspect both that this is the real leverage finance has over the world's governments and that no-one knows how to exit from the predicament.
If my anti-banksters stance is bullsh!t this is probably the best reason why.
Re. accounting, yes and tax policy. zzzz
Originally posted by Aetius Romulous
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This has never bothered me much, except when the self-seeking is actually not productive but destructive and parasitical and no-one, generally, seems to notice. (Like with bankers, but don't get me started on those guys!!! )
Your point reminds me of C.B. MacPherson, a Canadian political philosopher I read years back. As far as I recall his main critique aimed at liberalism was this: there is no content here, just the outline for a system with an endless pursuit of material prosperity which rules out any discussion of what any of it is for. (I think I can hear Medved's turret turning this way. ) He argued for embracing a positive, substantive goal: that of maximising every individual's potential. Sound's like a "Worthwhile Canadian Initiative," no? (He was far more interesting than I'm making out FWIW.)
But more generally regarding finance, I have a sinking feeling that the main thing I'm missing in trying to understand our current straits is the obvious insatiable demand for "capital efficiency" that the system generates. Think of the explosion of derivative products that is ongoing. This is generally bemoaned by the likes of me but I suspect that it is the most telling feature of the current landscape: debt-money systems cannot run in reverse so this endless quest for a tiny increment of "efficiency" is all that's keeping the collective bike up. I suspect both that this is the real leverage finance has over the world's governments and that no-one knows how to exit from the predicament.
If my anti-banksters stance is bullsh!t this is probably the best reason why.
Re. accounting, yes and tax policy. zzzz
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