I understand that I am very late for posting my blog for "Corporations". It was about a week ago that I read it but have not been able to get back to it.
I am writing an essay on the exactly opposite argument that this book gives, and have been able to gather some very interesting information. First off, I feel that this book is trying to attack the entire corporate system, but is only giving out the extreme examples. There are many, MANY corporations that are doing fairly freely within the corporate law of "profit priority". Instead, this book keeps on taking up BP multiple times. They first show a good image of BP, then go and present how bad they actually are, in attempts to convince the reader that all corporations are bad. But I am not convinced just by a single corporation that the entire corporate system is hiding secrets.
There are, however, many arguments that I agree to. I feel that stating corporations as "people" is a very absurd thing. How can we call a system a human!? Even if we did, a person without a moral is not a person. Corporations are given the merits of a person, yet do not need to have any morals or are not put in prison when doing something bad. If they want to follow the path of a "person", they should create laws where corporations are put behind bars, where they are not allowed to do any business for a certain period of time. The funds are frozen, and the stocks cannot be extracted. Maybe then will corporations be permitted to be called "person".
I'm looking forward to my presentation, where I can directly object to Rab's view of corporations as the evilness in the world.
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