Zenmervolt
Elite member
<< I'm glad you asked. Corporate AmeriKKKa is a hydra-headed multinational MONSTER. They rule on the exploitation of cheap labor in third world places that fall outside the normal protections we provide to people in most cities in this country. We are not angels ofcourse but we at least have the legal options to pursue these evil bastards when they exploit, hurt, endanger, and do all sorts of harm to poor people. Look at the recent Anthrax case. All those white corporatist types, former or current lawyer masters and their pasty faced assistants were treated first for POSSIBLE EXPOSURE. Yet the largely poor, working class, and under-educated people who handled the INFECTED MAIL, hauled the heavy bags, and who have to answer to these blue-suitrf losesr, they were ignored for over a week and their lives placed in incredible danger because they are not considered HUMAN beings. These poor people can be thrown away, re-placed, and re-trained like a bunch of baboons. Now take this same mentality and apply it to some dictator ruled jungle gym of a country in asia or central america and you can begin to cringe at the gross exploitation of the poorest and least educated people on earth. The have no one to defend them, least of all their own governments. They live, breath and work at the mercy of their overseers who can fire them for the least imagined mistake with no hope of possible labor mediation. Corporate GREED is why we are in Afghanistan today. Corporate-
Military structures form the backbone of the secret world government that major powers use to spread their sickening greed and materialist values to the farthest corners of the earth. I would go so far as to say that Multinationals are the TRUE Governments. Forget elections. Forget all these comic book notions of fair representative elections. What exists is pure greed that seeks to control as many lives as possible to further their own political agendas and to create friendly consumer markets for their own subliminal ideas to spread. >>
You, sir, are an idiot. Enjoy your time in college or on the commune, and have fun campaigning for organic hemp, but don't expect me not to laugh when you're living in some low-rent apartment decrying the "socio-economic prejudices" that forced you there. One last thing, it has been proven time and time again by psychologists that subliminal messages do not work, then again, why would you bother to check that out? After all, your entire argument is nothing more than a knee-jerk emotionalist reaction without any supporting evidence.
With that done, I'll move on. What a lot of the anti-technologists fail to realise when they lament that "corporate america" is "dehumanizing" to the workers is that a job is dehumanizing only if you allow it to be. I am reminded of the time my grandfather had to take work on a farm for $1.00 per hour, he didn't complain about the work, he just did it because it had to be done. The people who worked with him said he was the hardest worker there and that he was the most likeable worker as well. It seems interesting to me that this work made him more human. On my college campus there has recently been a large push for a "living wage". The most striking thing to me about this was that the people who were the most vocal in support of the living wage were those who did the least work. The food service workers, for example, are among the laziest people I have ever seen, and it routeinely takes them more than a minute to realise that there is someone standing in line waiting to be checked out. I'm sorry, but the time those people put in is not worth more than minimum wage, in fact, their time is probably worth less than the artificial minimum wage. The neo-luddites can shout all they like about the plight of the proletariat, but the fact remains that the greatest periods of development have been those during which true laissez-faire Capitalism was most closely approximated. Mithrandir2001 was very well spoken when he said, "Companies pay my salary. Companies make products I want. Companies make money for stockholders, a status almost anybody can attain. What is the evil here?". The question, of course, is rhetorical. Any thinking, rational man can see that the only answer is "There is no evil.".
ZV