Thursday, April 2, 2009

from NY to Israel Sultan Reveals The Stories Behind the News







Are Governments more Trustworthy than Corporations?


Posted: 01 Apr 2009 06:54 PM PDT







The big sales pitch for socialism over free enterprise, for the government
taking control of corporations, is that it's for "the protection of the people."
But while there's no question that corporations are often corrupt,
monopolistic and abusive-- so is government. There's a simple reason
for that, guns don't kill people, and corporations don't steal from or abuse
people. Only people do. And people will take those human failings with
them into the boardroom as much as they will into the halls of
government.


Corporate corruption is a reflection of human greed. Corporate
misbehavior is the product of universal human moral failings,
which exist just as much in any other highly organized institution,
including government. There is nothing uniquely "evil" about
corporations, and nothing uniquely "good" about government.
Both are examples of human institutions, which contain plenty
of examples of both good and bad behavior.

To believe that government should control corporations, you would
have to assume one of four things.

1. That government is more competent than corporations.

2. That government is more representative than corporations are.

3. That government is more moral, incorruptible and ethical than
corporations are.

4. That government is more trustworthy because it lacks a profit motive.

I think we can safely throw the idea of Number 1 out the window
right off the bat.

Most things the government does cost more, are less efficient and less
likely to succeed. As much as corporations fail, the government fails more.

The average government office does less for more money, with less
transparency, more overhead, worse customer service and no workable
plan for the future. That applies to government in general as well. The only
reason government survives is that it can do what corporations can't, forcibly
tax businesses and the general public to keep funding its own ventures.

Furthermore many top government officials have washed out of the
business world, e.g. Bush and Obama. That doesn't suggest a high standard
of competence when the highest leaders in government are people who couldn't
succeed in business.
So to argue that government control of business will be in any result in
those businesses being better run, as Obama claims, is contradicted by the
sheer weight of evidence and common sense. We can take a look at the
results of Communism and Socialism, as well as a practical comparison of
how well government agencies vs businesses operate to reach that conclusion.

On to Number 2 then, are governments more representative than
corporations?

On the surface of it, the answer might be yes. After all we believe in one
man, one vote. Corporations answer to their shareholders, the rich.
Government is supposed to answer to the common man. Of course if
you seriously believe that, you're either in elementary school or
hopelessly naive. Governments and corporations both answer to
much the same people. The odds of getting your Congressman or
Senator's ear greatly improves with the amount of money you donate
to his campaign.
Don't have any money? Better hope he's feeling charitable or can
use your case to promote himself. Which is much the same reason
corporations help people.

Representative government depends on elections within a limited
party system. Winning an election requires money. The money
comes from many of the same people who run the corporations.
Representative government turns out to be more representative to
the rich than to the people they represent.


For that matter you can buy a few shares of stock and ask a question
at a shareholder's meeting of a corporate CEO. Try getting into a
Cabinet meeting and asking the President a question, without
spending the next 48 hours in a jail cell.

In sum total, government is not particularly more representative
than corporations are.

On to Number 3 then, are governments less subject to corruption
and more ethical than corporations are?

The spectacle of CEO's being marched off to jail is counterbalanced
with no shortage of Congressmen being marched off to jail as well.
Corporate corruption is counterbalanced with no shortage of
government corruption. Embezzlement, corruption, lies, fraud,
deceit, abuse of power and all that grab bag of malevolence is just
as present in government as in corporate life.

Even the most die hard liberal would have trouble denying that
government is any more moral and ethical than the corporation.
With that we come to Number 4, that the structure of government
makes it more ethical or moral than corporations, because its calling
is nobler and it lacks a profit motive.

On the face of it this notion seems absurd. Government officials get paid
hefty salaries, perhaps smaller ones than corporate executives, but at the
higher levels far more than the average American can expect to see. The
frequency with which bribes and kickbacks occur, makes the idea of
confusing non-profit with the lack of a profit motive even more absurd.
But is profit motive itself a bad thing? That question underlies the
left's preference for regulating businesses using government. For championing
"non-profits" over privatization. And that comes from their knee jerk
opposition to capitalism itself.

The underlying argument goes back a long way but it ties into the most
basic questions of civil rights and human freedoms. And the most
dangerous of those questions is, do we consider property to be
individually owned or collectively owned?

That particular argument predates the French Revolution. It split some
of the major Enlightenment philosophers as well as some key figures
in the American Revolution. And it is at the heart of the question of
whether Free Enterprise and commerce is a Natural Right, or a
regulated activity.
If commerce is a natural right like speech or religion or assembly, then
not only can government have only a limited ability to regulate it at
best, but it has no moral right to regulate it.

While the Constitution never went so far, the American experiment
fell on the side of free enterprise and individual property ownership. That
was not however the case in Europe, where ironically many of the same
people working to liberate the common man from the state of peasantry
and serfdom, did so by advancing collective theories of property. Rather
than attacking monarchy by ending its monopolization of land and
opening it up to individual use and exploitation, they instead viewed
all land as being the common property of the people. Which meant
that no individual could own it, and only a body of men who acted
on "behalf of the people" could supervise its use. Namely the
government.

Thus when Lenin spoke of giving land to the peasants, he meant it in
the collective sense in which all Russians would own the land in a
collective sense, without any of them actually owning a square inch
of land. But you don't have to go as far as Lenin to see plenty of
examples of this same view of collective property ownership in
Europe and America. The utilitarian idea that property laws exist
only to promote what the government decides is the general welfare
is at the heart of virtually every Western political system today.
It is at the heart of the UN's treaties about deep water mining or
exploitation of the moon, which we have accepted as law.


And from that same standpoint, the government can and should regulate
and control any and every aspect of business it chooses. From a
Constitutional standpoint, it's the right of individuals to engage in
commerce. From the Collectivist standpoint, individuals owning
property and running companies can only do so at the behest of the
guardians of that collective property, namely the government.
Business and corporations from a Collectivist perspective are a form
of robbery from the "collective", the people who actually own all of it
in sum. Property is not a right, it's theft. Commerce is exploitation.
Business is crime. And the victim is "the government" which should
be collectively managing all that industry, as Obama did when he
mandated changes to the boards and management of major banks
and now General Motors.

This Collectivist perspective explains why many liberals insist on
advancing the disproven position that government is in any way
more fit to control corporations, than their own executives. It is
at the heart of the long war against business in the West.
And so we come to the reason for the liberal preference for
government and non-profits, the guardians of the "collective
property" of the people, over for profit corporations. It is at the
heart of it a debate about the nature of civil rights and natural law,
over the question of whether we have a right to commerce, or only a
"permission to commerce" under the thumb of the appropriate
government official. That is the debate we should be having now. And
as the Ninth or Tenth have not sufficed, it may be time to settle that
debate with one more amendment.













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