HansMustermann
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Mar 2, 2009
- Messages
- 23,741
Wait... Michael Moore's final conclusion is that the replacement for capitalism is... democracy????
Is it frightening to anyone else that he apparently doesn't know the difference between a political system and an economic one?
I'm not a Michael Moore fan, but I don't believe that the two are that separated any more. Sadly.
The trivial example is: it's pretty obvious that corporations effectively influence some decisions with their campaign contributions, lobbyists, PR bullcrap, bribes, astroturfing campaigns, etc, more than all the population combined. I'm sorry, but that's not what democracy was supposed to mean.
But that's not the only thing.
There are a lot of things that we'd scream bloody murder about, if the state did them, but when a mega-corporation does them... well, that's ok then.
Another trivial example: the big "OMG teh politicians want to control the games" fight in the states is really only about what is the threshold where gory games should be labelled 18+ (AO) versus 17+ (M). Why is a year that important? Well, because of one single corporation: Wal Mart. It's the biggest retailer and it won't carry AO titles. Effectively one corporation is already sorta unilaterally regulating the games market, and everyone is apparently ok with that, even when they won't give their elected government the same right. Content is removed, games re-rated, cut-scenes reworked, just to please WalMart. And that's apparently ok, because OMG capitalism is sacro-sanct. It seems to me utterly illogical that people grant effectively the same regulation powers to a corporation we don't control, that they would instantly get paranoid if an ellected representative even hinted at getting.
There's nothing even "free market" about it. It's a unilateral, one-corporation decision which regulates a whole market. WTF?
And you don't see how democracy would actually _be_ an alternative to that? What's the difference? Both effectively decided on a regulation. The only difference I see is that the population at large can control the government in a democracy.
E.g., if the government were to ban a book or movie, everyone would scream "censorship." But when Disney gets another copyright extension just to _prevent_ a movie from being seen... well, that's ok, then. It's capitalism, see? Must be good.
Again, what's the difference? Both keep a movie from being shown.
E.g., people already are changing their behaviour because prospective employees will Google them. We've reached a more distributed version of the Soviet scare that they have a dossier on you, and anything you say or do can bite you in the rear later. The chilling effect actually worked better than Stalin's executions and mass deportations to keep the population in line. In the West nowadays it's not the secret police, it's Google and the HR departments. But a lot of people are already changing their behaviour and sticking to only saying or doing what seems ok to be found about them later.
So, again, what's the difference? Effectively a bunch of corporations created the same chilling effect that we scream "tyranny" about when the State does it.
E.g., drug testing. WTF? Since when did it become the corporations the volunteer enforcers of a law that shouldn't even be their business?
Etc.
So, basically, yes, it seems to me like there _is_ a lot of overlap. Yes, I know the difference between a political system and an economic one, but it seems to me like the latter has already muscled in on the former's domain.