I both agree and disagree with this whole post.
Look back at history. I will admit my statement was a tad sweeping, but throughout history people have been screwing one another over for the slightest advantage. Take for example the 2008 crash. The bankers, unless they had recently hit their heads very forcefully, knew that sub-prime mortgages were bound to eventually collapse and take everyone else down but they did it anyway.
Yes, it is a tad sweeping, and yes, bankers are part of the minority of sociopaths.
In spite of what various politicians on the right (especially here in the US) tell us, Corporations are not People. If corporations
are people, then they're sociopaths.
Corporations are a social constructions that are operated by rational people. In a sense, because they seek to accomplish a goal and go about it in a rational manner, they are "conscious" entities. But because they don't actually have any emotional motivations or needs (the structure of decision making is designed to limit the influence of emotion) they have no 'conscience'. Consciousness without conscience is "sociopathy" as far as I'm concerned.
Corporations feel no shame, they have no sense of guilt, they have no social drives, or empathy. No nagging conscience keeps them awake at night. They will do whatever they can get away with.
Normal people are not like this.
Look at the Blitz in the 1940's. Forget all the propaganda about Brits coming together and all being a force for good. There was widespread crime, especially looting.
Link. Link. Link.
Your links actually demonstrate the opposite, that only a very small minority take advantage of their neighbors. And remember, the nation was under wartime rationing, so most people were short on things as it was. So
even among a population facing deprivation, only a very small percentage actually took part in looting. Most figures I've seen place sociopaths at about 4% of the population.
Look at The Soviet Union. What started out as a mass revolution by the stamped on lowest classes turned into a monster of a state, rife with kickbacks, fraud, mass murder and oppression of those it claimed to be there to help on a scale potentially worse than that of the Tsarist system it replaced.
The Soviet Union is an excellent example of what happens when a sociopath gets loose among the earnest revolutionaries. Stalin is the ultimate bogyman of the objectivist. Unfortunately they seem to think that granting corporations total deregulation will prevent despotism.
These experiments demonstrate how social pressures actually reinforce conformity. I think the wrong lesson to take from this is that human nature is cynical and self serving. The principal which they clearly demonstrate is that humans are social animals and that their behavior will conform to social norms. If those norms are altruistic and fair, then they will tend to behave in that way.
My own opinion (for which I have no study or data to back up) is that people are naturally altruistic, and members of a society that reinforces altruism will all benefit (so long as we figure out a way of identifying and ostracising the sociopaths)
When put in a situation where it would benefit those nearest and dearest, people can turn on their own, and willingly do. Sure, I might have been hyperbolic (it was late and I was tired, after all) but human nature conspires against itself. Whenever there is an absence of regulatory systems, those with the money call the shots. In those situations, they are more likely to use their influence against those complaining, and most "regular" people are more likely to conform.
Altruism is a complex human behavior. I don't think such sweeping statements can be made about it. I can (and sometimes do) behave very selfishly, but I can also be quite altruistic. Most people who consider themselves good and trustworthy will still profit from the crimes of others if those crimes are sufficiently adjudicated. For example, we may complain about the actions of a particular corporation, yet we often profit as shareholders (through mutual fund investments and retirement accounts) from those very actions. We may decry child labor, yet without a second thought we buy cheap clothes off the rack at Walmart.
As a general rule, the more removed we are from another individual (geographically or socially), the less likely we are to be altruistic towards that individual..