Re: So, why are Gibson guitars being subjected to a Federal witch hunt?
Every group enterprise needs a governing structure of some kind. The stockholder corporation is a convenient structure to allow many hundreds or thousands of people to participate in the fortunes of a business enterprise. It's not the only structure, and corporations are not the only way to organize a business venture. I don't think there is anything inherently more frightening about a corporation than there is about a privately held business venture, or a big university, for that matter. I think people are understandably put off by the amoral nature of corporate governance and direction -- we tend to look for good and evil in all things, and most business organizations don't really have a moral code, at least not one that is relevant to individual human beings.
And, to quibble perhaps, corporations and other businesses are NOT, IMHO, creations of the state -- they are creations of their founders and incorporators and investors, and then are supported by their customers and employees. The State merely authorizes their operation, within regulated limits. Once in awhile the State creates a big semi-business enterprise, like Fannie Mae, but those are the exceptions, and are rarely noteworthy for their return on the investment.
Every group enterprise needs a governing structure of some kind. The stockholder corporation is a convenient structure to allow many hundreds or thousands of people to participate in the fortunes of a business enterprise. It's not the only structure, and corporations are not the only way to organize a business venture. I don't think there is anything inherently more frightening about a corporation than there is about a privately held business venture, or a big university, for that matter. I think people are understandably put off by the amoral nature of corporate governance and direction -- we tend to look for good and evil in all things, and most business organizations don't really have a moral code, at least not one that is relevant to individual human beings.
And, to quibble perhaps, corporations and other businesses are NOT, IMHO, creations of the state -- they are creations of their founders and incorporators and investors, and then are supported by their customers and employees. The State merely authorizes their operation, within regulated limits. Once in awhile the State creates a big semi-business enterprise, like Fannie Mae, but those are the exceptions, and are rarely noteworthy for their return on the investment.
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