Aizle wrote:
Khross wrote:
Your propensity for regulation does not automatically infuse corporations or businesses with the traits you ascribe to them.
Where did you get the idea that I think that regulations infuse traits? Frankly, if corporations or businesses had traits that were centered around being good stewards, we wouldn't need many of the regulations that are out there. The regulations are needed because the companies are incapable or unwilling to regulate themselves.
Do you read English? I'd post the Sam Jackson quote, but this is about 5th or 6th time in the last two weeks you've taken the object of a preposition as the noun it modifies. This isn't an insult by the way; you've repeated the same set of relational operations in other arguments.
That said ...
You basically just said, you believe these companies have these traits and that they would not need regulation without those traits.
Well "traits" is a pretty broad category, but regulation doesn't validate need for regulation or existence of the "wrong doing" that caused the regulation in the first place. Materialism concerns itself predominantly with outcomes; social materialism in particular has a fascinating and problematic eros regarding bad-outcomes: bad-outcomes are always a) someone's fault and b) must be punished.
Your position on regulation, particularly as it relates to Federal policy, the commerce clause, and your moral construct, because I've certain read enough of your prose on this matter to know ...
Your position on regulation is almost wholly driven by that peculiar aspect of the materialist apparatus.
_________________
Corolinth wrote:
Facism is not a school of thought, it is a racial slur.