Man, armed with microphone and camera, wanders through Taxpayer March On Washington, interviewing crowd members on different issues. So cringe worthy, you'll dislocate your shoulders.
Comments:
- Attribution: I copied this from Fark.com.
Post a Comment- Preamble to the Constitution:
"We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America."
Five goals:
1) Establish Justice
2) Insure domestic Tranquility
3) Provide for the common defense
4) Promote the general Welfare
5) Secure the Blessing of Liberty
Universal unbiased Fairness, Peace at Home, Security and Sovereignty, Shared Prosperity, Freedom from Tyranny. Simple wishes that are complex to support.
What troubles me is the rejection of the 4th tenet. But worse the ignorance among so many that the committment is embedded in our foundation.
"We, the people ..." has become distorted to "Me first, to hell with the rest".
It is what saddens me most.
Excerpt for an interesting New Republic article:
Comments:
- Here ! Here !
Balanced rationality is the key.
Risk without reward is saintly but not something you will find in the hyper-materialistic culture we live in. Risk without ENFORCED personal consequence is the balancing weight that is missing in the financial sectors.
Lack of consequence is akin to 'insanity' defense in the law. We seem to be conceding that the banking sector is, but definition, insane and therefore cannot be held responsible.
One point the article did not address and I feel is relevant as well is the status of a corporation as a entity, an entity without morals, ethics or intelligence yet possessing the powers and rights of a real person to enter into contracts, accrue benefits, seek protection under the law. Yet a corporation is not explicitly a real person, it is a legalistic definition of a conspiracy to make a profit while limiting the loss consequences to whatever assets are directly committed to the corporation's officers to manage. The contributors are shielded because they have to NO DIRECT role in the management and use of the contributed assets. Sounds reasonable but who is responsible?
Shouldn't then the officers, acting as the moral, ethical and intelligence actors behind the facade bear the consequences of their failures? Or are they not responsible because they are 'insane' because they cannot distinguish between right and wrong?
Perhaps the remedy for corporate officers who act recklessly, irresponsibly, carelessly and without prudence should be the same as for an individual declared 'not guilty by reason of insanity'. Perhaps we should commit them to psychiatric hospitals where they can get the needed therapy to return them to rationality.
Post a Comment- Bonuses are paid either employment agreements. For the highest executives this is managed by the Board of Directors Compensation Committee. A bit lower down the food chain it is included in the performance evaluation processes for an individual, division, or overall profitability taken from the corporate financial statements.
Which leads me back to my point, the BoD are acting in a direct management role determining the distribution of assets. They are responsible for forming the agreements that 'separate' performance reward and performance penalties from the realities of fiscal operations. It is they who have allowed 'insane' agreements to exist.
We, the investors, have only one opportunity to influence who is on a BoD: the annual stockholders meeting. But 'votes' are tied to the number of shares owned and large stakeholders can and do easily overwhelm the vote of small stakeholders unless and until the small stakeholders form a coalition voting block.
In short, it is a stacked game favoring the large stakeholders who are more and more frequently the very executive being awarded bonuses and other corporations who hold large block of shares, like mutual funds, investment banks, etc.
While it seems reasonable to tie executive compensation to share ownership (stock options) in order to incentivize them to build share equity, it creates an suspicious, if not untenable, conflict of interest.
At heart of this mess is many of the issues raised by Ralph Nader in his campaigns against the legal hegemony of artifical entities.
Labor Day 2009
Labels: jobs, labor, unemployment
Comments:
Post a Comment- Looks like the banks are going to "rescue" (wink wink) us. You know the "payday" loans that Ohio just voted to make illegal? Apparently that only applies to state chartered institutions so the nationally chartered banks are stepping in to fill the void. I guess the billions of tax dollars we gave them only served to whet their appetites.