Message from @UOC
Discord ID: 363429531622834176
Not sure I'm knowledgeable enough to do it justice
just wing it
wait in that article @devolved how is the whole lineup black but the quarterback is white
i hope this ruins football for everyone
Quarterblack
poor little white guy
that's so shit-stirrey lol
Marquis Williams Did Nothing Wrong Hail Israel No Lives Matter
I don't even know what a corporation is. I have my techné and that's it
I don't need to know "How the solar system is composed"
But I've heard that they have fewer liabilities than individuals, that they have more rights than mere hierarchies of individuals banded together would have
That's silly and there's no reason for it
But a lot of what's bad about them still comes from how they can control the government
If you limit the government, you limit the corporations
A powerful government that acts benevolently and wisely is great, but will it really do that? Do you really want to entrust any government with power?
a corporation is any of a number of legal entities, each having a set of rights, powers, obligations, etc defined by the law that creates the category.
A corporation is formed when an individual or group of individuals creates it usually by filing certain documents of incorporation with a state
the corporation then exists as a legal fiction and can own property, conduct business, etc
the shareholders of the corporation (depending on the type) may or may not be shielded from forms of liability incurred by corporation itself while conducting business
bankruptcy, torts, etc
Ok
They're intrinsically undesirable
Ownership is fine, this crap stinks bad potential
@UOC what is the legal distinction between a corporation and a regular business?
If there even is one
business isn't really a legal term
everyone conducting transactions is a business
but not everyone is a "corporation" for example there are sole practitioners/proprietorships, partnerships, etc
usually the dividing line is a protection from liability based on the legal fiction that the corporation is an "entity" that can be sued, but the shareholder members can't be sued
I see
its exactly the same as a government bureaucracy @TendieLord
e.g, state department functionaries running shit
and never having to take any heat
yes, it's conceptually similar in many respects to the immunity that a lot of government actors enjoy
you can "pierce the corporate veil" and sue the members of the corporation under certain circumstances, but it's not easy
GOVERNMENT IS A SELF-INTERESTED CORPORATION