Anti-corporate activismAnti-corporate activists believe that the increasingly massive corporations are becoming equally immune to the law. These corporations, they believe, are invading people's privacy, manipulating political issues, and psychologically influencing the public at large to their own benefit. Some evidence that supports this believe includes invasive advertising (adware, spam, telemarketing, etc.), massive corporate campaign contributions in democratic elections, national news stories about corporate corruption (Martha Stewart and Enron, for example), and various anti-corporate books (most notably the science fiction novel Nineteen Eighty-Four by George Orwell). Critics of this philosophy argue governments pass plenty of laws restricting the actions of corporations and that lawbreaking companies and executives are caught and punished. Corporation leaders, the critics say, are not inherently more evil than anyone else and so are no more likely to attempt atrocities or large-scale criminal activity than the general population. Anti-corporate activists often allie themselves with other activists, such as environmental activists or animal-rights activists in an attempt to help level the field against what they see as a much more powerful opponent. A well-known fictional anti-corporate activist is Larry Finkelstein on the TV show Dharma & Greg. |
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"#3 pencils and quadrille pads." - Seymoure Cray (1925-1996) when asked what CAD tools he used to design the Cray I supercomputer; he also recommended using the back side of the pages so that the lines were not so dominant. |
