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If corporations are so evil, so says /r/politics, then why did this guy even get any rights on his "Rome, Sweet Rome" story?
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I'm talking about this link if you haven't seen it:

http://www.reddit.com/r/reddit.com/comments/lbq91/congrats_to_prufrock451_his_story_rome_sweet_rome/

Warner Bros and co could have easily ripped off the idea from the website and never said a word to him, but they didn't do that. Why? Surely the CEOs of these companies are greedy, right?

Every day, day in and day out, we witness acts of kindness and good faith from large organizations (Apple, B&M Gates Foundation, Wal-Mart, Pepsi, and more).

Almost all of the vile in the "corporate" world comes from the financial sector which tradition has it is the most closely tied industry to government -- for a very fundamental reason.

Why can't /r/politics see this? People with common goals working together under a banner are not inherently bad; people are not evil.

That being said, I believe in freedom, voluntarism and anarcho-capitalism, but not because of blind faith. I believe it because there's a logical deduction from the non-aggression principle and moral behavior that must move us there.

/rant

(Did I post this in the wrong subreddit?)

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13 years ago