• @ziggurism
    link
    521 year ago

    I’m not following. You’d be ok with risking beheading to overthrow a monarch. But you won’t overthrow a corporate CEO?

    You think corporations don’t exist under monarchy?

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      2
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      I feel like it’s more about distribution of responsibility. If you have a king, he’s either a good king and runs things well, or a bad king and runs things poorly. A King’s success is generally measured by the quality of his kingdom, which is at least somewhat tied to the wellbeing of subjects.

      In a corporation, even if you have a comparitively “good” CEO, he’s still answerable to the shareholders, and thus obligated to raise the stock value by any means necessary, a factor which is not necessarily dependent on the wellbeing of his employees.

    • DomilleOP
      link
      fedilink
      1
      edit-2
      1 year ago

      no, I don’t. They have far more complex structures. Just because you remove a CEO, does not mean the whole company will go away. How many CEOs have been fired and replaced? Plenty. These companies still remain though, corrupting everything around them.

      • @megasin1
        link
        61 year ago

        I will say I’m the UK we still have a king that we couldn’t physically overthrow although we could possibly remove them constitutionally if the democracy aligned in that direction. However we do still have amazon here.

        I think the difference between UK and US for workers rights comes from how we treat lobbying differently.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        2
        edit-2
        1 year ago

        Yeah, but the point is that corporations still exist and rule in most monarchies at this very moment. You would just be adding an extra layer of something to overthrow.

      • @bi_tux
        link
        -21 year ago

        How many monarchs have been replaced? Plenty. Just think of anchient Egypt.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    321 year ago

    jeff bezos is a monarch. he has an empire with people doing literal slave-work and practically untouchable by the judicial system. if you are not willing to overthrow him now, you won’t be willing to overthrow a “literal” monarch. same goes for every billionaire.

    as there are middlemen protecting the billionaires now -like mass media, military industrial complex, heavily armed local police, union busters, corrupt judicial system etc.- there will be middlemen protecting the monarch then.

    you think you would be willing to overthrow the monarch because it’s not real, a fantasy. but you’re willingly turning a blind eye to the exact same thing that is real and happening right now.

    • @Cinnamon3431
      link
      -31 year ago

      except if you overthrow bezos, other billionaires will just take his place, put the insurgeants (is this a word?) in prison and the system persists

      • @bi_tux
        link
        -21 year ago

        You don’t overthrow people, you overthrow systems

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          11 year ago

          and as if like there will be one monarch to rule them all! all by himself, waiting by the dock, preparing for a duel.

          just because we don’t officially call it monarchy, people think that it’s a whole new system. every critique you have against monarchy is valid for the billionaires and vice versa.

          • @bi_tux
            link
            -11 year ago

            Oligarchy and monarchy are not the same, but have similarities

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    221 year ago

    What makes you think a monarchy would do anything to combat a corpo hellscape? If history’s any indication, they’d probably make all the CEOs lords and turn everybody else into an indentured peasantry.

  • @gundog48
    link
    201 year ago

    A company is much easier to crash than a monarch or government. A government will lock you up or kill you for planning to overthrow them.

      • Your Huckleberry
        link
        41 year ago

        Don’t buy anything from Amazon. Convince others to join your cause.

        • DomilleOP
          link
          fedilink
          11 year ago

          Right. All 10 of us will make a huge difference…

          • @[email protected]
            cake
            link
            fedilink
            21 year ago

            Why do you need to make a difference in the existence of Amazon. Stop trying to save the world and start trying to save your block.

            Like, maybe call the city and report a pothole or something. Get a low hanging branch trimmed so it doesn’t hit a biker.

            You’re right. Even with the might of 10 people you’d be a mote of dust on Amazon’s windshield. And you don’t have 10 people you have 1.

            Amazon is named after a mighty river. And you’ve got a little beach shovel and and a bucket and you’re asking about how to stop the river.

            The trouble with someone trying to find the biggest machine they can and pilot it, is that they might actually succeed in getting to those controls some day and then because they didn’t work themselves up from small to larger vehicles, they have no idea how to drive it and they crash.

            Doing good works is about more than obtaining power. You also need competence. Like, a software developer is omnipotent in the realm he’s working in. Doesn’t mean that omnipotence actually results in anything valuable being done.

  • @Sylver
    link
    191 year ago

    Same way you overthrow a king. Without exaggeration or sarcasm, we can’t really discuss those methods civilly, but history can always repeat itself.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    91 year ago

    It would be far easier to start a populist movement that reigned in corporations. The problem with revolutions is you never know who’s going to to end up on top at the end. Most likely the new regime will be just as bad as the old. I think what we actually need is more democracy. I like the idea of a democratic referendum that allows the people to force the government into action.

    • @killernova
      link
      71 year ago

      What if the people who make and enforce the regulations are the very same people who run these corporations?

        • DomilleOP
          link
          fedilink
          81 year ago

          they are corrupted by the very same corporations though

        • @mycroft
          link
          61 year ago

          I mean, if you make decisions that affect the corporations profits directly, give a benefit to one company over another and then increase your holdings in one company or another before the benefits are announced to everyone else… you’re a person who runs the corporation, and never has to be on the board. You make profits from the shift in the stock market, and you can even go long if you think you’ll have even more positive changes to make for that corporations benefit.

          If you’re confused ask Nanci and Paul Pelosi, they’ve the epitomal example.

        • @killernova
          link
          31 year ago

          A lot of them are appointed former execs of the corporations they’re supposed to regulate, and in America corporations are people so they can donate to PAC’s and whatnot all in the light of day to influence policy making. There’s no telling what happens when the lights are off. Thus, they are employed by these corporations gracious donations while at the same time placed in a position to make policy in government. Tail meet dog.

          You think they’re campaigning off of grandma’s $5 donation?

  • @ConsciousLochNess
    link
    11 year ago

    Man you would love NRx-type thinking and people like Mencius Moldbug if you’re interested in this line of thought.

  • @bi_tux
    link
    -11 year ago

    I think a lot of people here have a weird understanding of monarchy and revolutions.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      31 year ago

      When the entirety of your experience with monarchies and revolutions is a line in a history textbook, it seems a lot easier and less painful than it is.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    -31 year ago

    Same - monarchy’s flaw is that it’s clear who is in charge and who can be (ultimately) blamed. The same thing is simultaneously it’s advantage - it’s honest. For fans of voting - you can have elected monarchy as was a case with few countries ;)

    • @bi_tux
      link
      -21 year ago

      Not really, or do you think, that all those child monarchs in anchient times were actually ruling?