I still say though to all of you people that hate big business, and corporations. Give up your job,your clothes, your car, your computer, your house, and don't but any food. They come from big business.
That's like saying "If you find problems with AH, then you aren't allowed to play it."
Remeber, people provide things because someone buys them, and thus makes profit out of those who buy. Customers are entitled to an opinion because the the modern captialistic way of life is a life of exchange. We don't have to thank the 'big business' for anything. They aren't running it for free. The "in-debt" conditions are mutual.
However, the problem lies in the fact that because human life is inevitably affected greatest by material environment, in an environment where things can be exclusively privatized, effectively things and issues that are vital to the quality of life, and most often life itself can also be privatized by a few who make profit of it. So, it is in truth a simple matter to control and suppress people not directly(as in the past history in the form of slavery, peonage, peasantry, or etc) but indirectly, by buying and altering the material conditions around them.
For instance, one of the classic examples of such problems are welfare in the form of financial insurances, or hospital services. They aren't free, and thus, they are distributed to those who can afford it. This meets a fundamental crisis when it is involved with "life", something that cannot be measured with money. As I mentioned in some other thread, 70 million North Koreans are in a state of poverty. That's enough to condemn the regime as being inhuman and incompetent. However, turn your eyes on to yourselves and then you can see 45 million Americans are homeless, illiterate, living under minimum/no wage conditions, can not receive welfare, and are hopelessly beyond salvation by sympathetic form of philanthropic/financial "welfare" provided by private institutions.
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The comments on "big businesses" are yes, idealistic and often very simplistic. However, it is a popular sentiment and carries with it an inkling of truth about life in modern society, just as the cynical "Dilbert" strip simplifies life of white-collar citizens with a satire and yet, grabs a certain amount of truth inside.
Whilst some comment of the most "conservative" era in American history as the 1950's, a closer look easily reveals the condition and quality of life in 2002 is nothing like what it was in 1950 - where everyone could have their own homes, full-time jobs, cars, receive active welfare, receive job security, go to school with less money and etc etc. People living in 2002 are tolerating conditions which would have been intolerable in 1950.