I can tell you why people are scared of corporations. It's because they transcend nation states and hence democracy. They can pick and choose from different jurisdictions for different purposes. Pay taxes here, use good infrastructure there, conform to environmental standards or labor laws in one country whilst exploiting broken political funding rules in another one.
I can't say this is always bad. Sometimes it helps us avoid authoritarian ideas that various governments subject us to. Sometimes it leads to cheaper goods and services for all of us. But it is definitely scary how large entities controlled by a small wealthy minority wield such disproportionate power.
> It's because they transcend nation states and hence democracy. They can pick and choose from different jurisdictions for different purposes. Pay taxes here, use good infrastructure there, conform to environmental standards or labor laws in one country whilst exploiting broken political funding rules in another one.
None of that I consider to be inherently bad. Democratic states do much worse things, like mass murdering people in wars and imprisoning people for victimless crimes - and all of that states do using money they confiscate from its citizens. Call me when a corporation does anything close to such atrocities.
I merely explained why people are scared of corporations. I didn't say that there isn't anything more scary. But if you think that wars haven't been fought over corporate interests or that corporations, organized crime and governments are always completely seperate things you are very mistaken.
I can't say this is always bad. Sometimes it helps us avoid authoritarian ideas that various governments subject us to. Sometimes it leads to cheaper goods and services for all of us. But it is definitely scary how large entities controlled by a small wealthy minority wield such disproportionate power.