Brain-damaged woman at center of Wal-Mart suit

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A morality that changes with every decision is no morality at all.

While we may expect moralty to evolve as the individual learns, this in no way approximates the schizophrenic like morality of a majortiy rule on every decision.
 
A morality that changes with every decision is no morality at all.

While we may expect moralty to evolve as the individual learns, this in no way approximates the schizophrenic like morality of a majortiy rule on every decision.
It’s your definition of “morality” that’s changing – you seem to be defining it as something changeable, with no permanent footing.

Morality doesn’t change like that – God establishes right and wrong, and He doesn’t change it.

Now, people may conform to God’s standards today, and not tomorrow – but that’s behavior that changes, not morality.
 
I believe in holding people responsible for their own actions./quote]
Then you must hold management and the Board of Directors responsible for their decisions and actions – and grant them merit and praise, as well, when they do right.
vz71;3550708:
Not the actions of something they may not have had any control of.
If a Wal-Mart clerk short-changes me, that’s her sin. But when the BOD set up policies, when high-level management issues orders, that’s their sin or merit.

And in many cases, we must concede Wal-Mart managers and the BOD have acted responsibly, as good neighbors.
 
Yes – individuals and corporations can become better or worse over time. A man who was once sinful may become virtuous – as Jesus told us.

Seems the morality of the individual is too fluid to be considered morality. He must be amoral
Morality doesn’t change like that – God establishes right and wrong, and He doesn’t change it.

Now, people may conform to God’s standards today, and not tomorrow – but that’s behavior that changes, not morality.
Looks to me that someone is equating a corporation with a person.
This is not the case, and it would be a mistake to apply traits to the corporation as though it was a person.
 
Looks to me that someone is equating a corporation with a person.
Looks to me like someone is denying either the humanity or the responsibility of the people who run the corporations.
 
The BOD rRunning a corporation does not mean the corporation is the BOD.

While considering all your points though, I had a good laugh at something interesting…
How insulting it must be to all of these hard working individuals that their Good deeds are not attributed them, but are instead handed over to the corporation.😃
 
The BOD rRunning a corporation does not mean the corporation is the BOD.
But the BOD running a corporation does mean the BOD runs the corporation.
While considering all your points though, I had a good laugh at something interesting…
How insulting it must be to all of these hard working individuals that their Good deeds are not attributed them, but are instead handed over to the corporation.😃
What irony!!

You are the one who has been saying, “It’s the corporation, not the people in the corporation.” You are the one depriving all those hard-working individuals of the credit for their good deeds.

When a corporation does good or ill, I say the credit (or blame) goes to the people in the corporation who made the decisions and carried them out.
 
But the BOD running a corporation does mean the BOD runs the corporation.

What irony!!

You are the one who has been saying, “It’s the corporation, not the people in the corporation.” You are the one depriving all those hard-working individuals of the credit for their good deeds.

When a corporation does good or ill, I say the credit (or blame) goes to the people in the corporation who made the decisions and carried them out.
And not the corporation??
 
Why hasn’t anyone criticised the doctors for charging too much? 😃

Walmart and Target ought to exchange logos because Walmart is always the target.

But seriously folks…Walmart has everyright to do anything they want including:

Resell donated toys: snopes.com/holidays/christmas/walmart.asp

Partner with GL groups:
snopes.com/politics/sexuality/walmart.asp

And:

Sell flip-flops that cause chemical burns:
snopes.com/medical/toxins/flipflop.asp

What is my point in pointing out the above? Walmart has an economy greater than most nations. It is fun for more people to blaim, Walmart does more transactions. Laws of probablities say you are going to screw up if you have more chances. That’'s why you have layer after layer of management, to try to minimize bad/immoral/illegal transactions. Sometimes upper management doesn’t know something until it has gone too far then they have to react to bad decisions by lower management.

All this coupled with high doctor cost, high insurance cost, high legal costs, the world’s largest retailer, a brain damaged woman and people on both sides of the issue make for great debate.

But where does it affect us? Is Wal-mart good for the US economy? Do they hire the unemployable? Do they give us value? Are they convienent to go to? Are they moral? Do they ultimately try to do the right thing and add to their communities? Are they just another Enron? Do they pay their employees fair wages? Do they pay their suppliers for their goods/services? Do they run other companies out of business?

If you do good and sometimes you screw-up does that negate the good you do? If you do a very immoral thing and later correct it does that make all the good you do bad?
 
The CCC makes no stipulation concerning a requirement to assume the best intentions from tools.
Actually, this is not true.
2478 To avoid rash judgment, everyone should be careful to interpret insofar as possible his neighbor’s thoughts, words, and deeds in a favorable way:

Every good Christian ought to be more ready to give a favorable interpretation to another’s statement than to condemn it. But if he cannot do so, let him ask how the other understands it. And if the latter understands it badly, let the former correct him with love. If that does not suffice, let the Christian try all suitable ways to bring the other to a correct interpretation so that he may be saved.
 
Now you got it!

The people who run the corporation make the decisions.
If it is not the corp that makes the decsions, then how can you say that the corp has a morality at all?

Morality is based on the decisions we make. If there is no decision, there can be no morality.
 
If it is not the corp that makes the decsions, then how can you say that the corp has a morality at all?
We don’t say the corporation has a morality – except in the sense we use the corporation as shorthand for the people who make it up.

For example, we say “The White House said” when we really mean the President or one of his spokesmen said such and such. We often say “the Vatican” or “Rome” when we really mean the Pope and curia.

But we know the White House cannot speak, and neither the Vatican nor Rome actually say or do what the Pope or Curia say.
Morality is based on the decisions we make. If there is no decision, there can be no morality.
And the morality or lack thereof is assigned to the people who make the decision and those who carry them out.

When the people running a corporation routinely make good or bad decisions, for shorthand, we ascribe that to the corporation – but we shouldn’t forget it’s people who do whatever is done.
 
We don’t say the corporation has a morality – except in the sense we use the corporation as shorthand for the people who make it up.
Everytime I have tried to draw a distinction between the people and the tool, I have been shot down.
Now we are trying to use ‘corporation’ as another word for the people in it??
 
Everytime I have tried to draw a distinction between the people and the tool, I have been shot down.
Your problem was you tried to ascribe action to the tool, not to the people using it.
Now we are trying to use ‘corporation’ as another word for the people in it??
Sometimes people use names like that as shorthand – they say “Washington” when they mean “The people who run the government.”

But it isn’t the city that raises your taxes, it’s the Congress.
 
Well…
Let’s see.

We have a tool here that is capable of making decisions and acting upon those decisions.
We have a BOD that can in a limited fashion control the tool.
And we have the employees of the tool.

So when you make the claim that Wal Mart is altruistic, who gets the credit?
 
Well…
Let’s see.

We have a tool here that is capable of making decisions and acting upon those decisions.
We have a BOD that can in a limited fashion control the tool.
And we have the employees of the tool.
No, we do not have a tool that is “capable of making decisions and acting on those decisions.”

We have people who are capable of making decisions and acting on those decisions.
So when you make the claim that Wal Mart is altruistic, who gets the credit?
The people who make and act on the decisions, of course!
 
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