T
Teflon93
Guest
We compete against non-corporations as well. In addition, corporate taxes have ins and outs which affect different corporations differently, and emerging industries differently from mature ones.Because the taxes apply to all corporations, there is no competitive aspect to them – if K-Mart’s taxes go up, so do Wal-Mart’s.
That’s true. Capitalism is the private ownership of the means of production and distribution, operated for profit, **in a competitive environment. **
And always for political, rather than economic, reasons.People who complain about capitalism often miss that bolded section. The evils of “capitalism” are really evils of anti-capitalism – almost always in the form of government intervention to make the system less competitive.
A sentiment too many Americans have forgotten, but one the Founding Fathers certainly would have agreed with.Of course. To paraphrase Pogo Possum, “We have met the enemy and he is our government.”
One of the supreme glories of the Catholic Church is her historical role of staving off despotism in Europe following the fall of Rome, not to mention her moderating influence upon the Empire in its waning centuries. We must of course be wary of big, impersonal, powerful institutions, of which by far the largest, most impersonal, and most powerful in America is Big Government.