this post was submitted on 14 Aug 2023
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There's only one thing I would alter in your statement. You said:
I would say, "and to focus on shareholder profits over ~~making a good product~~ anything else, including life itself.
It's more profitable for a health insurance company to deny someone's claim than to pay for their healthcare in the US. The insurance company won't care if that ultimately leads to the person's death - they have to answer to their shareholders.
It's more profitable for Nestlé or Google to siphon water from countries in the global South than it is to have sustainable practices that don't exacerbate climate change. So what if that means that millions of people will die in the years to come? That's their problem for being poor.
We need to bring about the kind of change that has politicians recognize that there is more to human life than a dollar amount, and that poverty is not a moral failing on the part of the individual. But until that happens, poverty is akin to a death sentence.
Ok but what you are asking is to crash the market, that will lead to more harm than good. Any better less drastic idea?
If the market can’t survive without being detrimental to human life on a large scale, it deserves to crash.
Sounds exactly what an evil super villain would say.
Is it evil to prioritize human life over the state of the market?
Is it good to prioritize the economy over human lives?