If the
question about corporations taking primary responsibility for environmental matters points to such voluntary agreements and compliance, it is difficult to be optimistic.
We need to draw attention to these kinds of actions by formula companies (and it's not just formula companies, it's
just about every corporation out there).
While I am disappointed in not being selected, I learned a great
deal about your corporation, and I enjoyed meeting with you and your staff.
You would want to ask a question
about the corporations culture, the responsibilities of the position you are applying for, and whether the position is a new one.
In addition, the directors and shareholders of a Nevada corporation are not named in public records, and Nevada is less willing than many other states to share information
about its corporations with other states and with the federal government (although Botkin points out this has changed significantly in the wake of the 9/11 terrorist attacks).
Budgetary revenues closed at $ 241.9 Â billion, compared to $ 236.7 in the budget, with corporate income tax up 12 % (don't
worry about corporations paying too much, we're giving them tax cuts).
While you might be upset
about corporations making profits from GM products you might equally be upset about the negative effects of avoiding GM for religious reasons.
Instead of talking about race, the Internet
buzzed about a corporation that had turned its staff into mouthpieces and provoked customers on a subject that seemed too serious for that place and time.
The most powerful driver of change in 1986 was
stories about corporations reporting huge profits to shareholders on their 10k and then paying no taxes.
The good
thing about corporations being «greedy» and «only caring about profits» or whatever else we say is that it gives the people who give them money through our consumption tremendous power.
Who could read the recent article in Life
magazine about corporation wives without seeing in it an example of how the genuinely personal gets stifled?
Then there's the slippery slope argument — what
about corporations adopting religious beliefs that prohibit transplants and transfusions also wanting an exemption.
Corporation A may just find it convenient to profit from information
found about Corporation Y during the investigation authorized against Corporation X. Will the strict controls applied to privateers hold?
Much of the
debate about the corporation, however, has focused on whether it's an attempt by Cuomo to gain further control over the Metropolitan Transportation Authority's $ 29 billion modernization plan, which includes 30 remodeled subway stations along with repairs to bridges and tunnels.
Some of the AHA's current sponsors include Subway, Cheerios, and Bayer (pharmaceutical company), and conducting research exposing any
negatives about these corporations or their products / ingredients would cut funding.
Michael Clayton bounces between rich characterization and caricature, moral complexity and empty - headed
mantras about corporations.
Boots Riley's
satire about corporations and code - switching attacks the funny bone, while a near - perfect character study dissects bro - culture
I recently received an odd package from SEGA in the mail, it contained a water bottle, mints and a info
sheet about this corporation I was to join.
From Wal - Mart, to Google, and even the formerly climate sceptic Fox News Network, corporations are falling overthemselves to appear to be doing something about the
Given the local food movement's focus on food miles, Carole Anne's spirited
polemic about corporations dropping long - term family farm suppliers when they find a closer supplier should provide some interesting food for thought too.
[Ned Breslin from Water for People] is less concerned
about corporations going overseas looking to buy control of water — he thinks water companies have realized not much money is to be made in doing that, and they are more interested in management contracts than outright ownership — but the bigger question might be allocation of water resources, which until now has been sort of a free - for - all.»
I mean, if we ask who
knows about corporations and corproate personhood, the answer will almost always be the highly educated and people who own corporations.
Concerns
about corporations suppressing market forces date back to at least Adam Smith's The Wealth of Nations in 1776, and are not unique to the legal industry.