There are many big laughs (a musical orientation video from a maximum security prison in Norway brings down the house), and yet the film is also tremendously sobering in its cumulative impact, illustrating with acute clarity
how the corporate greed fueling our economy has resulted in an anti-humanist society of disastrous proportions.
It shows
how corporate greed is able to capitalise and feed off personal weakness, compounding destructive behaviour.
Not exact matches
Executive avarice and
corporate greed, still high in national consciousness, will be part of any discussion of «
How much would Jesus accumulate?»
It frustrates and infuriates me to no end
how Big Food deliberately lies to impressionable youth (and their parents), and forces parents into discussions about marketing and
corporate greed in relation to food choices and health.
If May is serious about her distain for
corporate greed, she should be apoplectic with rage at what happened here and would provide suggestions for
how to prevent it happening again where firms were bidding for public contracts.
If you go into this expecting a slick, international thriller with some relevant social commentary about relations between the United States and Mexico, the state of
corporate greed and
how bad things often happen to good people — well, there's a LITTLE bit of that stuff lightly sprinkled in.
Ryan, I agree that it should also be about
corporate greed but what fuels that «desire» for bogus beauty is the insecurity of women and
how they feel about themselves — in their truly natural state.
I present to you Frontier Dev - Expansions / Updates & Micro transactions done right - with no Loot Boxes - it proves its possible to have Monetization in games to prolong the games longevity to the advantage of the gamer and the developers With EA, its
corporate greed, I truly believe if they removed the Pay -2-Win scenarios this would of not garnered as much attention as it has and for now at least I can not see
how they can re-implement anything that gamers alike are going to get behind in there droves - EA shafted themselves with seeing the consumer as a money pit and assuming that gamers have either an unlimited source of funds or its acceptable to suddenly throw out the balance of a game due to financial gain.