Peter Saul's solo exhibition at Mary Boone offers a satirical look
into corporate greed and personal excess which plagues American culture.
Although people seldom think of Hollywood as a location where messages can be provided, these movies give insight
into corporate greed, finance and leadership in an entertaining way.
Not exact matches
Into the risk - averse worlds of
corporate lawyers and bankers in the 1970s came a new generation of raiders, a mogul horde the likes of which had not been seen since the days when Jay Gould and other grandees of
greed held sway.
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.
But «Chappie» doesn't stop there, digging
into notions of nature versus nurture and the bonds between the spirit and the flesh, as well as sci - fi staples like
corporate greed and the privatisation of power.
The screenplay employs
corporate greed and military hubris as its chief villains in a pro-conservation story that integrates pop - culture references
into the narrative, rather than simply slathering them on as «Ready Player One» does.
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.
But Chappie doesn't stop there, digging
into notions of nature versus nurture and the bonds between the spirit and the flesh, as well as sci - fi staples like
corporate greed and the privatization of power.
Harkening back to his monster movie The Host, Bong delves
into the
greed of
corporate America and its effect on the little guy — or in this case, little girl, who will stop at nothing to save her best friend, a giant pig destined for the slaughterhouse.
Bern the White House made sense as it represents burning down the status quo of
corporate greed and political corruption to let Bernie make the changes we feel are necessary to bring us, the middle - and working - class people of this country, back
into prosperity.
These early collages in which Kruger used the techniques she had perfected as a graphic designer, were the artist's initiation
into the world of ongoing political, social, and feminist provocations and commentaries on religion, sex, racial stereotypes, consumerism,
corporate greed, and power.
The problems are: Lack of a constructive, earth nurturing moral outlook, ideology that encourages expanding capitalist economies that do not factor ecological capital or its destruction
into their bottom line,
greed as a way of life,
corporate imperatives and power, intentionally misinformed or ignorant public (especially in the United States and China), inertia, rampant bad design in energy generation, housing, transportation, community planning, consumer products and packaging and materials cycling, etc..
As such, there's a strong argument to be made for bringing the carbon tax closer
into focus: With Occupy Wall Street rallying attention to the income inequality gap and Americans growing increasingly frustrated with
corporate greed, a tax that hits industrial polluters and relieves the individual tax burden could start sounding pretty good to plenty of folks.
Thousands of plaintiffs harmed by
corporate greed finally receive justice Dupont Chemical recently agreed to settle a massive toxic chemical exposure lawsuit with 3,500 plaintiffs over allegations the notorious chemical giant dumped cancer causing chemicals
into the Ohio river from its West Virginia plant.