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I drink your milkshake! a metaphor for capitalism
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<blockquote data-quote="rickyb" data-source="post: 3681978" data-attributes="member: 56035"><p>sounds like a step in the right direction.</p><p></p><p>ppl always talk like theres either capitalism or socialism, but this articles is a good example of whats in between.</p><p></p><p>"Since 80 percent of the value of the stock market is owned by about 10 percent of the population and half of Americans own no stock at all, this has been a huge triumph for the rich.</p><p></p><p>Investment, however, has not soared. In fact, it’s stagnated...</p><p></p><p>If imposing stakeholder responsibilities on businesses and requiring many of the seats at the biggest firms to be elected by workers pushed the S&P 500’s Q ratio down to German levels (which is probably a high estimate since <strong>German codetermination rules are somewhat tougher than her proposal),..."</strong></p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>looks like theres lots of American support for socialism, just don't call it that or u may get an adverse reaction. 53% support.</p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong>"</strong></p><p></p><p>In many countries, employees at large companies elect representatives to their firm’s board of directors in order to advocate their interests and point of view to management. Democrats say this gives regular workers a greater say over how their companies are run and will increase wages, while Republicans claim that this makes companies less efficient and be bad for the economy. <strong>Would you support letting employees at large companies elect representatives to their firm’s board of directors?”</strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong>They found broad support for the idea, even with Republican-leaning voters.</strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong></strong></p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="rickyb, post: 3681978, member: 56035"] sounds like a step in the right direction. ppl always talk like theres either capitalism or socialism, but this articles is a good example of whats in between. "Since 80 percent of the value of the stock market is owned by about 10 percent of the population and half of Americans own no stock at all, this has been a huge triumph for the rich. Investment, however, has not soared. In fact, it’s stagnated... If imposing stakeholder responsibilities on businesses and requiring many of the seats at the biggest firms to be elected by workers pushed the S&P 500’s Q ratio down to German levels (which is probably a high estimate since [B]German codetermination rules are somewhat tougher than her proposal),..."[/B] looks like theres lots of American support for socialism, just don't call it that or u may get an adverse reaction. 53% support. [B] "[/B] In many countries, employees at large companies elect representatives to their firm’s board of directors in order to advocate their interests and point of view to management. Democrats say this gives regular workers a greater say over how their companies are run and will increase wages, while Republicans claim that this makes companies less efficient and be bad for the economy. [B]Would you support letting employees at large companies elect representatives to their firm’s board of directors?” They found broad support for the idea, even with Republican-leaning voters. [/B] [/QUOTE]
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I drink your milkshake! a metaphor for capitalism
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