Originally Posted by
Bobby H
The Delta plant's closing in Chickasha can simply be summed up as American big business culture run afoul.
The only thing that matters is the profit motive. Get as much profit onto the balance sheets for the next quarterly report as possible. The skewed numbers will boost the price of the stock, the board members will get big dividends and then pay the journeyman CEO of the month a big fat bonus. Then they can take all that cash and buy even bigger houses, fancier cars and younger trophy girlfriends to spark jealousy in their rivals.
This sounds like exaggeration and hyperbole; however it is very close to the truth. A rapidly shrinking number of large American companies have any kind of loyalty at all to community or country.
Just look at all the contradictory behavior. Take Google for example. They're trying to keep the US Government from getting data on its American users, but at the same time they capitulate to Communist Chinese Government demands to censor free speech and make it easier for that government to track down dissidents. It doesn't make any sense, until you see the common thread of the profit motive. Google will lose money in America if it lets our government have its way. By letting the Chinese government have their way, Google stands to make a fortune.
I'm not a big fan of unions and I don't feel that anyone is simply entitled to a job just because they got out of high school and have a pulse. However, it seems very clear that working for a large corporation is a growing liability.
Unfortunately, opening your own small business or working for another small business is an even less secure prospect. Our health care costs, worker's comp insurance costs and other costs of doing business are out of control and breaking the backs of many small businesses.
But that doesn't mean squat to me as long as my shares of Pfizer gain more money. Booyah!
If anything, some of these developments may encourage me to buy foreign more often. Look at the problems Ford and GM are having. But then you have to examine the culture at those companies.
Ask a Japanese auto company executive what he does for a living and he'll probably reply, "I make cars for a living." Ask an American auto executive who makes 5 times as much money, "I make money for a living."
We're not concentrating on making products. We're only interested in making money. I think that's why Asia and Europe are both kicking our tails.
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