Re: Langer and the White House
1 - 'fiduciary duty to maximize profits' taken at face value justifies violating every law that may be profitably violated. If there is no higher responsibility than maximizing profits, then why should a company handicap itself by obeying the law of the land, if the law may be profitably violated? If Smithfield Foods can dump ammonia into the Big Sioux River on a daily basis, knowing that they will rarely be caught and/or fined, and that the fines will not exceed the cost savings in the dumping, then Smithfield has a FIDUCIARY RESPONSIBILITY to dump ammonia.
And if they don't, then you've already started to qualify 'fiduciary duty' to such an extent as to render it meaningless outside a larger philosophical context which involves a higher responsibility to obey legally mandated protections for workers and the environment which, in turn, brings you around to an open question of how a company's 'fiduciary duty' mandates only ONE course of action on the hypothetical law in question.
And if that is the case, then who are you to declare the proper balance between fiduciary duty and the other responsibilities of a business?
2 - 'ultimate responsibility of the lawmakers' This is an interesting notion. Are you speaking in a philosophical sense or in a legal sense? If the law requires me to pay higher taxes, and I decide not to feed my kids in order to pay these higher taxes without sacrificing any of my preferred amusements, then are the 'lawmakers ultimately responsible' for my starving kids? Should they also be arrested? Could I raise this defense in court?
Or is this another instance where you are presenting something which requires qualification as though it were an absolute truth?
And if this statement requires qualification, then what is your authority to declare the nature and character of the qualification?
3 - 'causing a death spiral sending the company completely out of business.'
Please.
Observe what happens when I change a noun in your line of reasoning:
How is a 'law' different from 'competition'? If 'lawmakers' are ultimately responsible for whatever a company does in response to a law, then is it not functionally equivalent to assert that a competing business is 'ultimately responsible' for whatever a company does in response to competition?
And if there is a difference, than what is it? Is it merely ideology?
Originally posted by filbert
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And if they don't, then you've already started to qualify 'fiduciary duty' to such an extent as to render it meaningless outside a larger philosophical context which involves a higher responsibility to obey legally mandated protections for workers and the environment which, in turn, brings you around to an open question of how a company's 'fiduciary duty' mandates only ONE course of action on the hypothetical law in question.
And if that is the case, then who are you to declare the proper balance between fiduciary duty and the other responsibilities of a business?
2 - 'ultimate responsibility of the lawmakers' This is an interesting notion. Are you speaking in a philosophical sense or in a legal sense? If the law requires me to pay higher taxes, and I decide not to feed my kids in order to pay these higher taxes without sacrificing any of my preferred amusements, then are the 'lawmakers ultimately responsible' for my starving kids? Should they also be arrested? Could I raise this defense in court?
Or is this another instance where you are presenting something which requires qualification as though it were an absolute truth?
And if this statement requires qualification, then what is your authority to declare the nature and character of the qualification?
3 - 'causing a death spiral sending the company completely out of business.'
Please.
Observe what happens when I change a noun in your line of reasoning:
Second: regardless of what the managers "choose" do in response to the competition, it is a NOT an action that they would have taken absent the presence of the competition. It is NOT a "reasonable choice"--it is a coerced action.
And if there is a difference, than what is it? Is it merely ideology?
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