The Morals Of Costco, The Ethics Of Walmart

What’s
Wrong Today
:


Our politics are in an
ethical crisis. From Ian Welsh:



Morals are how you
treat people you know.  Ethics are how you treat people you don’t know.


Your
morality is what makes you a good wife or husband, dad or mother, even a good
employee or boss to the people you know personally in your place of work.


Ethics is
what makes you a good politician. It is also what makes you a humane CEO. Whether you are a politician or a CEO, most of what you do will affect
people you don’t know, people who are simply statistics. 


Change
Social Security or welfare, and people will live or die, suffer or
prosper.  Change the tax structure, healthcare mandates, trade laws, infrastructure
spending—virtually everything politicians do means some people will win and
some people will lose. 


Our
political system ensures that politicians will do harm to people they don’t
know. But that doesn’t give them the right to protect the people they do know. If they protect their friends and family, they will act
unethically. In the Great Recession of 2008, millions of homeowners and
employees unknown to politicians were hurt and the people (companies) the politicians
and treasury officials did know were bailed out. 


Today’s politicians
also ignore future consequences: They refuse to build or repair infrastructure, to
invest in basic science or education. They refuse to deal with global warming. 
These decisions overwhelmingly affect people they don’t know: Odds are, any
individual bridge collapse won’t hit the politicians. Global warming will hurt
most of its victims in the future.  The rich and powerful in particular,
believe that they will be able to avoid the consequences of these things. Welsh concludes:
(emphasis by the Wrongologist)


To put the needs of
the few before the needs of the many, in public life, is to be a monster.  If we all put only ourselves and those we
love first, and damn the cost to everyone else, our societies cannot and will
not be prosperous, safe, or kind.


So, our
politics are in an ethical crisis, while
capitalism is in both an ethical and moral crisis:


The current
structure of our economy is designed to impoverish people we don’t know. For the
rich this means cutting the wages of the middle class.  CEOs are obsessed
with “lowering costs” and making profits, and both of those are meant to
extract maximum value from people while giving them as little as possible in
wages, goods and services in return.


Capitalism was originally thought of as a materialistic, utilitarian philosophy
in which the alpha and omega was the maximization of aggregate
utility
.


Somewhere along the way, the alpha and omega of capitalism seems to have
morphed from maximizing aggregate utility to maximizing profits for the tiny minority who
possess “capital.”


In April, Forbes
wrote an article comparing Costco with Walmart:


Costco’s most
recent quarterly earnings report
 reveals a fairly healthy 8% rate of
growth in year-on-year sales—including a 5% rise in same store sales.


Meanwhile,
Costco’s primary competitor, Walmart, saw an anemic 1.2% rise in sales, while
other competitors such as J.C. Penny and Target experienced even greater
problems with their sales results.


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Terry McKenna

We romanticize Feudalism but the reality was far from romantic. If you were a regular guy, you were beholden to superiors, and they beholden to others superior to them.

It sucked.

The way we treat entrepreneurs is not all that different from the romanticism of the knights (bullies) and ladies of the feudal era. It sucks now too.