rogers park bryan wrote:
leashyourkids wrote:
I think this gets to the heart of how my own perspective has changed a little bit. The reality is that people would sell those Swastikas if it made them a buck.
Of course. As my dad used to say, if the networks got ratings by airing church, it would be on 24 hours a day.
But that's not what I'm saying.
Ogie seemingly attempts to spike the football on companies that make decisions that might be more on the moral side and not best for the bottom line. I just point out that there are some companies/people who are ok with losing a few bucks in the name of what they consider right. So the spiking of the ball is lame because you haven't scored on them.
Do we really believe Kmart thought stopping the sale of guns or Starbucks inviting non paying customers in to their stores were going to INCREASE profits? I strongly doubt it.
You know that the large companies which are closed on Sunday (Chik Fil A and Hobby Lobby) are privately owned companies and not publicly held. This means they do not have the fiduciary responsibility that their publicly held competitors have. If they were publicly held, they would have shareholders voting in a board who would install a CEO who would force them to open on Sunday.
Just as your swastika comparison was a poor one to make, the Chik Fil A one is equally poor for this reason. In fact, the being closed on Sundays is cited by their founder/owner as the reason he will never take the company public. He knows that as soon as they go public, they will have to open on Sundays. This is a company that would probably be a very successful IPO, yet they have chosen not to issue one. In fact, the founder put such terms in his will.
http://www.businessinsider.com/chick-fi ... lic-2016-1If a publicly company makes a decision, even one which is sold as being altruistic, it's generally made because they believe it will improve their performance. A corporation owes nothing to you or the public. They do however owe a great deal to their shareholders.
I will also point out on Hobby Lobby that if they were publicly held, then they certainly would not have sued the government over Obamacare's birth control requirements. 1: such a publicly divisive move would not be approved by a board which is responsible for shareholders and 2: being publicly held would almost certainly ensure that the case would have been decided the other way. In fact, if you read the decision, you will see they only won the case because they were privately held. The ruling in fact only applies to privately held companies and not to public companies.