2008年8月25日 星期一

Inbox Capitalism 2.0

I'm glad that people like bono and Bill Gates are endorsing the practice of spreading corporate profits among the world's disadvtanged and helping convince the business elite that it is in their interest to care about the world's less fortunate.Both individuals have used their influence to do great things and trigger lasting change.But let's forget that our elected representatives must be the ones held primarily responsible for protecting the poor.The mandate of a corporation can never be as binding as that of the state.Since the government must set a minimum wage for justice's sake,perhaps it can set maximums for corporate profits or individual salaries and offer incentives for the rich to give back.



Gate's article made me want to stand up and cheer,As he pharsed it,There are two great forces of human nature.self-interest and caring for others.By using his own wealth and influence to respond to world poverty in a meaningful way,Gates exemplifies the latter force.His initiatives sharing technology,providing small business loans,eradicating preventable disease make measurable differences.Thank you for providing a forum for him to share his ideas.




While Bill Gates does a fine job out-lining his creative capitalism initiative,his exclusive focus on developing nations at the expense of his own is a tremendous oversight.Corporations in developed countries certainly should feel socially responsible for those in developing ones.But if they ever want to be take seriously as agents of social change and as stakeholders in local communities,they need to consider their own domestic markets as well.Gates is fooling himself when he brushes over the U.S's economic woes so lightly,especially when creative capitalism could potentially solve some problems like our own oft-neglected poverty and inner-city urban blight.Only when America proves that capitalism can cure social ills within its own borders should it start looking to prove so abroad.





Hollywood's Ticking Time bomb I agree with James Poniewozik's assessment that Hollywood has yet to demonize China in the same way the news media have.However,one need only look at the parallels between negative new coverage and negative pop-culture depictions of Arabs and the Middle East during the past decade,or similar coverage of the Japanese during World War II, to see how closely one influences the other and how both influence the minds of the American people in different ways.The current political climate suggests that China is next.It may be only a mater of time before the delightful pandas take on a more ominous form.


A state of concern As a lifelong Michigan Resident,I have lived through this state's trials and tribulations.We are hardworking group of citizens who epitomize what it means to be American.This presidential election offers Michiganders an opportunity to seek the change that it so desperately needs.However,given the shenanigans of Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpartick and the ineffective leadership of current Governor Jennifer Granholm,their support of Obama might make him guilty by association.I know I would not want the endrosement of any politician who represents regression in a state that needs all the forward-looking help it can get.

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