In an era marked by unprecedented material abundance, a profound societal disquiet has taken root, threatening the very foundations of American exceptionalism.
The Corporate Edict: When Boardrooms Become the New Crown of Public Trust
In an era marked by unprecedented material abundance, a profound societal disquiet has taken root, threatening the very foundations of American exceptionalism.
Why it matters: The contemporary turn towards corporate leadership to mend a fractured social fabric, while perhaps pragmatic in its intent, subtly reconfigures the very compact upon which this nation was founded. It represents a quiet ceding of the public's right to self-governance, echoing the precise grievances that once stirred the colonies to rebellion. When trust in representative institutions evaporates, the vacuum is invariably filled, often by entities unaccountable to the ballot box. As Thomas Paine observed in "Common Sense," "Government, like dress, is the badge of lost innocence; the palaces of kings are built upon the ruins of the bowers of paradise." To seek salvation from an unelected corporate elite, rather than reinvigorating the mechanisms of democratic accountability, risks exchanging one form of distant, unassailable authority for another. The ultimate price of a "rattled generation" may not be economic decline, but a profound amnesia regarding the hard-won principles of popular sovereignty.
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