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We need a lot more talk like this in government...

There are so many good ideas here:

In previous posts, 

80-umair-haque
Umair Haque

Has coined terms like "zombiconomy" and "ponziconomy"... now "forporations"

This post has some great thoughts on intellectual property, corporations, taxes, and so much more.  for example,

"The Empty Vessel Rule. Government, Arthur Okun famously argued, is a leaky bucket — one which leaks money at every turn. Yet, though the government may be often a leaky bucket, the corporation is just as often an empty vessel: bereft of any purpose higher than profit. What the private sector offers in terms of efficiency, it subtracts in terms of virtue. So what we really need to do today isn't merely to privatize what used to be public, or the reverse, nationalization. We need to meld the efficiency of the private sector with the virtues of the public sector — to pioneer the legal, financial, and contractual basis for new corporate forms, like forporations, that balance obligations to shareholders and the many kinds of stakeholders; that exist "for" a higher purpose than mere near-term profit."

"The next item of the Washington Consensus's moldy agenda is legally protecting the corporation. It's been taken to an absurd extreme, with the doctrine that corporations must enjoy legal personhood. But (Earth to beancounters) corporations aren't people — only people are people. The former face few of the obligations citizens do, can't face the same kinds of punishments, are legally bound to maximize profit in ways that citizens aren't, and tend to have thousands of times more cash, time, and power, which means they can afford to de facto buy rights almost no person on earth has (like hiring batteries of lawyers to fight cases for decades). Corporations, like hammers, are just tools. And for the same reason we don't anthropomorphize hammers, nor should we empower corporations with the same rights and powers as people. Where the Washington Consensus humanizes corporations, and dehumanizes people, the M consensus suggests unhumanizing corporations, and rehumanizing people."

http://blogs.hbr.org/haque/2010/08/how_to_say_no_to_an_economic.html