| | Just to clarify:
The market alternative to the corporation, which is literally a child of the state, an artificial person created to stand in for real people when they screw up, is the trust, which can also issue shares, but is a purely contractual market entity. Trusts limit liability by giving complete control of the assets to the Trustees. The reason why corporations became the dominent business form, over partnerships and trusts, was the corruption of the court system, basically its move from a common law equity basis to that of an enforcer of positive (state) law.
Under the common law, it was highly unlikely that a business could be ruined by punitive judgments, as such judgments were simply outside the scope of the common law's authority, which was limited to identifying equity and restoring it. Once the floodgates of punitive judgments were opened, however, such judgments became a serious liability for businesses and their owners or Trustees. This became the incentive for the move to the corporate structure, in which the risk is assumed by the general public, willy-nilly, by state fiat, while the state is supposed to oversee the artificial person, its child, to ensure not only that it doesn't do bad things, but also that it function in the "public interest."
If that doesn't define the corporation as inherently a fascist construct, I don't know what could.
In fact, the state has not in general interceded either in the interests of safety or for the public good (whatever that means). Instead, the various bureaucracies that are supposed to be protecting us are typically staffed by representatives from the very industries and corporations they are supposedly monitoring, so that we get the worst of all possible worlds via the corporate model. Rules and regulations are passed to hurt one company at the behest of another or to prevent competition from emerging, and when real disasters happen - as they inevitably do when you've offloaded risk, the courts have typically ruled that since the issues were already covered by bureaucratic law, typically fines of a few thousand dollars, the people actually harmed are barred from suit.
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