"Roedy Green" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> On Tue, 18 Oct 2005 23:18:31 -0700, "David Schwartz" > <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote or quoted : >> Perhaps you aren't following the thread, but I was talking about the >>obligations a company has, not the obligations any individual has. And I >>was >>talking about obligations *to* individuals. > To me that makes no sense. Microsoft is an abstraction. It can't do > anything. It can't make decisions. Only the individuals to work for it > or on the board can, though they may do it in Microsoft's name. If > you want to talk about moral action, obligation etc. you can't divorce > that from the people who do the actions. If anything that makes the objection even less meaningful. The objection was: > Why should loyalty to company trump all other loyalties -- family, > law, species, community, country, religion ... ? And the answer is that I'm not talking about "loyalty to company" but loyalty to shareholders, which are people. Of course, a person is never required to do anything that actually conflicts with their conscience, although in some cases this may require you to quit. DS -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list