I'd go so far as to say that any such construct that has a very limited purpose runs the same risk. A revolutionary movement, as often as not, betrays the ideals of the revolutionary members. A political party designed to gain advantage for a line of thinking finds that blind opposition to be at least as useful as collaboration.ComradeJim270 said:Adam Smith warned against this business model back when capitalism was a novel new idea and he was working on refining it, for the very reason that the people running the business don't necessarily have much to lose or gain based on its success and thus doesn't have that as a built-in safeguard against irrational (and possibly immoral) behavior. Over two centuries ago, and the guy fucking called it.Eclectic Dreck said:When judging a construct like a corporation, morality is relative to successful fulfillment of purpose. You can judge the people calling the shots as immoral when they guide the corporation down such paths of course as people are a part of the social contract and thus the relative impact on the society as a whole becomes a morale issue.
In such cases, pointing to the construct and crying foul when that very structure pursues the stated goal well is folly. It is nothing more than a tool, any morality inherent is based upon the effectiveness of that tool. If you want to judge deeper, look at the hand that holds the tool.