During a 3/21/12; interview on CNN's Piers Morgan Howard Schultz CEO of Starbucks critiqued the 2012 elections and it's supposed $6 billion price tag as a waste. The critique was another rote refrain that money spent for political office and it's speculative power is a waste.
Coming from the CEO of a company Entrepreneur in it's April 2012 issue lauded as one of the 10 most trusted brands in the nation. Howard Schultz's critique mocks the success of Starbucks and it is alarming in it's naivete.
If the 2012 elections will cost $6 billion. What it means is $6 billion is being redistributed and contrary to the insidious illiteracy of financial redistribution as an un-Godly, un-American, Marxist scheme, finance (and Joe The Plumber listen up) worships at the alter of redistribution. The $6 billion in question will immediately and primarily flow into Corporate Media (for ads and the relative means of disseminating political hook, line and sinkers) and the political consultancy industry. This primary redistribution translates into. A secondary one within the society impacting it's roots germanely.
Even though viscerally the idea that $6 billion is being spent in pursuit of speculative-power and it's Intellectual-Liberalism insults common sense. It's critique lies with and is that of morality and it's relativism.
Corporate Media, it's share holders and ancillary support functionaries see a $6 billion boon. The political consultancy industry sees a wind-fall and mom and pop eateries along the less traveled roads of battle-ground states are as those Nile Crocodiles lurking in African rivers on the bi-annual animal migrations: blacking out the red of the preceeding lean 3 years with what their take out and counter tops collect.
Considering Starbucks has been a beneficiary of election financial-transmigratory, redistribution and will be during the 2012 election and it's purported $6 billion tag. It is ridiculously disingenuous for Howard Schultz CEO of Starbucks to critique financial redistribution so recklessly.
By Apropos
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