Comment by eru
3 days ago
> If something bad happened against any laws, even if someone got killed, we don't see them in jail.
We do! In many jurisdictions, there are lots of laws that pierce the corporate veil.
3 days ago
> If something bad happened against any laws, even if someone got killed, we don't see them in jail.
We do! In many jurisdictions, there are lots of laws that pierce the corporate veil.
its surprisingly easy to get away with murder (literally and figuratively) without piercing the corporate veil if you understand the rules of the game. Running decisions through a good law firm also “helps” a lot.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Piercing_the_corporate_veil
Eh, in the US you don't even need a company nor a lawyer, a car is enough.
See https://www.reddit.com/r/TrueReddit/comments/1q9xx1/is_it_ok... or similar discussions: basically, when you run over someone in a car, statistically they will call it an accident and you get away scot-free.
In any case, you are right that often people in cars or companies get away with things that seem morally wrong. But not always.
A bit over five years ago, someone struck and killed my friend in a crosswalk. He was a fellow PhD student. It was on a road with a 30mph limit but where people regularly speed to 50+mph.
He was an international student from Vietnam. His family woke up one day, got a phone call, and learned he was killed. I guess there was nobody to press charges.
She never faced any accountability for the 'accident'. She gets to live her life, and she now runs a puppetry education for children. Her name even seems to have been scrubbed from most of the articles about her killing my friend.
So, I think about this regularly.
I was a cyclist at the time so I was aware of how common this injustice was, but that was the first time it hit so close to home. I moved into a large city and every cyclist I've met here (every!) has been hit by a car, and the car driver effectively got only a slap on the wrist. It's just so common.
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