They already do, they sold most of you on frivolous law suit reform, they've sold you on the surge. They own us. You buy their crap faster than you buy the new I Phones.
lol view life as a video game you have so many health hearts ( money ) every time you buy something you lose a heart and the more you work the more hearts you get... so i ask this question why do some people have more hearts especially the people with lots of hearts and a non stressful job ? sounds like society is broke to me... if I was a billionaire I would systematically help people with giving them accessories to life that they want or just give them money, I would bail people out of debt and rehabilitate homeless people and setup living situations, I would make cheaper drugs and contribute to different budgets that help people with troubles in their lives. If I could maintain enough income to support the child bonus I would do that. But what people have to understand is that it is all how they spend their money.. If they want to rent or buy a house that consumes so much of their income that they can’t afford accessories then that is their fault and they need to be told this. And for the people who are basically living in an area that is hard to offored those r the people I would help first because its not their fault their families and friends live there but I think it is the governments problem to fix the living situations.
but im just a nice guy. also you guys wanna get off ur ass n take ur shit to a recycling center ? n while everybody does that the recycling centers can start analyzing metals and other materials for property values so we can recycle stronger metals and apply the metals to realistic creations like car parts instead of combining all types of medal together to make one big peace of shity metal for making stop signs or some shit.
they do own us. in the future it gets worse. they want us to take the micro chip. if we act up they just turn off our chip=no buy, no sell...
Multinational corporations don't own us, we own them. Then again, they're like owning a house cat. Collectively we have the power to determine whether they live or die because we're the ones that feed them, but they're going to do whatever they like while trying to manipulate us into fulfilling their needs.
Let’s not resort to hyperbole. Multinational corporations are not going to own us the way that plantation owners in the American South used to own their slaves. Nevertheless, multinational corporations find it easier to elude taxes, regulations, and trade union activity than national corporations did in the past. This is a challenge that political parties on the left – I include the Democrat Party in the US – have not yet found an answer for.