@Toby
I view complaints such as ‘But this harms my property’ and ‘This will drive me out of business’ as very different. If an iron foundry was set up in town, and drove me, running an old foundry out of business, I would have no grounds for complaint, all that has happened is that somebody is doing better than me. If the iron foundry was built right next to my home, and was damaging my home by the heat it created, then I would have just grounds for complaint. I have a right to my property, but I don't have a right to my business' success.
Why, and how can you assume that profit is necessarily a bad thing? Why do you describe the corporation as a soulless monster because it exists to make a profit? I just don't see why that value is to be written down as amoral or immoral, but others to be praised.
Look at the way in which we do almost everything in our lives: I eat food that could provide greater advantage to a homeless man, choosing food not on the basis of the environmental impact but on whether or not I like it. Is this immoral? No. I go to school, when, all things considered, there are people in greater need of schooling than me. My parents are sufficiently well educated to give me an acceptable level of education, and those without such fortune could go to actual schools. Should I be expected not to go to school? No. I work on good quality paper, of greater density than average, if we were more frugal about our use of it, supply could be increased by 50% and so someone unable to afford paper could get some. Am I wrong to choose good paper? What of my pen, which cost approximately ten times as much as the cheapest Parker fountain pen, fifty times as much as a run-of-the-mill pen crudely made by some nondescript company? Should I be expected to sacrifice that? How about my family's income. My father's pension alone is easily enough to support him and would, at a squeeze, support the whole family. Is it wrong that we seek to spend the money we have on ourselves?
You see, all of these things are types of profit, be it a nicer meal, an education, writing equipment or money for our leisure. Profit is not some abstract concept that is meaningless except as a number put on a line in a company's books. It is the enjoyment, the investment and the happiness that can result from it. Even before the goods are bought, when it is money it still means this. We all seek profit; working for a charity, seeing the benefit done for other people is profit; going out with friends is profit; posting this message is, in the broadest sense, profit. Profit is gain in anything; money is its measure, not its source or destination.
Look again at the corporation. Why does everyone working for it work? Profit. Why do its customers buy the products? Profit. Why does anyone work with it? Profit. Whatever values you think you have, your value is profit, its value is profit and the only difference is scale and co-operation. When you cook a mean, you produce CO2, when the company makes a product, so does it. The difference is that the company involves more people, more profit and more CO2. It is just a matter of scale. If you and a friend agree to cook each other's dinners, one week on, one week off, you begin to co-operate, you become more efficient in costs, be they CO2 emissions, work or actually paying for the food, so you profit more. There is no empathy in this arrangement, no consideration of the needs of the other person, just one motive: profit. But shouldn't we still view it as a virtue?
Corporations aren't faceless, they are a collection of more faces than you could ever know; they shouldn't blow in the wind, the executives within them should guide them forward, onward. They should neither be expected to consider anything other than their own profit, nor claim to do so, and nor should you.