Re: Corporatism: First, yes companies have damaged common resources, people do have the power to organise to protect themselves, HOWEVER they do not necessarily have the information. I doubt the corporations are going to freely admit how they are making record profits (that's a trade secret afterall) so how does the public prove any damage is being done? Well research of course, but that costs money...
So your 'free-market' mechanism assumes that corporations will have the benefit of the doubt when it comes to common resources, and that the people will bear the cost of proving both of organising a boycott AND of proving a problem exists in the first place - this is against the fact that it is not in the corporation's interest to have these facts known, and they have more money to throw at the issue, both in terms of propaganda AND falsified research.
Re: Labour Unions, yes, though there is no reason to think that the management should be a separate entity. The FACT is there is a class division, and the management works for the elite, the shareholders. The workers or stakeholders do not have the same interests.
It is in principle entirely possible to reward the workers as stakeholders with bonuses dependant on the profit which the company makes - a dividend based bonus scheme for every worker. This may be a step towards a better working environment. I don't know.
Re: Bank bailout - so, no matter what happens, you blame it on government intervention. Yet i'm still waiting to hear you say you disagree with the protection of the banking system.
@"I would argue that the reason a person is a low-wage worker and is forced to "work or starve" is due to earlier decisions he or she made."
In some cases this may be true, in some cases a person may have dropped out of high school to get a job and work to provide food for their family. Now maybe there is less poverty at that level than there was in the 20s and 30s but only BECAUSE of social programs and the new deal... but that just demonstrates the important of this kind of social program.
:: Yes, i'm glad you said 'slippery slope' because there is a balance between personal responcibility and (government) collective responcibility. I don't mean to make the case that there should be no personal responcibility. You need to find a balance - between government and the individual.
Ultimately people are not free to make decisions. The violence of authoritarian regimes has been replaced with the propaganda model of the democratic states. People are influenced to buy MacDonalds by advertising, education programs can counter bad habits which people choose, but the choice they make in the first place is not entirely their own, it is massively influenced by the environment and the information which is available to them.
The fact that TV (at least when i was growing up, the internet may now be more significant) is controlled by corporations, and managed to be more interesting to children than school work is an example of the success of corporations, they managed to build and leverage a system for providing information to people which was considerable better than the education system. HOWEVER it was not in the public interest, it was only in corporate interest. Education systems failed to leverage TV in the same way.
I agree that people should be free to make their own decisions, and school curriculum do fall prey to the weakness of authority dictating what we should learn, it was recently brought to my attention that other schooling models exist ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sudbury_valley_school )
BUT only at public expense. Personal responcibility for learning out of the tax payer's pocket. Of course i could see an alternative system where there is no education provided by the government and corporations instead educate their workforce as needed... but this again would result in biased information content.
Again, as with stakeholders in companies this does not result in totalitarianism, it instead facilitates a system of personal responcibility.
If the government provides free education and people fail that's their fault, but their education system is still authoritarian. Education is a failed social program if you ask me.