Brian Moench
Published: 2019-01-16
Total Pages: 507
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All the reviews are in! ExxonMobil, Volkswagen, and Big Pharma hate this book. Monsanto hates this book so much they are trying to genetically modify it. Big Pharma thinks this is the worst book ever written because their pills won't cure it, and the chemical corporations are trying to spray all the copies of this book with pesticides to try and kill it. McDonald's, Burger King, and Arby's are grinding this book up and feeding it to cattle. Wall Street CEOs are throwing this book off the decks of their yachts. If he could read, Donald Trump would build a wall around this book, because it contains facts. And the public will definitely hate what's in this book, which is exactly why they need to read it.Businesses, especially large corporations, are becoming more and more controlling influences in the global economy, in governments, and in public policy throughout the world. In fact, corporations have become almost soulless monsters in the singular pursuit of profit, perpetrating, even feeding off human misery, threatening every aspect of human life--the air we breathe, the water we drink, the food we eat, the health care we receive, and even the survival of humankind itself. Dr. Brian Moench reviews the historic and current inhumane behavior of well known corporations, offering shocking detail and insights about the pharmaceutical, chemical, financial, pesticide, biotech, food processing, lead, gun, asbestos, and fossil fuel industries. A common denominator among them is that despite scientific and empirical evidence of the danger and lethality of their products, these industries successfully fought off meaningful regulation for many decades, and many are still succeeding today. Why is it that corporations run by seemingly accomplished and talented, if not admirable people, end up behaving like psychopathic, Frankenstein monsters, where profit eclipses all other considerations, including the literal survival of the human population? In today's world, with the global reach of corporations, and their technological capability for destruction, those unrestrained pathologic urges are hurtling us all toward consequences unimaginable, and a future irredeemable. What must we do to save ourselves before its too late?