Sampai sekarang Chan tidak jawab kapan dia mau mulai babat kaum  kapitalis.  
Barangkali dia mau tunggu sampai tahun 2050!

FORBES: UNLESS IT CHANGES, CAPITALISM WILL STARVE HUMANITY BY 2050
Capitalism has generated massive wealth for some, but it’s devastated the 
planet and has failed to improve human well-being at scale.   
   - Species are going extinct at a rate 1,000 times faster than that of the 
natural rate over the previous 65 million years (see Center for Health and the 
Global Environment at Harvard Medical School).
   
   - Since 2000, 6 million hectares of primary forest have been lost each year. 
That’s 14,826,322 acres, or just less than the entire state of West Virginia 
(see the 2010 assessment by the Food and Agricultural Organization of the UN).
   
   
   - Even in the U.S., 15% of the population lives below the poverty line. For 
children under the age of 18, that number increases to 20% (see U.S. Census).
   
   - The world’s population is expected to reach 10 billion by 2050 (see United 
Nations’ projections)

How do we expect to feed that many people while we exhaust the resources that 
remain?Human activities are behind the extinction crisis. Commercial 
agriculture, timber extraction, and infrastructure development are causing 
habitat lossand our reliance on fossil fuels is a major contributor to climate 
change.Public corporations are responding to consumer demand and pressure from 
Wall Street. Professors Christopher Wright and Daniel Nyberg published Climate 
Change, Capitalism and Corporations last fall, arguing that businesses are 
locked in a cycle of exploiting the world’s resources in ever more creative 
ways.“Our book shows how large corporations are able to continue engaging in 
increasingly environmentally exploitative behaviour by obscuring the link 
between endless economic growth and worsening environmental destruction,” they 
wrote.Yale sociologist Justin Farrell studied 20 years of corporate funding and 
found that “corporations have used their wealth to amplify contrarian views [of 
climate change] and create an impression of greater scientific uncertainty than 
actually exists.”Corporate capitalism is committed to the relentless pursuit of 
growth, even if it ravages the planet and threatens human health.We need to 
build a new system: one that will balance economic growth with sustainability 
and human flourishing.A new generation of companies are showing the way 
forward. They’re infusing capitalism with fresh ideas, specifically in regards 
to employee ownership and agile management.The Increasing Importance Of 
Distributed Ownership And GovernanceFund managers at global financial 
institutions own the majority (70%) of the public stock exchange. These absent 
owners have no stake in the communities in which the companies operate. 
Furthermore, management-controlled equity is concentrated in the hands of a 
select few: the CEO and other senior executives.On the other hand, startups 
have been willing to distribute equity to employees. Sometimes such equity 
distribution is done to make up for less than competitive salaries, but more 
often it’s offered as a financial incentive to motivate employees toward 
building a successful company.According to The Economist, today’s startups are 
keen to incentivize via shared ownership:
The central difference lies in ownership: whereas nobody is sure who owns 
public companies, startups go to great lengths to define who owns what. Early 
in a company’s life, the founders and first recruits own a majority stake—and 
they incentivise people with ownership stakes or performance-related rewards. 
That has always been true for startups, but today the rights and 
responsibilities are meticulously defined in contracts drawn up by lawyers. 
This aligns interests and creates a culture of hard work and camaraderie. 
Because they are private rather than public, they measure how they are doing 
using performance indicators (such as how many products they have produced) 
rather than elaborate accounting standards.
This trend hearkens back to cooperatives where employees collectively owned the 
enterprise and participated in management decisions through their voting 
rights. Mondragon is the oft-cited example of a successful, modern worker 
cooperative. Mondragon’s broad-based employee ownership is not the same as an 
Employee Stock Ownership Plan. With ownership comes a say – control – over the 
business. Their workers elect management, and management is responsible to the 
employees.
REI is a consumer cooperative that drew attention this past year when it opted 
out of Black Friday sales, encouraging its employees and customers to spend the 
day outside instead of shopping.I suspect that the most successful companies 
under this emerging form of capitalism will have less concentrated, more 
egalitarian ownership structures. They will benefit not only financially but 
also communally.Joint Ownership Will Lead To Collaborative ManagementThe 
hierarchical organization of modern corporations will give way to networks or 
communities that make collaboration paramount. Many options for more fluid, 
agile management structures could take hold.For instance, newer companies are 
experimenting with alternative management models that seek to empower employees 
more than a traditional hierarchy typically does. Of these newer approaches, 
holacracy is the most widely known. It promises to bring structure and 
discipline to a peer-to-peer workplace.Holacracy “is a new way of running an 
organization that removes power from a management hierarchy and distributes it 
across clear roles, which can then be executed autonomously, without a 
micromanaging boss.”Companies like Zappos and Medium are in varying stages of 
implementing the management system.Valve Software in Seattle goes even further, 
allowing employees to select which projects they want to work on. Employees 
then move their desks to the most conducive office area for collaborating with 
the project team.

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