Brainpolice: I'm trying to point out that it is impossible or unsustainable without a state, that it came about as a result of a state-created legal construct or privilege in the first place, and hence once such a legal construct is removed it would be impossible to avoid liability in this way and on such a large scale.
States are extremely powerful institutions, so very few things would be on as large a scale as they are today. But all that would be necessary is that the corporate form provide mutual benefit to enough people that have an interest in its preservation that they can maintain it against objectors.
If every outlay of capital meant the schlep who bought five shares of stock could get a knock on his door because a Home Depot employee ran over somebody 2,000 miles away, then the cost of capital would be so prohibitive that the market would find a way to lower its cost. Like using the corporate form. Same thing with consumer goods. Mass production and logistics would be unsustainable on all but a very small scale without cost-shifting and risk-spreading devices such as the corporate form. Since people like rising living standards instead of being autarchic farmers, then they'll demand and use cost-shifting and risk-spreading devices.
Brainpolice:In my understanding, individuals should be liable for their actions.
All shareholders do is provide capital. Thus, their loss should be limited to the amount of capital they provided.
The State has suddenly and quietly gone mad. It is talking nonsense; and it can’t stop. —G.K. Chesterton