Corporate Cancer

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Corporate Cancer: How to Work Miracles and Save Millions by Curing Your Company
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Author Vox Day
Language English
Genre business, political science
Publisher Castalia House
Publication date
November 11, 2019
Media type Kindle
Pages 140

Corporate Cancer: How to Work Miracles and Save Millions by Curing Your Company is a non-fiction business book by Vox Day released in November 2019 by Castalia House. It is also available at Amazon. The book describes how corporations can defend themselves from political attacks and forms of sabotage by social justice warriors, also known as SJWs, who have succeeded in infiltrating and subverting these organizations. The book also describes how to discredit and reduce the influence of these attackers and how to expel them.[1]

Premise

Two earlier books by the same author, SJWs Always Lie: Taking Down the Thought Police (2015) and SJWs Always Double Down: Anticipating the Thought Police (2017), describe the phenomenon of SJW convergence where entryists infiltrate and then subvert existing companies or groups, seeking to turn them into left-wing political organizations. The infiltrators will also try to assume leadership positions, and expel anyone who was there previously who disagrees with the new leadership. However, such changes may also occur through existing employees becoming more focused on social politics over the organization's original purpose.

The author recommends a policy of zero tolerance against SJWs. In this book and many of his previous blog posts, Day has claimed that infiltration and other pressure by left-wing activists is weakening many large organizations in the Western world, and becoming a threat to society itself. He states that an early sign of such infiltration is virtue signalling.

Cultural examples given by Day include the change in focus and theme of Disney media properties, including the Star Wars franchise and printed Marvel Comics. Important business examples include the politicization of payment processors like Paypal and online retailers, leading to trade restrictions through monopoly control of essential services. Many software publishers have become converged through a progressive code of conduct.

In Corporate Cancer, Vox Day describes ways to actively reverse such infiltration attempts, if they were not recognized as a threat earlier, or were tolerated by the employer or previous group leadership. Day states it is necessary for employees to familiarize themselves with these trends to safeguard their jobs.[2]

External links

Also see

References

  1. Vox Popoli (Nov 12, 2019) http://voxday.blogspot.com/2019/11/corporate-cancer-by-vox-day.html
  2. Amazon reviews page(retrieved Nov 13, 2019) https://www.amazon.com/dp/B081D58P1X/