What I find concerning is 'Corporate Personhood'. Basically, a corporation is given all the rights of a 'natural' person...that is, you and me.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Corporate_personhood
The problem as a judge noted is, "These legal entities, he argued, have perpetual life, the ability to amass large sums of money, limited liability, no ability to vote, no morality, no purpose outside profit-making, and no loyalty. Therefore, he argued, the courts should permit legislatures to regulate corporate participation in the political process."
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citizens_United_v._FEC
The above link is about corporation's rights to participate in elections.
Corporations, in essence, become 'a country within countries', especially if large enough. Their prime motivation is not the same as a 'natural' (real) person.
We see it when CEOs are given obscene amounts of money, or in the case of banks too big to fail, going to the public purse to be bailed out. How many individuals were bailed out after the last depression? Another case was when the banks colluded to set the overnight rate. They were caught, but the punishment was a slap on the hand, relatively speaking. An individual would be bankrupted. What invariably happens is we loathe to punish corporations to the same extent we punish individuals, because one argues, we don't want to cripple a corporation because they give jobs to many. Yet, we have no problem crippling an individual. The playing field is not level, especially when a corporation can lawyer their way into a 'fine'. SEC or IRS, for instance, can't be bothered to take corporations to court (too expensive), so they negotiate a penalty. Individuals don't have that clout.
Corporations even take into account their clout (large bank accounts) when making a liability decision. Sure, this product could cause injury, but lets balance it against how much money we can make. If we can make a billion dollars in profit, will that offset our liability if someone sues? Now, if you were an individual selling a product with liability issues, would you? As an individual, you have more 'skin' in the game. A corporation has a legal department. We see this nonsense all the time, when they push a drug with known health risks or is prone to abuse. A prime example is that took decades to find big tobacco liable for it's product. Millions, if not billions of folks died before they were found liable. Eventually, they were found guilty, and had to pay massive settlements, but they made billions over the decades they were in court...to add insult to injury, our government was complicit because of the tax revenue they garnered.