It's amazing that, every time I've played a Final Fantasy game, new thoughts/theories/realisations rush through my mind.
So, even as a child, with an age in single digits, I understood that Shinra were bad - really bad. Perhaps I didn't quite grasp things about corporate greed and politics, but it was there. As I grew older, I started to understand a little bit more about the grip they had on the world and the impact they had on people's lives.
Now, at the grand old age of (nearly) 23, I'm shocked to realise just how far Shinra really went in this world.
Firstly - the company. Shinra Inc, or "the Shinra electric power company", as Marlene calls them, provides energy and "comfortable lives" to people in Midgar by extracting the planet's life force and using it to power...well, everything. Great - we learn that early in the game. President Shinra is an absolutely evil man - wiping 1/7th the population of Midgar just to prove a point. What never entered my head until now is that, although President Shinra is the Chief Executive of the company...he's also, incidentally, the leader of the world.
A SINGLE COMPANY RULES THE WORLD. Departments we're aware of include Urban Development, Space Exploration, Weapons and "Science", as well as, obviously, energy. A single company built and owns cities (Midgar, Junon) and control tax in the area; they forced towns and villages to sell their land (Coral, Gongaga, Fort Condor. They have an enormous army - not just security, but trained military personnel. They fought and defeated resisting forces (Wutai) and left their people and economy crippled as a result, forcing citizens like Yuffie to resort to crime to try and restore their previous glory. They control the newspapers, television and travel. President Shinra (and then Rufus) don't just own a terrible company; they, quite literally, rule the world.
I know none of this is new stuff but I just wanted to bring up my recent sheer horror over realising that President Shinra isn't President of the world...but kind of is.
What might be a new point of discussion: following the events of the original game, Shinra is left crippled. Rufus talks about helping to build a new world in Advent Children but it's just talk; he only has a couple of Turks left. In Dirge of Cerberus, Reeve is basically the land's saviour - but have we really considered what happened to Midgar, for example? With the end of Shinra came the end of Mako Reactors - how did they sustain power? People already lived in squalor in the slums - take away any kind of stability and sustainability and you have yourself a Great Depression.
In other words - Shinra ruled the world but also sustained it, ignoring the whole lifestream thing. With its defeat would inevitably come difficult times for the people of the world; hundreds/thousands would have lost their jobs! So, one controversial discussion might be: was it right to attempt to completely destory Shinra, as was AVALANCHE's original plan? Although it's a private company, they own the public, so their destruction would be negative for the people. Or does righteousness and liberalism trump corporate greed every time?
I'm still reeling over the idea that Richard Branson might, one day, send in a 10,000-strong army to destroy those bastards at Sky.
So, even as a child, with an age in single digits, I understood that Shinra were bad - really bad. Perhaps I didn't quite grasp things about corporate greed and politics, but it was there. As I grew older, I started to understand a little bit more about the grip they had on the world and the impact they had on people's lives.
Now, at the grand old age of (nearly) 23, I'm shocked to realise just how far Shinra really went in this world.
Firstly - the company. Shinra Inc, or "the Shinra electric power company", as Marlene calls them, provides energy and "comfortable lives" to people in Midgar by extracting the planet's life force and using it to power...well, everything. Great - we learn that early in the game. President Shinra is an absolutely evil man - wiping 1/7th the population of Midgar just to prove a point. What never entered my head until now is that, although President Shinra is the Chief Executive of the company...he's also, incidentally, the leader of the world.
A SINGLE COMPANY RULES THE WORLD. Departments we're aware of include Urban Development, Space Exploration, Weapons and "Science", as well as, obviously, energy. A single company built and owns cities (Midgar, Junon) and control tax in the area; they forced towns and villages to sell their land (Coral, Gongaga, Fort Condor. They have an enormous army - not just security, but trained military personnel. They fought and defeated resisting forces (Wutai) and left their people and economy crippled as a result, forcing citizens like Yuffie to resort to crime to try and restore their previous glory. They control the newspapers, television and travel. President Shinra (and then Rufus) don't just own a terrible company; they, quite literally, rule the world.
I know none of this is new stuff but I just wanted to bring up my recent sheer horror over realising that President Shinra isn't President of the world...but kind of is.
What might be a new point of discussion: following the events of the original game, Shinra is left crippled. Rufus talks about helping to build a new world in Advent Children but it's just talk; he only has a couple of Turks left. In Dirge of Cerberus, Reeve is basically the land's saviour - but have we really considered what happened to Midgar, for example? With the end of Shinra came the end of Mako Reactors - how did they sustain power? People already lived in squalor in the slums - take away any kind of stability and sustainability and you have yourself a Great Depression.
In other words - Shinra ruled the world but also sustained it, ignoring the whole lifestream thing. With its defeat would inevitably come difficult times for the people of the world; hundreds/thousands would have lost their jobs! So, one controversial discussion might be: was it right to attempt to completely destory Shinra, as was AVALANCHE's original plan? Although it's a private company, they own the public, so their destruction would be negative for the people. Or does righteousness and liberalism trump corporate greed every time?
I'm still reeling over the idea that Richard Branson might, one day, send in a 10,000-strong army to destroy those bastards at Sky.