Corporate communism in the workplace isn’t strength—it’s control. Tradespeople lose freedom while corporations centralize power and shift blame downward. This post exposes how corporate systems exploit “key people,” create toxic cultures, and quietly strangle the trades behind a mask of efficiency and teamwork.
The System That Pretends to Be Freedom
“They say America runs on hard work. But if you’re in the trades, you know that’s a lie.”
We don’t run on hard work anymore. We run on exploitation disguised as “best practices.”
Burnout is rebranded as “efficiency.”
Centralized control looks a hell of a lot like communism—only this time, it’s the corporations calling the shots.
At first, it’s the perfect illusion — a system built on control but sold as unity. That’s the foundation of corporate communism. At first, it feels like trust — “We depend on you because you always deliver.” But what it really means is they’ve found someone reliable to absorb the damage (Brookings — Corporate Power and the Illusion of Choice).
What Corporate Communism Looks Like
You’ve probably felt it but didn’t know what to call it.
Just layers of managers, corporate slogans, and paper safety.
It’s not merit—it’s control and it looks like this.
- No freedom in the system
- No pride in good work
- No voice for the people who keep it running
Why I Call It Corporate Communism
You don’t own your tools — they do. Even when you buy them yourself, some companies claim ownership once they’re used on-site. I’ve seen workers face lawsuits for “stolen property” — tools they purchased with their own paychecks. Hell, I’ve had it happen to me.
You don’t make the decisions — they do. Every “choice” is already buried in a policy.
You get the same slogans at every job — “teamwork,” “innovation,” “safety first.”
That’s not capitalism. It’s ownership by proxy.
They control everything but the liability — and even your ideas aren’t yours anymore. Most corporate policies include a clause stating that any improvement, fix, or method you create “in the course of employment” automatically belongs to the company. The system takes your labor, your thought, and your pride, then files it under “intellectual property” (A&O Shearman — How to capture IP created by employees and contractors)
Corporate communism means:
- You hold the risk
- They hold the power
- And the illusion of “team” keeps the system running
The Trades Are Dying Quietly
Fewer kids are choosing the trades. The ones with real skill either burn out early or take their talent overseas. Meanwhile, the country’s infrastructure keeps crumbling — and all we get are more reports about it (see “America’s Infrastructure Workforce Crisis”).
Meanwhile, the language of “safety” and “teamwork” becomes noise—a product of what theorists call the culture industry. It’s messaging designed to pacify, not protect.
Servitude in a hard hat
“When workers lose power but keep the blame, that’s not a job—it’s servitude in a hard hat.”
Why I’m Writing This
Because I’ve seen both sides—real leadership and the illusion of it.
And I’m done watching tradespeople carry the cost of someone else’s image.
This blog is for the people still showing up, holding it all together with grit and electrical tape.
If that’s you, stick around. Let’s stop pretending this is normal.
Let’s start building what comes next.
Companies can achieve corporate communism through a mix of language and debt — tools designed to entice people into the system and keep them there. I cover this in greater depth in my free eBooks Slave Wages by Design and Corporate Language by Design.









