but one of the things I find despicable is this tendency to exploit loopholes, justify corruption and to admire those that manage to do so. The bureaucracy is not ALWAYS just an excuse for "elites" to screw over everyone else, only if your bureaucracy is fundamentally broken in the first place.
whats wrong with exploiting loopholes? it's how business is, it's how it always will be. in order to maintain a successful enterprise, you need to maximize profits. whenever government shoves its dick into something with regulations, by default someone is going to find a way around it to save some money. i think this kind of highlights the fallacy that lots of people use to advocate for huge bureaucratic governments. they like to believe that business, especially big business, hurts the working man by underpaying and under-privileging him. to counter this, they try to use governmental authority to punish these businesses in a glorious act of social justice. to them, it's the great Business vs Government conundrum, where the righteous government can put a stop to the wicked acts of the greedy capitalist pig.
i think if you look deeper though, you find that there is no Business vs Government battle. Business wins everytime. Goverment puts out a regulation, businesses find a loophole. Hell, in the US, businesses spend billions of dollars to lobby members of Congress to grant them special permissions, its why we have 70,000 page income tax code in US (according to taxfoundation.org) as well as an insanely corrupt government. in soviet russia, the government was the business man, and that turned out fantastic for everyone. i think history shows us that wherever bureaucracy rears its head, those below the elite class are ALWAYS screwed. bureaucracy fundamentally inhibits individual liberty, making it broken no matter what (unless you think individual liberty isn't an important ideal).