Great find Kat

I'll see your econocracy and raise ...
.......
Initially this would lead to a reduction in government revenue from corporate taxation. However this would be more than compensated for by a drastic reduction in expenditures for government services, subsidies, regulatory services, and the size of the social safety net. Many if not all of these governmental functions are now necessitated by corporate irresponsibility, but in the new order, where corporations are taxed or compensated for the way they impact social and environmental systems, the need for many of these government services will be dramatically reduced, and others will be assumed by the corporations themselves. In addition the consumption and destruction of our planet will be gradually reversed as corporations find it more profitable to conserve and restore to consume and destroy.
The Omnius Manifesto | Jeff Eisen, Ph.D.
I'd like to see were socialism fits into this?
I'll admit - while I like Dr Eisen's view of correcting corporate culture - (and his detailed definition of econocracy) - I don't see his implementations as realistic (1). They seem quite "paternalistic" - and I think he loses credibility further with his views on how humanity needs to change (2) (that we all need to be unified in one-ness and enlightenment).
(1) An ethical corporate culture requires many laws and fines and oversight to
begin to implement and then to follow that implementation through for the long term. There are just too many people who look at profit then avoid any further responsibility that might interfere with their bottom line. Government included (government especially).
The "occupy" movement started as a backlash to that - but has lost it's direction and voice.
I believe that consumer pressure is about the only thing that will really move the mountain. But government does need to cooperate and listen to it's citizen's voices - making it truely unprofitable to run on the basis of "profit with no concern for effect".
(2) Unfortunately, Dr. Eisen fails to develop an political or economic strategy for his ideal. Instead, he focuses on promoting a quasi-psycological-religious movement to address the problems with implementing his system. That we should all become "enlightened and unified". But who will define that? And what if it goes against my personal beliefs? Or yours? Or your grandmothers? Then what? (...then we have another inquisition).
Utopian idealogies are not new in the world. They don't work - because they fail to respect individual choice, belief and religious freedom.
I'd love to see someone pick up the occupy movement, combine it Eisens corporate ethical standards and find a way to implement that into every socio-political system on earth - without touching individual freedom of choice, religion and culture. That would be something. Not Utopia - just a better a future.