Nah, there's something to this: "move fast and break things" sure. Like, the tech bubble hasn't been kind to everyone. There is a sort of "bubble up and push everyone else" type of unrestrained competitiveness--sort of like (in analogy or simile, not hi-fi) the "sociopathic corporate culture" of the 80s that Bret Easton Ellis tries to skewer in American Psycho.
Capitalism and corporatism has always been violent, in many senses of the word (not just American, consider the various colonial "East India" companies). So while that's not new, there's something to the idea that particularly effusive emanations of corporate splendor or their nexes are coupled to physical violence, destruction and moral collapsism pragmas.
Capitalism and corporatism has always been violent, in many senses of the word (not just American, consider the various colonial "East India" companies). So while that's not new, there's something to the idea that particularly effusive emanations of corporate splendor or their nexes are coupled to physical violence, destruction and moral collapsism pragmas.