Slippery slope doesn't have anything to do with this. My point was that societal standards & expectation shouldn't end with the government. Yes it's not required, but that's irrelevant.
People are paying for these corporations through tax breaks, subsidies & other governmental projects (Tesla for example).
It is a slippery slope because you're trying to extrapolate public policy onto private property.
If you're upset with the tax breaks and subsidies, then elect someone who will deal with them. That and your arbitrary expectations doesn't give you entitlement to someone else's private property.
I think the fundamental misunderstanding we're having here is that people on the left side of the political spectrum believe the solution to all answers is more government control. The idea that the government isn't the beginning and ending of social control is outside of their realm of understanding.
People are paying for these corporations through tax breaks, subsidies & other governmental projects (Tesla for example).