-Caveat Lector-

Now Corporations Claim The "Right To Lie"
by Thom Hartmann
Published on Wednesday, January 1, 2003 by CommonDreams.org
http://commondreams.org/views03/0101-07.htm

While Nike was conducting a huge and expensive PR blitz to tell people
that it had cleaned up its subcontractors' sweatshop labor practices, an
alert consumer advocate and activist in California named Marc Kasky
caught them in what he alleges are a number of specific deceptions.
Citing a California law that forbids corporations from intentionally
deceiving people in their commercial statements, Kasky sued the
multi-billion-dollar corporation.

Instead of refuting Kasky's charge by proving in court that they didn't
lie, however, Nike instead chose to argue that corporations should enjoy
the same "free speech" right to deceive that individual human citizens
have in their personal lives. If people have the constitutionally
protected right to say, "The check is in the mail," or, "That looks
great on you," then, Nike's reasoning goes, a corporation should have
the same right to say whatever they want in their corporate PR
campaigns.

They took this argument all the way to the California Supreme Court,
where they lost. The next stop may be the U.S. Supreme Court in early
January, and the battle lines are already forming.

For example, in a column in the New York Times supporting Nike's
position, Bob Herbert wrote, "In a real democracy, even the people you
disagree with get to have their say."

True enough.

But Nike isn't a person - it's a corporation. And it's not their "say"
they're asking for: it's the right to deceive people.

Corporations are created by humans to further the goal of making money.
As Buckminster Fuller said in his brilliant essay The Grunch of Giants,
"Corporations are neither physical nor metaphysical phenomena. They are
socioeconomic ploys - legally enacted game-playing..."

Corporations are non-living, non-breathing, legal fictions. They feel no
pain. They don't need clean water to drink, fresh air to breathe, or
healthy food to consume. They can live forever. They can't be put in
prison. They can change their identity or appearance in a day, change
their citizenship in an hour, rip off parts of themselves and create
entirely new entities. Some have compared corporations with robots, in
that they are human creations that can outlive individual humans,
performing their assigned tasks forever.

Isaac Asimov, when considering a world where robots had become as
functional, intelligent, and more powerful than their human creators,
posited three fundamental laws that would determine the behavior of such
potentially dangerous human-made creations. His Three Laws of Robotics
stipulated that non-living human creations must obey humans yet never
behave in a way that would harm humans.

Asimov's thinking wasn't altogether original: Thomas Jefferson and James
Madison beat him to it by about 200 years.

Jefferson and Madison proposed an 11th Amendment to the Constitution
that would "ban monopolies in commerce," making it illegal for
corporations to own other corporations, banning them from giving money
to politicians or trying to influence elections in any way, restricting
corporations to a single business purpose, limiting the lifetime of a
corporation to something roughly similar to that of productive humans
(20 to 40 years back then), and requiring that the first purpose for
which all corporations were created be "to serve the public good."

The amendment didn't pass because many argued it was unnecessary:
Virtually all states already had such laws on the books from the
founding of this nation until the Age of the Robber Barons.

Wisconsin, for example, had a law that stated: "No corporation doing
business in this state shall pay or contribute, or offer consent or
agree to pay or contribute, directly or indirectly, any money, property,
free service of its officers or employees or thing of value to any
political party, organization, committee or individual for any political
purpose whatsoever, or for the purpose of influencing legislation of any
kind, or to promote or defeat the candidacy of any person for
nomination, appointment or election to any political office." The
penalty for any corporate official violating that law and getting cozy
with politicians on behalf of a corporation was five years in prison and
a substantial fine.

Like Asimov's Three Laws of Robotics, these laws prevented corporations
from harming humans, while still allowing people to create their robots
(corporations) and use them to make money. Everybody won. Prior to 1886,
corporations were referred to in US law as "artificial persons," similar
to the way Star Trek portrays the human-looking robot named Data.

But after the Civil War, things began to change. In the last year of the
war, on November 21, 1864, President Abraham Lincoln looked back on the
growing power of the war-enriched corporations, and wrote the following
thoughtful letter to his friend Colonel William F. Elkins:

"We may congratulate ourselves that this cruel war is nearing its end.
It has cost a vast amount of treasure and blood. The best blood of the
flower of American youth has been freely offered upon our country's
altar that the nation might live. It has indeed been a trying hour for
the Republic; but I see in the near future a crisis approaching that
unnerves me and causes me to tremble for the safety of my country.

"As a result of the war, corporations have been enthroned and an era of
corruption in high places will follow, and the money power of the
country will endeavor to prolong its reign by working upon the
prejudices of the people until all wealth is aggregated in a few hands
and the Republic is destroyed. I feel at this moment more anxiety than
ever before, even in the midst of war. God grant that my suspicions may
prove groundless."

Lincoln's suspicions were prescient. In the 1886 Santa Clara County vs.
Southern Pacific Railroad case, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the
state tax assessor, not the county assessor, had the right to determine
the taxable value of fenceposts along the railroad's right-of-way.

However, in writing up the case's headnote - a commentary that has no
precedential status - the Court's reporter, a former railroad president
named J.C. Bancroft Davis, opened the headnote with the sentence: "The
defendant Corporations are persons within the intent of the clause in
section 1 of the Fourteen Amendment to the Constitution of the United
States, which forbids a State to deny to any person within its
jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws."

Oddly, the court had ruled no such thing. As a handwritten note from
Chief Justice Waite to reporter Davis that now is held in the National
Archives said: "we avoided meeting the Constitutional question in the
decision." And nowhere in the decision itself does the Court say
corporations are persons.

Nonetheless, corporate attorneys picked up the language of Davis's
headnote and began to quote it like a mantra. Soon the Supreme Court
itself, in a stunning display of either laziness (not reading the actual
case) or deception (rewriting the Constitution without issuing an
opinion or having open debate on the issue), was quoting Davis's
headnote in subsequent cases. While Davis's Santa Clara headnote didn't
have the force of law, once the Court quoted it as the basis for later
decisions its new doctrine of corporate personhood became the law.

Prior to 1886, the Bill of Rights and the 14th Amendment defined human
rights, and individuals - representing themselves and their own opinions
- were free to say and do what they wanted. Corporations, being
artificial creations of the states, didn't have rights, but instead had
privileges. The state in which a corporation was incorporated determined
those privileges and how they could be used. And the same, of course,
was true for other forms of "legally enacted game playing" such as
unions, churches, unincorporated businesses, partnerships, and even
governments, all of which have only privileges.

But with the stroke of his pen, Court Reporter Davis moved corporations
out of that "privileges" category - leaving behind all the others
(unions, governments, and small unincorporated businesses still don't
have "rights") - and moved them into the "rights" category with humans,
citing the 14th Amendment which was passed at the end of the Civil War
to grant the human right of equal protection under the law to
newly-freed slaves.

On December 3, 1888, President Grover Cleveland delivered his annual
address to Congress. Apparently the President had taken notice of the
Santa Clara County Supreme Court headnote, its politics, and its
consequences, for he said in his speech to the nation, delivered before
a joint session of Congress: "As we view the achievements of aggregated
capital, we discover the existence of trusts, combinations, and
monopolies, while the citizen is struggling far in the rear or is
trampled to death beneath an iron heel. Corporations, which should be
the carefully restrained creatures of the law and the servants of the
people, are fast becoming the people's masters."

Which brings us to today.

In the next few weeks the U.S. Supreme Court will decide whether or not
to hear Nike's appeal of the California Supreme Court's decision that
Nike was engaging in commercial speech which the state can regulate
under truth in advertising and other laws. And lawyers for Nike are
preparing to claim before the Supreme Court that, as a "person," this
multinational corporation has a constitutional free-speech right to
deceive.

The U.S. Chamber of Commerce, Exxon/Mobil, Monsanto, Microsoft, Pfizer,
and Bank of America have already filed amicus briefs supporting Nike.
Additionally, virtually all of the nation's largest corporate-owned
newspapers have recently editorialized in favor of Nike and given
virtually no coverage or even printed letters to the editor asserting
the humans' side of the case.

On the side of "only humans have human rights" is the lone human
activist in California - Marc Kasky - who brought the original complaint
against Nike.

People of all political persuasions who are concerned about democracy
and human rights are encouraging other humans to contact the ACLU (125
Broad Street, 18th Floor, New York, NY 10004) and ask them to join Kasky
in asserting that only living, breathing humans have human rights.
Organizations like ReclaimDemocracy.org are documenting the case in
detail on the web with a sign-on letter, in an effort to bring the ACLU
and other groups in on behalf of Kasky.

Corporate America is rising up, and, unlike you and me, when large
corporations "speak" they can use a billion-dollar bullhorn. At this
moment, the only thing standing between their complete takeover of
public opinion or their being brought back under the rule of law is the
U.S. Supreme Court.

And, interestingly, the Chief Justice of the current Court may side with
humans, proving this is an issue that is neither conservative or
progressive, but rather one that has to do with democracy versus
corporate plutocracy.

In the 1978 Boston v. Bellotti decision, the Court agreed, by a one vote
majority, that corporations were "persons" and thus entitled to the free
speech right to give huge quantities of money to political causes. Chief
Justice Rehnquist, believing this to be an error, argued that
corporations should be restrained from political activity and wrote the
dissent.

He started out his dissent by pointing to the 1886 Santa Clara headnote
and implicitly criticizing its interpretation over the years, saying,
"This Court decided at an early date, with neither argument nor
discussion, that a business corporation is a 'person' entitled to the
protection of the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific R. Co., 118 U.S. 394, 396 (1886).
..."

Then he went all the way back to the time of James Monroe's presidency
to re-describe how the Founders and the Supreme Court's then-Chief
Justice John Marshall, a strong Federalist appointed by outgoing
President John Adams in 1800, viewed corporations. Rehnquist wrote:

"Early in our history, Mr. Chief Justice Marshall described the status
of a corporation in the eyes of federal law:

"'A corporation is an artificial being, invisible, intangible, and
existing only in contemplation of law. Being the mere creature of law,
it possesses only those properties which the charter of creation confers
upon it, either expressly, or as incidental to its very existence. These
are such as are supposed best calculated to effect the object for which
it was created.'..."

Rehnquist concluded his dissent by asserting that it was entirely
correct that states have the power to limit a corporation's ability to
spend money to influence elections (after all, they can't vote – what
are they doing in politics?), saying:

"The free flow of information is in no way diminished by the
[Massachusetts] Commonwealth's decision to permit the operation of
business corporations with limited rights of political expression. All
natural persons, who owe their existence to a higher sovereign than the
Commonwealth, remain as free as before to engage in political activity."

Justices true to the Constitution and the Founders' intent may wake up
to the havoc wrought on the American political landscape by the Bellotti
case and its reliance on the flawed Santa Clara headnote. If the Court
chooses in the next few weeks to hear the Kasky v. Nike case, it will
open an opportunity for them to rule that corporations don't have the
free speech right to knowingly deceive the public. It's even possible
that this case could cause the Court to revisit the error of Davis's
1886 headnote, and begin the process of dismantling the flawed and
unconstitutional doctrine of corporate personhood.

As humans concerned with the future of human rights in a democratic
republic, it's vital that we now speak up, spread the word, and
encourage the ACLU and other pro-democracy groups to help Marc Kasky in
his battle on our species' collective behalf.

Thom Hartmann is the author of "Unequal Protection: The Rise of
Corporate Dominance and the Theft of Human Rights."
www.unequalprotection.com This article is copyright by Thom Hartmann,
but permission is granted for reprint in print, email, or web media so
long as this credit is attached.

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