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The American Reporter
The Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S.  Constitution stipulates that "No State
shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or
immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any
person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to
any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws."

In the 1886 Supreme Court case, Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific
Railroad Co., the Court declared that a corporation was a "person" as
interpreted by the Fourteenth Amendment. In a preface to the Court's
argument, Chief Justice Morrison R. Waite observed that all the Justices
shared the opinion that the provisions of the Fourteenth Amendment that
applied to persons also "applied to these corporations," the corporate
defendants affected by the case before the Court.

This 19th Century decision set a momentous precedent. It gave an abstract
paper construct, a corporation, the legal rights of a "person," though
without binding these legal persons with the same social responsibilities
communities place on individual human beings.

Four score and 14 years later, the Court de facto extended the progressively
enhanced legal empowerment of corporations, enabling them finally to design
contracts that supersede and nullify an individual human being's protections
under the U.S. Constitution's Bill of Rights.

Not surprisingly, it was a government agency, namely, the CIA, that pioneered
the use of employment contracts to limit the fundamental freedoms of American
citizens. In Snepp v. the CIA (1980), the Court upheld an injunction
enjoining Snepp from publishing any work concerning the CIA or its activities
without pre-publication review by the CIA.

The Agency had sued ex-agent Frank Snepp for publishing his book, "Decent
Interval," without submitting it to the CIA for pre-publication review.
Although the book did not contain any information that was not already part
of the public record, when Snepp entered the CIA, he signed a secrecy
contract in which he promised not to publish any information or material
relating to the agency without prepublication approval. The Court
found that Snepp had not only violated his contract, but also breached a
fiduciary duty to the government. It imposed a "constructive trust" on the
proceeds of his book. Thus, all the money Frank Snepp received from
publishing his book had to be turned over to the federal government.

Today, corporations are using the "contract tool" to nullify the rights of
citizens under the Constitution of the United States. The best example of
this occurs when insurance companies require patients to "waive" their
Constitutional rights to due process and submit to "arbitration" in a dispute
with a doctor covered by the insurer. This de
facto deprives the human patient of immediate legal due process as guaranteed
by the same Fourteenth Amendment that gave life to paper corporations.

Through the years and a series of corporate-friendly, perhaps socially
irresponsible decisions, the Supreme Court has created a horde of monstrous
predators, legal Dr. Jekyll/Mr. Hydes.

At one level, corporations develop new technologies and economies of scale.
These may serve the economic interests of mass consumers by  introducing new
products and more efficient methods of mass production. On another level,
given the absence of political control today, corporations serve to destroy
the foundations of the civic community and the lives of people who reside in
them -- here in the United States, and everywhere else in the world.

In the struggle to survive, denial is strong. Most Americans are frustrated
by the gravity of the problem: legally, corporations have unlimited life,
unlimited size, unlimited power, and a whole lot of license to control the
political, economic, and cultural destinies and
disparities of local communities and of the world. Having no conscience for
the community, corporations remain focused solely on their own "rational"
self interest in profit, respecting no human being that stands in their way,
especially those lacking status, wealth, or power.

Mokhiber and Weissman's book, "Corporate Predators," is important for the
information it contains about impact corporations have on you and I, our
communities and the world.

Russell Mokhiber is editor of the "Corporate Crime Reporter." Robert Weissman
is editor of the "Multinational Monitor." The authors' agenda is clear, and
"Corporate Predators" is spiced with the kind of rhetoric one would expect
from writers reporting on the evils of corporations. But you can ignore the
rhetoric, if you want. Facts speak
for themselves.

The book itself is a collection of the columns the authors wrote during 1997
and 1998. The data it contains is a step toward raising public consciousness
about the legally accepted institutions that control their future. "Corporate
Predators" contains facts and information about corporations that rarely
reaches the general public in a unified, coherent way. And the public can
change the law, once people grasp the problem and
unify to solve it.

"Corporate Predators" exposes the problems in monitoring corporate crimes,
for example. In "No Mind, No Crime," the authors write, "While street crime
is reportedly being brought under control in America's major cities, all
indications are that corporate crime and violence continue to skyrocket." Yet
some legal scholars like George Mason Law School Professor Jeffrey Parker
argue, "Since a corporation has no mind, is can commit no crime." Then why
give it the legal status of a thinking human being?

According to Mokhiber and Weismann, "The FBI does not issue a yearly
"Corporate Crime in the United States" report, despite strong evidence
indicating corporate crime and violence inflicts far more damage in society
than all street crime combined." Indeed, the FBI "Crime in the United States"
report ignores corporate and white-collar crimes such as pollution,
procurement fraud, financial fraud, public corruption and occupational
homicide, while it does document murder, robbery, assault, burglary, and
other street crimes.

The authors also note throughout the book that corporate crime and violence
goes undetected or unprosecuted either because corporations can modify the
laws to excuse them from wrongdoing or they have enough power to influence
prosecutorial actions and outcomes.

Yet companies do commit crimes. A few are uncovered and sometimes prosecuted.
Their column, "Blue Cross, Blue Shield, Blue Criminal,"  describes the 1998
case where Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Illinois pled guilty to eight felony
counts after admitting concealing evidence in a Medicare claim payment
investigation. In another case, Blue Cross/Blue Shield of Florida paid $10
million to settle charges that it falsified and
failed to properly screen provider claims. These are not the only states
wherein this particular corporation faced criminal charges.

The authors report in "Brinkley Shills for Corporate Criminals" that in 1996
Archer Daniels Midland (ADM) pled guilty to criminal price fixing and paid a
$100 million fine. ADM hired David Brinkley to film a series of TV promos to
repair the company's image. Our vocabulary has no concept of working for a
corporate felon.

In 1998 state testimony showed that General Electric dumped a millions tons
of PCBs (polychlorinated biphenyls) into the Hudson River, lining the bottom
of a 200 mile strip. The Oil Pollution Act, passed by Congress in 1990,
required the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (N.O.A.A.) to
develop a new set of rules and procedures to determine exactly how toxic
cleanup sums should be calculated.

As described in "Saving or Trashing America's Treasures?" at issue for
General Electric are the tons of PCBs that it dumped into the Hudson River.
G.E. wants escape responsibility for the environmental damage it caused and
wants the rules changed before it is forced to clean up this toxic
environmental mess. The cleanup could cost the company $2 billion to remove
from the river. GE says such a cost is unfair, even though its revenues for
1997 alone reached a record $90 billion. Court cases are pending.

In "Dissolving Unocal" the authors describe how a California citizens group
petitioned the state attorney general (Dan Lungren) to revoke the charter of
Union Oil of California for pollution, OSHA violations, worker
discrimination, and complicity in human rights
violations in Afghanistan and Burma. Of course, Lungren rejected the 127-page
petition within a couple days. Revoking a corporate charter has happened only
once in California this century. Loyola Law School Professor Robert Benson
explains, "California attorneys general haven't often done it because they've
become soft on corporate crime."

While the public is becoming increasingly aware of corporate control of the
political process, the question of how to take back our government from
corporations is a problem the authors raise that requires a solution.
Mokhiber and Weissman suggest, "Citizens activists forced to confront
corporate crime and violence in their community increasingly see that Big
Business dominates both major parties."

In "Boom and Bust" the authors describe how large institutional investors --
Merrill Lynch & Co., Goldman Sach & Co., Bear, Stearns, & Co. and Bankers
Trust Corp. -- call on the government for taxpayer bailouts when hedge funds
with billions invested go bust. Calls placed to the Federal Reserve Chairman
or Treasury Secretary lead to orchestrated bailouts that benefit those with
the millions in risky investments. The
political party affiliation of the office holder has little significance --
the big guy can always get an infusion of worker and middleclass taxpayer
capital to reduce his risk irrespective of which political party holds
power.

Similar kinds of political arrangements exist in other industries, including
oil, pharmaceuticals, gambling, and manufacturing.  Meanwhile, forget
campaign finance reform. In Buckley v. Valeo (1976)  and First National Bank
of Boston v. Bellotti (1978), the Supreme Court declared corporate political
contributions as a person's exercise of free speech. When the elections are
over, it's time to legislate. And as the authors report, "If major
corporations don't like a law, they can invest millions
in campaign contributions, lobbyists, and political advertisements" to change
the law.

Sometimes they just ignore the law. The 1998 proposed merger of Citicorp and
Travelers Group is such a case. According to Mokhiber and Weissman, "This
merger is flatly prohibited by federal law that prevents banks, securities
firms, and insurance companies from owning each other." But the financial
services industry fought for years to tear down the regulatory wall
separating commercial banking from insurance and
investment banking. The merging companies can tie up litigation for two to
five years, while they lobby to change the law.

According to Mokhiber and Weissman, "When Teddy Roosevelt-era trustbusters
broke up the Standard Oil monopoly, they were motivated by political as much
as economic concerns. They understood that concentrated  economic power
translates into political power, and that concentrated political power in
incompatible with democracy." Today, conservatism has buried the
trustbusters.

In "One World, One Company" the authors note that a recent United Nations
report highlights the importance of recognizing the political implications of
mergers and acquisitions, especially American and European takeovers of Third
World companies. Such acquisitions do not create new jobs, generate new
economic activity, or even represent new investments. Only the company name
changes. Meanwhile, the takeovers create private monopolies and oligopolies
that sustain local price gouging, degradation
in living standards, suppression of local independent innovation, and the
maintenance of a hierarchical social structure with great disparities in
wealth.

People who've lived in the United States through the corporate downsizing
strategies implemented during recessions or as a result of mergers understand
how corporate consolidation and intimidation affect local communities.

During the Reagan years, a new climate for Big Business emerged. The decision
to fire the striking air traffic controllers broke the Professional Air
Traffic Controllers Association (PATCO). Union membership declined
nationally. Congress passed the Garn-St. Germain bill, which deregulated the
Saving and Loan Associations. Taxpayers paid the $500 billion plus bill for
the S & L collapse, resulting in increased dissatisfaction with taxation: the
politically desired result from the conservative, pro-business perspective.

Big Business still today capitalize on the political and economic climate
Reagan created. Corporations acquired enhanced power from increased capital
mobility, foreign competition, rapid technological change, and downsizing.
After NAFTA, they could move to Mexico. As Mokhiber and Weissman report,
"Employers use threats of plant relocations to bust unions; rely on weak or
non-existent unions to permit downsizing;
they capitalize on technological change to speed restructuring and to shift
production abroad. Many workers are so intimidated that they fear unionizing
or even asking for a raise."

The authors report a recent study showed that, in companies subjected to
union drives between 1993 and 1995, more than a third of employers fired
workers for union activity, 38 percent gave special favors to those who
opposed the union activity, and 14 percent used electronic surveillance of
union activists.

Moreover, as corporations have become strident defenders of First Amendment
freedoms in an electoral context, with increasing frequency they are
intimidating citizens from exercising their own free speech rights. More and
more corporations are charging community activists who speak out against
alleged corporate wrongdoing with defamation, libel, slander, and other
offenses, suing them for large sums of money. As the authors suggest, "Most
corporate suits fail, but they have the desired effect of
tying up activists' time, and intimidating them and others from speaking
out." Free speech is rarely allowed anywhere corporations control the message
through their financial power.

Public political culture is becoming less and less a pure human endeavor and
more and more a corporate product. Information control is an important
corporate mission, as politicians plan to privatize prisons, law enforcement,
social security, and even components of the military.

In "Corporate Fronts: An Epidemic with a Cure," the authors tell the story of
Sandra Steingraber, whose book, "Living Downstream: An  Ecologist Looks At
Cancer and the Environment," was savagely reviewed by Dr. Jerry Berke from
Ashton, Massachusetts, in the "New England Journal of Medicine." Berke called
the book, "a biased work" of an environmentalist. According to the authors,
"Steingraber soon learned that the Dr. Jerry
Berke who reviewed her book was in fact director of toxicology at W.R. Grace
& Co., on of the largest chemical companies in the United States." The
chemical pollution of this company was captured in the book, "A Civil
Action," now a motion picture starring John Travolta.

Corporations are resorting to new tactics to delude the public.  Mokhiber and
Weissman describe how corporations set up and fund think  tanks like the
American Enterprise Institute and Hudson Institute. The set up front groups
like Citizens Against Lawsuit Abuse or the Electric Consumers Association.
They fund "public interest groups"  like the World Wildlife Federation or the
Environmental Defense Fund.  Corporations have taken over organizations, like
the National Consumers League. And they fund many national corporate-friendly
conferences with misleading themes,
such as "Focus on Youth: The New Consumer Power," sponsored by Visa USA, the
Chemical Specialties Manufacturers Association, the Chlorine Chemical
Council, Monsanto, General Motors, and others.

At the same time, all media efforts are made to block reports deleterious to
corporate interests. The "old boy" network meets advertising.

In a lawsuit filed against WTVT, a Fox Television affiliate in Tampa,
Florida, two journalists allege that Fox executives ordered them to broadcast
lies about Monsanto's controversial bovine growth hormone (BGH), now being
used by many dairy farmers across the country. Jane Akre and Steve Wilson had
produced a four-part series on BGH in the Florida milk supply. Several
countries around the world prohibit use if BGH in cows. When Akre and Wilson
refused to include falsehoods in "adjustments" to the
script, they were fired.

This case represents only one of many involving issues focused on the media
and a number of corporations. Self-censorship of the media is well known
today.

Meanwhile, corporations have extended their national cultural reach and
control to museums, schools, and the arts. Corporations  regularly sponsor
exhibits at the Smithsonian Institution, in Washington,D.C., where they also
block information that is critical to their interests.  "Fund raisers" at
cultural institutions throughout the country
are faced with this problem.

Corporations are now providing study guides and textbooks to public schools,
and not without attempting to influence the contents. All the while, the flow
of information has become concentrated in fewer and fewer independent
newspapers, radio stations, and television stations.  National bookstore
chains threaten all local independent booksellers.

With the political control of the American body politic in their pockets,
corporations control the political state of the world by inducing foreign
policies protecting authoritarian regimes, oligopolies, and investment risks.
At the international level, support for corporate interests while sacrificing
needs of people has become a permanent component of U.S. foreign policy.
Countries like China and India have been able to maintain some modicum of
political and economic independence due to the size of their populations and
nationalist policies of their political leaders. Other smaller countries from
Argentina and Chile to Nigeria and Indonesia have had their authoritarian
regimes installed and sustained through American foreign policy designed to
protect corporate
interests.

Bottom line, at a pure human level, corporations represent the amoral,
absence of ethics in human society. Some corporations try to balance their
deeds with philanthropic contributions of one sort of another. But this is
not recompense for the damage and death done to communities and people
throughout the world.

The blind pursuance of corporate interests leads to the devaluation of human
beings, as the author describe, when they report that Occidental Petroleum is
intent on drilling in the Colombian rainforest on land considered sacred by
the U'wa people, who say they will commit collective suicide if the drilling
doesn't stop. The same can be said for
companies that charge a price that is 10 to 100 times the cost of producing t
he product, as is the case in the apparel and pharmaceutical industries. This
is something the facade of occasional conscience-easing corporate
philanthropy cannot hide.

Corporations have large budgets for marketing mendacity promoting dishonest
"spins" that have become part of the expectation of doing  business. They lie
about their products and maintain law-suit budgets to cover losses due to
product defect judgments. As Mokhiber and Weissman document, too many
corporations get low performance scores for "decent treatment of workers,
environmental preservation, respect for human
rights, delivery of affordable and quality consumer goods and services and
adherence to the law."

Perhaps the most disastrous impact corporations have in our lives is on the
human personality. On one hand, the PR-driven marketplace degrades honesty
and integrity. On the other hand, democratic values of tolerance and open
discussion become diluted in an organizational environment that fundamentally
emulates a feudalistic/militaristic
structure. The struggle to maintain a job occurs in the context of an
asymmetric relationship where obsequious sycophancy is highly
prioritized.

Today, the Fortune 1000 corporations control 70 percent of the economy. When
the nation was founded, the economy more closely approached a state of pure
competition. Then people dealt with people. Now supervisors manage their
"human resources" as they manage raw materials, which are discarded when they
lose their usefulness.

Read "Corporate Predators." And perhaps drop a line to your favorite Supreme
Court Justice and inquire about how this march toward Corporate Feudalism can
be legally stopped, on the ethical assumption that we truly ought to "put
people first."  -- Charles Reid
-----
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Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
All My Relations.
Omnia Bona Bonis,
Adieu, Adios, Aloha.
Amen.
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