[The Corporation: Documentary now out on DVD. Whether
you're on the right, or the left politically, everyone
should see this documentary. You can now rent it at
online rental clubs like www.netflix.com I know I've
sent this reminder out before to some of you, but this
is a doc worth checking out. Rick.]

Source > http://www.thecorporation.com/


THE CORPORATION explores the nature and spectacular
rise of the dominant institution of our time. Footage
from pop culture, advertising, TV news, and corporate
propaganda, illuminates the corporation's grip on our
lives. Taking its legal status as a "person" to its
logical conclusion, the film puts the corporation on
the psychiatrist's couch to ask "What kind of person
is it?" Provoking, witty, sweepingly informative, The
Corporation includes forty interviews with corporate
insiders and critics - including Milton Friedman, Noam
Chomsky, Naomi Klein, and Michael Moore - plus true
confessions, case studies and strategies for change.

Winner of 24 INTERNATIONAL AWARDS, 10 of them AUDIENCE
CHOICE AWARDS including the AUDIENCE AWARD for
DOCUMENTARY in WORLD CINEMA at the 2004 SUNDANCE FILM
FESTIVAL. The long-awaited DVD, available now in
Australia and coming in March to North America,
contains over 8 hour of additional footage.

The film is based on the book The Corporation: The
Pathological Pursuit of Profit and Power by Joel
Bakan.
THE CORPORATION - DETAILED SYNOPSIS
In THE CORPORATION, case studies, anecdotes and true
confessions reveal behind-the-scenes tensions and
influences in several corporate and anti-corporate
dramas. Each illuminates an aspect of the
corporation's complex character.

Among the 40 interview subjects are CEOs and top-level
executives from a range of industries: oil,
pharmaceutical, computer, tire, manufacturing, public
relations, branding, advertising and undercover
marketing; in addition, a Nobel-prize winning
economist, the first management guru, a corporate spy,
and a range of academics, critics, historians and
thinkers are interviewed.

A LEGAL "PERSON"
In the mid-1800s the corporation emerged as a legal
"person." Imbued with a "personality" of pure
self-interest, the next 100 years saw the
corporation's rise to dominance. The corporation
created unprecedented wealth. But at what cost? The
remorseless rationale of "externalities"�as Milton
Friedman explains: the unintended consequences of a
transaction between two parties on a third�is
responsible for countless cases of illness, death,
poverty, pollution, exploitation and lies.

THE PATHOLOGY OF COMMERCE: CASE HISTORIES
To more precisely assess the "personality" of the
corporate "person," a checklist is employed, using
actual diagnostic criteria of the World Health
Organization and the DSM-IV, the standard diagnostic
tool of psychiatrists and psychologists. The
operational principles of the corporation give it a
highly anti-social "personality": It is
self-interested, inherently amoral, callous and
deceitful; it breaches social and legal standards to
get its way; it does not suffer from guilt, yet it can
mimic the human qualities of empathy, caring and
altruism. Four case studies, drawn from a universe of
corporate activity, clearly demonstrate harm to
workers, human health, animals and the biosphere.
Concluding this point-by-point analysis, a disturbing
diagnosis is delivered: the institutional embodiment
of laissez-faire capitalism fully meets the diagnostic
criteria of a "psychopath."

MINDSET
But what is the ethical mindset of corporate players?
Should the institution or the individuals within it be
held responsible?

The people who work for corporations may be good
people, upstanding citizens in their communities - but
none of that matters when they enter the corporation's
world. As Sam Gibara, Former CEO and Chairman of
Goodyear Tire, explains, "If you really had a free
hand, if you really did what you wanted to do that
suited your personal thoughts and your personal
priorities, you'd act differently."

Ray Anderson, CEO of Interface, the world's largest
commercial carpet manufacturer, had an environmental
epiphany and re-organized his $1.4 billion company on
sustainable principles. His company may be a beacon of
corporate hope, but is it an exception to the rule?

MONSTROUS OBLIGATIONS
A case in point: Sir Mark Moody-Stuart recounts an
exchange between himself (at the time Chairman of
Royal Dutch Shell), his wife, and a motley crew of
Earth First activists who arrived on the doorstep of
their country home. The protesters chanted and
stretched a banner over their roof that read,
"MURDERERS." The response of the surprised couple was
not to call the police, but to engage their uninvited
guests in a civil dialogue, share concerns about human
rights and the environment and eventually serve them
tea on their front lawn. Yet, as the Moody-Stuarts
apologize for not being able to provide soy milk for
their vegan critics' tea, Shell Nigeria is flaring
unrivaled amounts of gas, making it one of the world's
single worst sources of pollution. And all the
professed concerns about the environment do not spare
Ken Saro Wiwa and eight other activists from being
hanged for opposing Shell's environmental practices in
the Niger Delta.

The Corporation exists to create wealth, and even
world disasters can be profit centers. Carlton Brown,
a commodities trader, recounts with unabashed honesty
the mindset of gold traders while the twin towers
crushed their occupants. The first thing that came to
their minds, he tells us, was: "How much is gold up?"

PLANET INC.
You'd think that things like disasters, or the purity
of childhood, or even milk, let alone water or air,
would be sacred. But no. Corporations have no built-in
limits on what, who, or how much they can exploit for
profit. In the fifteenth century, the enclosure
movement began to put fences around public grazing
lands so that they might be privately owned and
exploited. Today, every molecule on the planet is up
for grabs. In a bid to own it all, corporations are
patenting animals, plants, even your DNA.

Around things too precious, vulnerable, sacred or
important to the public interest, governments have, in
the past, drawn protective boundaries against
corporate exploitation. Today, governments are
inviting corporations into domains from which they
were previously barred.

PERCEPTION MANAGEMENT
The Initiative Corporation spends $22 billion
worldwide placing its clients' advertising in every
imaginable - and some unimaginable - media. One new
medium: very young children. Their "Nag Factor" study
dropped jaws in the world of child psychiatry. It was
designed not to help parents cope with their
children's nagging, but to help corporations formulate
their ads and promotions so that children would nag
for their products more effectively. Initiative Vice
President Lucy Hughes elaborates: "You can manipulate
consumers into wanting, and therefore buying your
products. It's a game."

Today people can become brands (Martha Stewart). And
brands can build cities (Celebration, Florida). And
university students can pay for their educations by
shilling on national television for a credit card
company (Chris and Luke). And a corporation even owns
the rights to the popular song "Happy Birthday" (a
division of AOL-Time-Warner). Do you ever get the
feeling it's all a bit much?

Corporations have invested billions to shape public
and political opinion. When they own everything, who
will stand for the public good?

THE PRICE OF WHISTLEBLOWING
It turns out that standing for the public good is an
expensive proposition. Ask Jane Akre and Steve Wilson,
two investigative reporters fired by Fox News after
they refused to water down a story on rBGH, a
controversial synthetic hormone widely used in the
United States (but banned in Europe and Canada) to rev
up cows' metabolism and boost their milk production.
Because of the increased production, the cows suffer
from mastitis, a painful infection of the udders.
Antibiotics must then be injected, which find their
way into the milk, and ultimately reduce people's
resistance to disease.

Fox demanded that they rewrite the story, and
ultimately fired Akre and Wilson. Akre and Wilson
subsequently sued Fox under Florida's whistle-blower
statute. They proved to a jury that the version of the
story Fox would have had them put on the air was
false, distorted or slanted. Akre was awarded
$425,000. Then Fox appealed, the verdict was
overturned on a technicality, and Akre lost her award.
[For an update on the case see Disc 2 where we learn
that at one point, Jane and Steve became liable for
Fox's $1.8 million court costs, later to be reduced to
$200,000.]

DEMOCRACY LTD.
Democracy is a value that the corporation just doesn't
understand. In fact, corporations have often tried to
undo democracy if it is an obstacle to their
single-minded drive for profit. From a 1934
business-backed plot to install a military dictator in
the White House (undone by the integrity of one U.S.
Marine Corps General, Smedley Darlington Butler) to
present-day law-drafting, corporations have bought
military might, political muscle and public opinion.

And corporations do not hesitate to take advantage of
democracy's absence either. One of the most shocking
stories of the twentieth century is Edwin Black's
recounting IBM's strategic alliance with Nazi
Germany�one that began in 1933 in the first weeks that
Hitler came to power and continued well into World War
II.

FISSURES
The corporation may be trying to render governments
impotent, but since the landmark WTO protest in
Seattle, a rising wave of networked individuals and
groups have decided to make their voices heard.
Movements to challenge the very foundations of the
corporation are afoot: The corporate charter
revocation movement tried to bring down oil giant
Unocal; a groundbreaking ballot initiative in Arcata,
California, put the corporate agenda in the public
spotlight in a series of town hall meetings; in
Bolivia, the population fought and won a battle
against a huge transnational corporation brought in by
their government to privatize the water system; in
India nearly 99% of the basmati patent of RiceTek was
overturned; and W. R. Grace and the U.S. government's
patent on Neem was revoked.

As global individuals take back local power, a growing
re-invigoration of the concept of citizenship is
taking root. It has the power to not only strip the
corporation of its seeming omnipotence, but to create
a feeling and an ideology of democracy that is much
more than its mere institutional version.

THE DVD
Along with the groundbreaking 145-minute theatrical
version of the film, the two-disc set has eight hours
of never-before-seen footage. All of your favourite
heroes and villains are back. In addition to two
commentary tracks, deleted scenes, Q's and A's,
additional languages and descriptive audio for the
visually impaired, 165 never seen before clips and
updates are sorted "by person" AND "by topic." Get the
details you want to know on the issues you care about.
Then, check out the web links for follow-up research
and action.




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