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From
http://www.monitor.net/monitor/9912a/default.html

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The Ten Worst Corporations of 1999
by Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
The consequences of corporations and greed run amok

Charles Dickens, where are you when we need you?
Never has "It was the best of times, it was the worst of times" served as a
more apt commentary on society than today.
The NASDAQ just broke 4,000 and has nearly doubled in 1999. The Dow is at near-
record heights as well. Internet, computer and communications technologies are
evolving at a stunning velocity. A lot of people are becoming incredibly
wealthy, and a lot are having fun on the Internet.
If you want, you can look at this state of affairs and say that everything is
fine. Go ahead, pat yourself on the back.
Or, you can look at a different set of snapshots and ask these and many other
probing questions:
Why does the United States, the richest nation in the history of the world,
warehouse its elderly in what are euphemistically called nursing homes,
permitting many to live out their last years in social isolation and sometimes
filth and neglect?
Why are profitable and fast-growing corporations permitted to expose their workers to 
dangerous and life-threatening conditions that could be avoided with minimal 
investments?
Why are the poor, undereducated and unsophisticated subject to a host of financial 
scams that empty their small savings accounts or throw them into debt?
Why are working people in the United State who try to organize into unions regularly 
subjected to threats of firing and plant closure, harassment, intimidation and 
managerial refusal to bargain with duly elected unions?
Why does the United States permit the massive concentration of economic and political 
power through mergers and acquisitions that work to foreclose democratic options for 
the future?
Why do rich societies permit their corporations to engage, directly or indirectly, 
through contractors and subcontractors, in brutally exploitative practices in 
developing countries -- practices that have long been outlaw
ed in the rich countries?
Why indeed.
There is of course no one single answer to these and the many other critical questions 
that should be asked in a society that does so much to generate wealth, at least as 
measured by conventional standards, but so little
to distribute that wealth -- or justice -- evenly. But there is one connecting theme 
that serves, at least, as a partial answer to many of these questions: concentrated 
corporate power.
Each year, to highlight the consequences of corporations and greed run amok, 
Multinational Monitor publishes a list of the 10 worst corporations of the year.
Here's this year's list, in alphabetical order:
Avondale: Good riddance For more than half a decade, Avondale, which operates a 
shipyard in New Orleans, waged a vicious campaign to block recognition of its 
employees' desire for a union -- a desire springing in no small
 part from way below industry standard wages and a gruesome workplace casualty record 
of a death a year. In August, Avondale was acquired by Litton, which agreed to 
recognize the workers' union in November. Citigroup: The
 standard in political corruption Citigroup played the lead role in ushering the 
"Financial Services Modernization Act" through the U.S. Congress, in the process 
joining with the rest of the financial services industry to
 set a new standard in legalized bribery. The Act will tear down the regulatory walls 
between banks, and insurance companies and securities firms, paving the massive 
concentration of financial wealth and a future of indus
try bailouts, weakening the Community Reinvestment Act and permitting huge intrusions 
on consumer privacy. Del Monte: Banana imperialism into the twenty-first century In 
September, Bandegua, the Guatemalan subsidiary of C
oral Gables, Florida-based Fresh Del Monte Produce (now a separate company from 
California-based Del Monte Foods), dismissed 900 of its banana workers. When other 
unionized Bandegua workers tried to organize a solidarity
protest, the union leadership was met with a 200-person, armed goon squad which chased 
the leadership out of town, threatening to kill them if they returned. Del Monte and 
Bandegua deny responsibility, but they have certa
inly benefited from the threats. Guardian Postacute: Maggots everywhere After learning 
that of Guardian Postacute Services Inc., a San Francisco Bay area nursing home chain, 
had permitted dirty feeding tubes to be install
ed into patients who then became infested with maggots, had permitted patients to lie 
for extended periods in their urine and feces, and had failed to take strong action 
against an employee who sexually abused patients, S
anta Clara County Deputy District Attorney Randy Hey has filed criminal charges 
against Guardian. Hoffman La Roche: Take the market, pay the fine Earlier this year, 
the Swiss pharmaceutical giant F. Hoffmann-La Roche Ltd.
 paid $500 million -- the largest fine in U.S. antitrust history -- for its efforts 
with German chemical maker BASF to allocate market shares for certain vitamins sold in 
the United States and elsewhere. The whistleblower
 who inspired the case says Roche's response to the fines was to redouble its efforts 
to gain total control of the vitamin market. Tosco: Four dead workers On February 23, 
1999, four workers at a Tosco Corp. facility in A
von, California were burned to death after they tried to replace a leaky oil
pipe. The San Francisco Chronicle reported that one Tosco employee, Anthony
Creggett, claimed shortly after the fire that plant managers had refused a
request by four workers to shut down the high-temperature distillation tower
during the repairs on the pipe. Tyson: Seven deaths in seven months Maybe we
should consider raising our own chickens. Clearly, relying on multinational
corporations to raise millions of birds for us in unsanitary and dangerous
conditions is not working out. Tysons Foods is a case in point. Do you really
want to buy your chicken from these people? Consider this: seven workers have
been killed at Tyson facilities this year. There have been no reported job-
related deaths at any other poultry company in 1999. U.S. Bank: Big brother is
watching Earlier this year, U.S. Bank agreed to stop selling its customers'
personal data -- everything from social security numbers to account balances,
from birth date to number of credit cards -- to a telemarketing firm. But that
came only after Minnesota Attorney General Mike Hatch filed a lawsuit against
U.S. Bank, alleging it violated the federal Fair Credit Reporting Act and
engaged in consumer fraud and deceptive advertising. Whirlpool: Preying on the
poor Earlier this year, an Alabama jury hit a recently spun off Whirlpool
subsidiary, Whirlpool Financial, and one of its dealers with a $581 million
verdict for targeting illiterate and poor people in a sales scheme involving
satellite television dishes. Lawyers representing the victims said that
Whirlpool had dealers all over the state going door-to-door soliciting poor,
unsophisticated and elderly customers to purchase satellite television dishes
for $1,100 plus 22 percent interest. The same equipment could be bought at an
electronics store for $199. On appeal, an Alabama appellate court agreed only
to knock the verdict down to $301 million.
W.R. Grace: You can't eat enough of it At least 192 people have died of
asbestos-related disease from a mine near Libby, Montana that was owned by W.R.
Grace for nearly 30 years, according to a report that appeared in the Seattle
Post-Intelligencer. At least another 375 have been diagnosed with the fatal
disease. For three decades, Grace mined enormous deposits of vermiculite in the
earth of nearby Zonolite Mountain. Under the vermiculite are millions of tons
of tremolite, a rare and exceedingly toxic form of asbestos. Community
residents say Grace for years told residents and workers that the dust was
harmless. "When my father was a young man they told him, 'You can't eat enough
of that stuff. It won't bother you. He's dead,'" Patrick Vinion, a Libby
resident, says. Now Vinion, who never worked as a miner, is himself dying from
asbestos-related disease.
© Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime
Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Multinational
Monitor. They are co-authors of Corporate Predators The Hunt for MegaProfits
and the Attack on Democracy (Monroe, Maine: Common Courage Press, 1999)

Comments? Send a letter to the editor.
Albion Monitor December 31, 1999 (http://www.monitor.net/monitor)


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