A Nation of Spectators?

excerpted from the book

Corporate Predators

by Russel Mokhiber and Robert Weissman

Common Courage Press, 1999

 

The most powerful organization in our society is the corporation. Corporations have become more powerful than governments, or religious institutions, or labor unions.

So how is it possible for a group of highly educated, well-intentioned citizens to spend millions of dollars and more than 18 months studying citizenship and civic action, and yet barely touch on the issue of corporate power?

This was the question raised last week when William Bennett and Sam Nunn, co-chairs of the National Commission on Civic Renewal, appeared together at a press conference at the National Press Club in Washington, D.C. to release the Commission's final report-"A Nation of Spectators: How Civic Disengagement Weakens America and What We Can Do About It."

At the press conference, reporters were given a copy of the Commission's 67-page report, 18 working papers written by scholars from around the country, and a book edited by Washington Post columnist E.J. Dionne, titled Community Works The Revival of Civil Society in America.

In all of this work, there is little or no mention of corporate crime and violence and its debilitating effect on civil society, of the corrupting influence of corporate money in politics or of how citizens band together in labor unions, environmental groups, and other citizen activists groups to combat the corrosive influence of corporate power on America's civic life.

In the Commission's final report, only three paragraphs deal with the issue of corporate power. Under the title "Markets and Civil Society," the authors write that while on the one hand "there can be little doubt that free markets help sustain a zone of personal liberty that bolsters the capacity of individuals to associate for civil purposes," on the other hand "there is no guarantee that the operation of market forces will prove wholly compatible with the requirements of civic health."

And what would be an example of such incompatibility? The Commission finds that "market-driven decisions of giant media corporations have diminished the quality of our public culture and have greatly complicated the task of raising children."

Of the 18 working papers, only one-written by Rutgers University Professor Benjamin Barber-deals with issues of corporate power.

And Dionne's book, like his columns in the Washington Post, keeps hands off the issue of corporate power.

What's going on here? It's not as if powerful institutions don't tackle issues of corporate power and its abuse. Just read the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times for your daily dose of reporting on corporate crime and violence.

But reporting on corporate power and its abuse is one thing. Doing something about it is quite another.

Imagine the Commission releasing a report documenting how citizens around the country were organizing, through labor unions, environmental groups, anti-sprawl citizen groups and the thousands of other ways citizens organize, to combat the encroachment of the corporate state into their lives.

That would be a report that could be taken seriously by citizens around the country, that could be used by citizens to help them challenge corporate power. And it would be a report that could never have been written by the Commission as constituted.

Nunn, after all, is a senior partner at the King & Spalding law firm, one of the nation's premier corporate crime white-collar defense law firms.

And Bennett, although he has a thing about rude lyrics in rap and rock songs supplied by Seagrams, is a defender of the corporate status quo. He is after all the John M. Olin Distinguished Fellow in Cultural Policy Studies at the Heritage Foundation, the nation's leading corporate think tank.

What about the other Commissioners? Elaine Chao, fellow, Heritage Foundation; John F. Cooke, executive vice president, corporate affairs, the Walt Disney Company; Peter Goldmark, chair and chief executive officer of the International Herald Tribune; Edwin Lupberger, chair of the board and president of the Entergy Corporation, one of the nation's largest electricity companies; Michael Novak, American Enterprise Institute, another corporate think tank.

You get the drift.

These Commissioners would never raise the current United Auto Workers strike against General Motors in Michigan, or the fight against nuclear waste disposal in New Mexico, or the nationwide citizens campaign to defeat casino gambling, as indicators of increased civic involvement.

That would too offend their keepers at the Heritage Foundation and King & Spalding.

Better to blame the citizens for inactivity than commend them for actively opposing corporate power.


Corporate Predators