The Nature of Community, Values
, and Government
excerpted from the book
Unequal Protection
The Rise of Corporate Dominance
and the Theft of Human Rights
by Thom Hartmann
Rodale Press, 2002, paper
p3
Corporate Personhood
... when papers called articles of incorporation
are submitted to governments in America (and most other nations
of the world) ... [a] type of new "person" is brought
forth into the nation (and most countries of the world). Just
like a human, that new person gets a government-assigned number.
(In the United States, instead of a Social Security number, it's
called a Federal Employer Identification Number, or EIN.)
Under our current agreements, the new
corporate person is instantly endowed with many of the rights
and protections of personhood. It's neither male nor female, doesn't
breathe or eat, can't be enslaved, can't give birth, can live
forever, doesn't fear prison, and can't be executed if found guilty
of misdoings. It can cut off parts of itself and turn them into
new "persons," can change its identity in a day, and
can have simultaneous residence in many different nations. It
is not a human but a creation of humans. Nonetheless, the new
corporation gets many of the constitutional protections America's
Founders gave humans in the Bill of Rights to protect them against
governments or other potential oppressors:
* Free speech, including freedom to influence
legislation
* Protection from searches, as if their
belongings were intensely personal
* Fifth Amendment protections against
double jeopardy and self-incrimination, even when a clear crime
has been committed
* The shield of the nation's due process
and anti-discrimination laws
* The benefit of the constitutional amendments
that freed the slaves and gave them equal protection under the
law
Even more, although they now have many
of the same "rights" as you and I-and a few more-they
don't have the same fragilities or responsibilities, either under
the law or under the realities of biology.
What most people don't realize is that
this is a fairly recent agreement, a new cultural story, and it
hasn't always been this way:
* Traditional English, Dutch, French,
and Spanish law didn't say that corporations are people.
* The U. S. Constitution wasn't written
with that idea; corporations aren't even mentioned.
* For America's first century, courts
all the way up to the Supreme Court repeatedly said, "No,
corporations do not have the same rights as humans."
* It's only since 1886 that the Bill of
Rights and the Equal Protection Amendment have been explicitly
applied to corporations.
Even more, corporate personhood was never
formally enacted by any branch of the U. S. government:
* It was never voted by the public.
* It was never enacted by law.
* It was never even stated by a decision
after arguments before the Supreme Court.
This last point will raise some eyebrows
because for 100 years people have believed that the 1886 case
Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad did in fact include
the statement "Corporations are persons." But this book
will show that this was never stated by the Court: It was added
by the court reporter who wrote the introduction to the decision,
called headnotes. And as any law student knows headnotes have
no legal standing.
p20
It's not just American companies who are playing this role around
the world. In Nigeria, a European corporation pumps crude oil
that provides much of the revenues that supported a corrupt and
brutal military regime, not unlike the situation I saw in Uganda.
When the people of the Ogoni tribe rose up to oppose the despoiling
of their lands, their leaders were arrested and tried-by a military
tribunal. Nigerian author Ken_Saro-Wiwa, said in his closing statement
of his trial:
"We all stand before history. I am
a man of peace, of ideas. Appalled by the denigrating poverty
of my people who live on a richly endowed land, distressed by
their political marginalization and economic strangulation, angered
by the devastation of their land, their ultimate heritage, anxious
to preserve their right to life and to a decent living, and determined
to usher to this country as a whole a fair and just democratic
system which protects everyone and every ethnic group and gives
us all a valid claim to human civilization, I have devoted my
intellectual and material resources, my very life, to a cause
in which I have total belief and from which I cannot be blackmailed
or intimidated.
"On trial also is the Nigerian nation,
its present rulers and those who assist them. Any nation which
can do to the weak and disadvantaged what the Nigerian nation
has done to the Ogoni, loses a claim to independence and to freedom
from outside influence. I am not one of those who shy away from
protesting injustice and oppression, arguing that they are expected
in a military regime. The military do not act alone. They are
supported by a gaggle of politicians, lawyers, judges, academics
and businessmen, all of them hiding under the claim that they
are only doing their duty, men and women too afraid to wash their
pants of urine. We all stand on trial, my lord, for by our actions
we have denigrated our Country and jeopardized the future of our
children. As we subscribe to the sub-normal and accept double
standards, as we lie and cheat openly, as we protect injustice
and oppression, we empty our classrooms, denigrate our hospitals,
fill our stomachs with hunger and elect to make ourselves the
slaves of those who ascribe to higher standards, pursue the truth,
and honor justice, freedom, and hard work.
"I predict that the scene here will
be played and replayed by generations yet unborn. Some have already
cast themselves in the role of villains, some are tragic victims,
some still have a chance to redeem themselves. The choice is for
each individual."
p30
The first corporations were the Dutch trading companies, chartered
in the 1500s. They came into being by declaration of the government,
but were owned and operated by wealthy and powerful individuals.
The corporation had a status that allowed it to own land, to participate
in the legal process, and to hold assets such as bank accounts.
It could buy and sell things.
But while even 16th-century European kingdoms
were acknowledging that humans had at least some "natural
rights," corporations were explicitly limited to those rights
granted them by the governments that authorized them.
p30
The Commons
In colonial times and before, a piece
of land that was subject to common use was called a commons. The
famous Boston Common is one example: It was originally the common
grazing ground for the townspeople's cattle. The peculiar twisting
streets of old Boston reflect the cow paths that were used as
people walked their cattle to and from the Common.
The metaphor of the commons has been extended
over the years to embrace all sorts of shared resources (as listed
at the end of this chapter) The nature of a commons and how it's
been considered at different times in history is central to the
issue of why we have government in the first place, for the common
welfare.
p40
Where do the commons begin and end? What are the things on which
our quality of life depends and that we humans share in common?
Different people have answered this question in different ways
repeatedly over the years.
* At one time, telephone service was considered
the commons, and telephone companies were both subsidized in bringing
phone service to remote areas and regulated in what they could
charge.
* During the Civil War era, the nation's
railroad tracks were considered part of the commons.
* Today, the nation's transportation airspace
is considered the commons, as government pays most of the cost
of managing it and local communities pay the cost of building
airports.
* Our water supplies and septic disposal
infrastructure are considered part of the commons, as are our
police, fire, and prisons.
* Education is in the realm of the commons
right now, as is health care in most of the developed world, with
the exception of the United States.
* National parks and vast tracts of forestland,
pastureland, and other government-owned lands are part of the
commons.
* Our banking system was often considered
part of the commons: The privatizing of it was a huge and running
battle in the United States throughout the first half of the 19th
century. Since 1913, the 12 Federal Reserve Banks that handle
the nation's money supply have been owned by commercial corporations
(the member banks), as are all other U. S. banks, and the Federal
Open Market Committee-which sets the nation's interest rates-does
not allow the public into its meetings, does not publish transcripts
of its meetings, and is responsible only to itself for its own
budget.
* In some communities, electricity is
part of the commons, although in most it has been taken over by
for-profit corporations. But the electric utilities still have
the right of eminent domain to take private land for power transmission
lines, as if that land were still part of the commons. In the
mid-1930s, for-profit corporations were not providing electricity
to rural Americans, so in 1934 Franklin Delano Roosevelt passed
the Rural Electrification Act (REA) which got electricity to rural
America. The situation repeated itself with regard to telephony,
requiring Harry Truman to extend the REA to telephone service.
* The nation's radio and television airwaves
were considered part of the commons until they were sold at auction
during the Reagan era to help finance other priorities.
* The nation's system of highways and
public streets are part of the commons, as is our public library
system and post office (both created by Ben Franklin, a booster
of the commons).
* The beaches, sky, waterways, oceans,
and land held by government are part of the commons.
... Right now, water is the hottest part
of the commons, with some of the world's largest corporations
pushing hard for water to be internationally defined as a marketable
commodity, and for local water supplies to be turned over to them.
During hard times, people may put off buying a new car or new
clothes, but they must have water each and every day. No matter
how poor or how frugal a person may be, they have no choice but
to drink, and the battle for the commons of water is becoming
global.
Unequal
Protection
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