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Jurassic Ballot: When Corporations Ruled the Earth
This country is being run for the benefit of alien life forms. They’ve invaded; they’ve infiltrated; they’ve conquered; and a lot of the most powerful people on Earth do their bidding, including five out of our nine Supreme Court justices earlier this year and a whole lot of senators and other elected officials all the time. The monsters they serve demand that we ravage the planet and impoverish most human beings so that they might thrive. They’re like the dinosaurs of Jurassic Park, like the Terminators, like the pods in Invasion of the Body Snatchers, except that those were on the screen and these are in our actual world.
We call these monsters corporations, from the word corporate which means embodied. A corporation is a bunch of monetary interests bound together into a legal body that was once considered temporary and dependent on local licensing, but now may operate anywhere and everywhere on Earth, almost unchallenged, and live far longer than you.
The results are near-invincible bodies, the most gigantic of which are oil companies, larger than blue whales, larger than dinosaurs, larger than Godzilla. Last year, Shell, BP, and Exxon were three of the top four mega-corporations by sales on the Fortune Global 500 list (and Chevron came in eighth). Some of the oil companies are well over a century old, having morphed and split and merged while continuing to pump filth into the air, the water, and the bodies of the many -- and profits into the pockets of the few.
Thanks to a Supreme Court decision this January, they have the same rights as you when it comes to putting money into the political process, only they’re millions of times larger than you -- and they’re pumping millions of dollars into races nationwide. It’s like inviting a T. rex into your checkers championship -- and it doesn’t matter whether dinosaurs can play checkers, at least not once you’re being pulverized by their pointy teeth.
The amazing thing is that they don’t always win, that sometimes thousands of puny mammals -- that’s us -- do overwhelm one of them.
Gigantic, powerful, undead beings, corporations have been given ever more human rights over the past 125 years; they act on their own behalf, not mine or yours or humanity’s or, really, carbon-based life on Earth’s. We’re made out of carbon, of course, but we depend on a planet where much of the carbon is locked up in the earth. The profit margins of the oil corporations depend on putting as much as possible of that carbon into the atmosphere.
So in a lot of basic ways, we are at odds with these creations. The novelist John le Carré remarked earlier this month, “The things that are done in the name of the shareholder are, to me, as terrifying as the things that are done -- dare I say it -- in the name of God." Corporations have their jihads and crusades too, since they subscribe to a religion of maximum profit for themselves, and they’ll kill to achieve it. In an odd way, shareholders and god have merged in the weird new religion of unfettered capitalism, the one in which regulation is blasphemy and profit is sacred. Thus, the economic jihads of our age.
They Fund By Night!
In the jihad that concerns me right now, most of the monsters come from Texas; the prey is in California; and it’s called our economy and our environment. Four years ago, with state Assembly Bill 32, the Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006, we Californians decided we’d like to cultivate our environment for the benefit of all of us, human and biological, now and in the long future.
They’d like to pillage it to keep their profit margins in tip-top shape this year and next. The latest tool to do this is called Proposition 23, and it’s on our ballot on November 2nd. It is wholly destructive, cloaked in lies, and benefits no one -- no one human, that is, though it benefits the oil corporations a lot. (You could argue that it benefits their shareholders, but I’d suggest that their biological and moral nature matters more than their bank accounts do and that, as a consequence, they’re acting against their deepest interests and their humanity.)
When he signed AB 32 into law, Governor Arnold Schwartzenegger, who’s totally weird, termed out, but really good on climate stuff, said: “Some have challenged whether AB 32 is good for businesses. I say unquestionably it is good for businesses. Not only large, well-established businesses, but small businesses that will harness their entrepreneurial spirit to help us achieve our climate goals. Using market-based incentives, we will reduce carbon emissions to 1990 levels by the year 2020. That's a 25% reduction. And by 2050, we will reduce emissions to 80% below 1990 levels. We simply must do everything in our power to slow down global warming before it's too late."
With Proposition 23, two out-of-state oil corporations, Valero and Tesoro, and right-wing oil billionaires based in New York and Kansas are trying to use the California initiative process, originally intended to allow citizen intervention in the governance of this state, to countermand AB 32 and set policy for us. “According to data from the California Secretary of State's office,” Kate Sheppard recently reported in Mother Jones magazine, “more than 98% of contributions to the pro-Prop. 23 campaign are from oil companies. Eighty-nine percent of the contributions come from out of state… Valero contributed $4 million, Tesoro gave $1.5 million, and a refinery owned by the notorious Kansas-based billionaire brothers David and Charles Koch, of Koch Industries, kicked in another $1 million. Just last week, Houston-based Marathon oil contributed $500,000.”
Actually, Tesoro and Valero are headquartered out of state, but their refineries in California gave us 2.4 million pounds of toxic chemicals in our air and water last year, and they’d like to continue offering the citizens of my state these gifts that keep giving illness, death, and long-term environmental devastation without interference. The coming vote is not about protecting fancy places for upscale hikers -- the stereotype used to portray environmentalism as a white-person’s luxury movement -- it’s about air quality for inner-city people, especially those who live near refineries and harbors. This is the kind of environmental degradation that’s about childhood asthma and increased deaths from respiratory illness. In other words, Prop. 23 is part of a corporate war on the poor. A vote for Prop. 23 is a vote to turn the lungs of poor children into a snack for dinosaurs, to put it in bluntly Hollywood-ish terms.
Lies of the Living Dead
To sabotage AB 32, they’re spending lots and lots of money and telling lots and lots of lies. Start with the proposition’s name -- “The California Jobs Initiative” -- designed to make you think that this measure will create jobs. Actually, according to most reputable analyses, it will do the opposite. A green economy has made jobs, is making jobs, and will make more jobs. This stealth initiative would suspend AB 32 until unemployment in California drops below 5.5% for four consecutive quarters, which it won’t anytime soon, if ever.
The implication is that doing something about climate change is a luxury we cannot afford in this bleak economy. That’s a lie. Down the road, if we don’t retool to address a future in which there’s less petroleum (at far higher prices), we’ll truly crash and the suffering will be intense. AB 32 would prevent that crash; Prop. 23 steers us directly into it.
The more we heat up the planet, the more it costs all of us, not just in money, but in colossal famines, displacements, deaths, and species extinctions, as well as in the loss of some of the things that make this planet a blue-green jewel, including its specialized habitats from the melting Arctic to bleaching coral reefs.
Doing something about climate change makes economic sense right now. It’s good business.
It’s hardly surprising that the corporate aliens lie when it comes to the relationship between doing something about climate change and the economy. After all, oil corporations funded a lot of the disinformation campaigns which, for years, promoted the idea that human-caused climate change was a figment of the overheated imaginations of mad environmentalists, and later that there was controversy (as well as corruption) among scientists when it came to global warming. The only honest information would have been that about 97% of the world’s relevant scientists overwhelming agree that climate change couldn’t be more real and is a genuine danger to humanity and the planet -- and that the evidence is all around us in freakish weather, rising oceans, melting arctic ice and glaciers, shifting habitats, and more.
The Phantom of Democracy
The oil dinosaurs want to win so badly in my home state because what happens here matters everywhere. The nation often follows where California goes. In the 1970s, we started setting energy efficiency standards that mean we Californians now use about half the energy of the average American (with no diminishment of quality of life or pocketbook pain). In the last decade, we created cutting edge measures to curb carbon emissions.
In 2002, Los Angeles state assemblywoman Fran Pavley (now a state senator) put out AB 1493, which was to -- and will -- reduce vehicle greenhouse gas emissions. It was, unfortunately, held up for six years by the Bush administration and then transformed into a national standard by Barack Obama as one of his first acts in office. Pavley also authored the now embattled “Global Warming Solutions Act of 2006,” AB 32.
If you think oil corporations and life share an interest, you should’ve been in the Gulf of Mexico a few months ago. I was. I saw their oiled pelicans, their unemployed fishermen, and their oil-smeared marshes. I tasted and smelled the poisons I could not see, and I read their lies.
The people of the Gulf will struggle to survive the recklessness of BP for decades to come, but the petrobeasts aren’t just destructive when things go wrong; they’re that way when things go according to plan as well. If the 5.5 million barrels of oil that spilled into the Gulf, thanks to BP, had instead made it to our gas tanks, the consequences would still have been dire. They are dire. The companies funding Prop. 23 are themselves a major source of climate change and, of course, a major obstacle to coming up with solutions to it.
Like the people of the Gulf during the spill, the people of Richmond, California, in the San Francisco Bay area, live with those tastes, smells, and consequences all the time, because they’re in the shadow of Chevron’s biggest west coast refinery. (Corporate headquarters are only 25 miles away.) Sirens go off during excessive leaks of toxins like ammonia, and as if out of a horror movie, an explosion at the plant in 1999 that sent an 18,000-pound plume of sulfur dioxide fumes into the air was said to be so nasty it took the fur off squirrels.
Chevron is one of the biggest corporations on the planet. While the average income for a human being in Richmond is a little over $19,000, Chevron’s profits last year were $24 billion, meaning the corporation is more than one million times as rich as the average citizen there. Nonetheless, the humans there won a huge victory recently, preventing the corporation from expanding and retooling its refinery so that it could process even dirtier crude oil (with dirtier local emissions, in a place that already suffers huge health consequences from the monster in its backyard). It may be the world’s first victory against refinery expansion.
Chevron is both the state’s biggest single greenhouse-gas emitter and a huge financial force in Richmond elections, invariably funding campaigns against green candidates. The mostly poor, mostly nonwhite citizens of Richmond are, however, organized and motivated, so if you want to watch a monster movie in which the little guys have been winning lately, follow city politics there.
One of the cool things about the West County Toxics Coalition, the Asian Pacific Environmental Network, the Green Party mayor, and the activists working with them is that they know better than anyone how to act locally and think globally, and even sometimes how to act globally and think locally. Maybe collectively they’re not so little. They’re allied with antiwar groups, with Burmese human rights groups, with the people of Ecuador and Nigeria who have suffered petro-contamination at least as bad, if not worse than BP’s Gulf spill this spring, with groups around the world fighting the petrobeast. There’s a movement out there, and sometimes it even wins amazing victories.
Around the world this month, 350.org coordinated more than 7,000 demonstrations in favor of lowering atmospheric carbon to a sane 350 parts per million, while the climate justice movement had a global day of action on Columbus Day. Among the month's heroic efforts were direct action against mountaintop-removal coal mining in West Virginia, blockades of refineries in France and Britain and of a coal-fired power plant in Germany, protests and gas-station blockades in Canada, and a rally in the Philippines, a demonstration in Finland, a march in Ecuador, a protest in South Africa, among others. In California, activists worked steadily against Prop. 23.
Think for a minute about horror movies: in some of them, the little people rally and do heroic things and the monsters or aliens are vanquished. The forces that have come together against Prop. 23 are impressive, ranging from inner-city job coalitions and traditional environmental groups to university think tanks and business interests. Winning or losing, however, depends on what happens when California voters look at that deceptive label “California Jobs Initiative” on their ballots on November 2nd.
If your heart isn’t pounding, and you aren’t biting your fingernails and teetering at the edge of your seat, then you haven’t noticed the monsters yet. Look carefully. They’re all around us -- and they’re coming for you.
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36 Comments so far
Show AllIf the oil corporations add something about banning gay marriage to the initiative, Proposition 23 will definately pass in California.
The only monsters bigger and more deadly than the petro monsters Solnit mentions are the too big to fail bankster monsters who prey throughout the universe and have an insatiable appetite for destroying their prey and continuously draining treasury resources that provide them with endless bailouts at the expense of all living creatures.
It's time for everyone to choose;
accept being prey or slay the beast.
I know one of the top magrs. of the biggest of the monsters EXXON. I've sat for hrs. with this ex. VP of EM and talked about these and other issues. He 's a climate denier ( sunspots according to him) he's geologist not a climitologist but he ignores 99% of the rest of the scientific community anyway. He also, thinks the oil spill in the Gulf only effected 400 acres and did no harm. He's retired as I said, but he still reaps huge amounts for Mobil stock and Mobil's retirement fund. He's a generous man to friends and family but it's pretty easy to be generous when you have millions isn't it? I loathe everything he believes in, but honestly I like him personally. I bet people who knew Stalin and Hitler personally probably felt the same way. It's the banality factor of evil I guess. Eichmann looked and sounded like a dept. store clerk. Bob, looks like a kindly old grandfather and part of him is just that. But, another part is a monster as evil and as dark as any monster straight from hell. He and his companions in their daily work are destroying the planet and they are profiting hugely and they like the Nazis at Nuremberg are unrepentant about it. One big difference is they are winning this war we are fighting against them aren't they?
Watch enough National Geographic films and you learn one idiosyncrasy of lions that killing their prey is secondary to eating it. They will claw a zebra to the ground from behind, then sink their teeth into a flank of juicy zebra for lunch. The zebra screams its head off while the lion increasingly resents all the damn noise while it is eating.
I find this an apt metaphor for Capitalism, seeking meals each day for corporate life and share holders. "Why all this damn screaming and whining? If a zebra were really worth something, it would have been born a lion. Who gives a shit if some zebra understands a credit card contract? How dare any force of peasant hyenas try to redistribute that which I have sacked and pillaged and killed for!"
The new political party that this country really needs is the HYENAS. Hyenas cannot kill lions but they can make lions lives such a living hell that they give up their prey to avoid perpetual harassment from all directions.
Trylon
That's a great metaphor. I'd initially thought 'virus,' but sort of prefer hyena.
Psywar techniques and tactics are viral. Their aim is to get inside you, defeat your mind's immune system and ability to challenge information, then change you into what the virus desires, cell by cell, subverting your own DNA. The phenomenon we call STALKING is also viral.
The Vasco Da Gama Era, or Age of Discovery -launched from the Iberian Peninsula- was viral. It took psywar specialists on ships to 1) conquer the DEITY of conquered peoples and 2) make certain the females covered their naked breasts. CD readers who like seeing tits can blame Christianity for that (when they are bored and want something to do).
TRYLON: Prediction: In the next life you won't view its entire context through the prism of a penis.
Although I find some of your allusions interesting, your sexism is almost always a key facet in your analyses.
If there is such a thing as a MAN, it is a rare animal that lives by the courage of convictions; and these take the big picture and everyone else's feelings--and status--into account. Mostly what passes for men are large boys. Nader is probably one of the few men that exist in today's world of boys still wanting to suck on Mama's breast.
Sorry, Siouxrose, your tits are not on my list. My telescope on the world is a vagina, but don't get excited. While you may choose whatever telescope you like, I suggest one with a wider lens than present.
The spread of Christianity to the tropics did exactly what I averred. From Africa to Central America to Pacific Oceania to Southeast Asia, shame was no basis for the covering of the upper female body. Christian missionaries induced that shame by Gospel attacks upon the minds of tropical females. It was stalking, and IMO the character of that stalking was viral.
=Mostly what passes for men are large boys. Nader is probably one of the few men that exist in today's world of boys still wanting to suck on Mama's breast.=
I should show Ralph techniques of female breast maintenance, using Colgate and vigorous abrasion with a soft-bristled brush. Once cleaned, her ladyship can choose from a short list of toothpaste removal methods. Suckling is more tidy than a Class "A" fire extinguisher.
Who says Common Dreams is full of questions, but no good answers?
Trylon
really?
i didn't read trylon's comments that way. i thought it a pretty accurate description of the emotionally crippling affect of the patriarchy. so called matriarchal societies tend to generate a more tolerant community for both male and female. everybody's boss in his/her own area of expertise. male and female symbols in artwork create a picture of balance not shame. men know what really drives them so they think to defame the woman can gain them a sense of being in charge and in control. too bad, if the man just realizes to spend more time on self-control. the patriarchal top-down hierarchy gets everything out of balance.
tsa-la-gee
I'd intended to imply that we maybe should become like a virus in the corporate 'organism.' I do love the analogy of the Corporation as a Life Form, madly slouching toward Bethlehem & seeking whom he may devour, and belive this way of thinking could help understand it and fight back more powerfully.
Not sure how the whole anatomy & gender bit worked its way in. My own prism shows me a beautiful, complicated spectrum.
Trylon, Sweetheart.
Lionesses do the hunting and killing. Lions do the eating.
Just sayin'.
I seem to remember a phrase in one of the Lord of the Ring books...somebody out there can probably place it...that if you come across something that looks human but isn't, or was human once but isn't any more, keep you ax handy.
I think it was in "The Invasion of the Body Snatchers".
Hannah Arendt wrote an excellent book about the Adolf Eichmann called 'The Banality of Evil.' Arendt's thesis was that evil was not done by extreme out-sized caricatures, but by ordinary people who succumbed to their worse instincts. Your Exxon executive is a perfect example of this.
Thank you -- a very interesting contribution on the banality of evil. People convince themselves that their actions are inherently principled.
Annoying facts or threatening belief systems are dismissed as nonsense and threats.
The vast majority of people are immensely resourceful at rationalizing their own actions. They use the same criteria to justify the actions of those they perceive as part of their identity group.
The odd part is that much of this rationalizing behavior is not really rational.
http://watchingthedeniers.wordpress.com/2010/07/28/when-facts-fail-study-notes-that-facts-can-reinforce-false-beliefs/
Ideology and personal conviction seem to triumph over information.
http://powerofnarrative.blogspot.com/2010/07/we-are-not-special-and-there-is-no.html
http://www.chris-floyd.com/articles/1-latest-news/1994-the-lies-that-bind-american-myth-obscures-murderous-enterprise.html
Now in the U.S. we face this odd fusion of economic 'free market' fundamentalism and Christian fundamentalism driving us to ruination.
'most of the monsters come from Texas; the prey is in California'
Ironically enough, the World Series.
All this started over a hundred years ago with "Santa Clara County vs. Southern Pacific Railroad"
Google that quote.
Corporate personhood is one of the biggest frauds ever committed, and the root of a lot of their evil. Waayy too much power.
I was watching a DVD last night, and right after the copyright notice the following words popped up:
- "The opinions and viewpoints expressed in the commentary do not reflect the opinions or viewpoints of Universal, its parent company, or subsidiaries."
Think about that one. How the hell can a corporation have an opinion?? I've seen that a hundred times, but it really struck home for some reason last night. These mega-gargantuan entities have so much power, and are basically untouchable by the law or government (which they control). Scary as hell. Step 1, to me, is take away their personhood. Then their "opinions" won't mean squat.
"When fascism comes to America, it will be wrapped in the flag, carrying a cross."
Thank you Rebecca, for an interesting and informative piece, but most of all thank you for your long and untiring environmental and political activism. Without people like you, California would not be the leader in environmental legislation.
I'm afraid that now the US Supreme Court is ruling on behalf of the Giant Monsters, that the battle will be tougher and tougher. We can win as long as the people stay informed. Thank you CD for keeping us informed.
who is going to profit from the corporations when all the carbon based life forms are dead?
As some other posters pointed out, the folks running these corporations are in denial and or rationalizing their actions in irrational ways, that's why this little experiment in modern capitalism is GUARANTEED not to end well.
The author almost gets it. Corporations are of this Earth. We created them in our own most craven image. But the singular role of corporations, the accumulation of profit, is entirely premised upon converting our living planet into an exhausted, dead planet. Or, more literally, converting forests, lakes, mountains, wildlife, soils, wetlands, atmosphere, carbon, etc ..., into cold, hard, and inanimate cash.
Once you understand that, you must understand there is no future in a world ruled by corporations.
CYBER: I see it the way you do, but I'd like to delve a bit deeper into the roots of how this savage disregard came to be. I believe the Judeo-Christian ethic, and its insistence that "God gave man dominion" over the earth, is a key factor.
The transposition of value from the natural thing, to the paper money false equivalent is part of a manmade system that resonates with Mammon.
Furthermore, the concept of God as father & supreme authority denigrates the Divine Essence of Mother Nature and her living banks composed of myriad resources.
Teaching Western culture to ONLY experience religious awe (or respect) for the father principle while entirely leaving the mother principle out of the Holy equation factors considerably into the mass consciousness that trashes the earth, poisons the seas and waterways, decimates the living forests, and consigns an amazing variety of sentient creatures to cruel and unusual punishment, if not death.
This is why the Shamans (and other Indigenous cultures) speak about the importance of showing love for The Mother.
Militarism works hand in hand with the love of money/mammon. It furthers the spiritually bankrupt notion that MEN are intended to DOMINATE the earth and HER resources. This explains why vast expenses are made in the forming of armies and the development of armaments. When a group works against nature, or what is fair & natural, it expects to be attacked in return. To offset the inevitability of reprisals, the stolen resources are essentially converted into stock piles of weaponry to protect the theives from those that seek justice. A metaphysical Catch-22 results. The remedy, or way out of this deadly conundrum--cannot take place until the spiritual foundation of society alters.
I honor the efforts of all those who work for environmental organizations, as well as those that trade their mortal hours in brave attempts to rope in the diabolical powers of these ghastly huMAN constructs, the corporate pharaohs.
Dear Souixrose:
I see it that way too.
There is a Holy Trinity, but it's Water, Land, and Air. All the old system is giving is war and greed and Holy crap!
Sioux, as much as I generally agree with you, I should point out that it is not just "judeochristianity" but what it has become.
I am assuming that you know enough about the lore to be familiar with the term Tetragammaton. aka the holy unspeakable name of god.
Traditionally,the letters Y and W are considered male letters, whereas the H is considered female, therefore the god that Jews and Christians claim to worship is both male and female. Both aspects were originally revered. Then the Romans invaded. Imperial Rome, though nominally Pagan, was Dominated by the cult of Mithra, the Sun God, that allowed for the Divine Right of Kings. At the time of the Roman occupation of Palestine, the Romans allied themselves with the Pharisees and Sadduccees who were the priest caste of the worship of the male aspect of the Jewish god, and actively fought against the priestesses that led the worship of the female aspect. The alliance between the Romans and the Pharisees and Sadduccees was so strong that the male Jewish leaders actually allowed the Romans to erect a massive idol of Mithra in the courtyard of the Temple of Solomon. (The same temple that the Christian Bible reports that Jesus gave one of the first recorded examples of a Direct Action against the finance industry in, in fact this Idol of Mithra would have been in the courtyard at the time he is recorded as having done this.)
to restate : Before the Roman Imperium controlled Palestine, the Jewish God was BOTH Male and Female, and worshiped as such. To this day, Judaism is Matrilineal, and I assume you know enough anthropology to know what this indicates.
As far as Christianity goes, we have to look at the Council of Nicea. This is the foundation of all "mainline Christian" groups today. (moreso than the teachings of Christ). At the council of Nicea, many things were determined that would shape the course of that which would call itself Christianity. Which books would be included in the Bible, and which books were to be (often violently) suppressed. The "Divinity of Christ" was decided on at this council by a vote, and the vote was close. The council had been called by the Emperor Constantine, who was a follower of Mithra and wanted to bring this new religion called "Christianity" into the service of the Roman Empire. Much evidence for this is right in front of our faces. The "Holy Day" observance was moved from the Sabbath (Saturday) to SUN day, in direct violation of the Ten Commandments of Moses. The celebration of Christ's birth was moved to coincide with the same day that Mithra's birth is celebrated (the first day the sun is noticeably in the sky longer after the Winter Solstice), in spite of the historical documentation of the time of the census that the Christian Gospels indicate that this Jesus guy was supposed to have been born during.
Much can be learned as to why the Roman Empire was interested in actively changing the belief structure of Christianity if one looks at what exists of the books that it denied for inclusion into the Bible and actively suppressed. The best known of these are known as the Nag Hammadi library. I will give you a hint. According to these texts, Jesus taught the deepest mysteries not to his male disciples, but to Mary Magdeline. The pop novel "DaVinci Code" is not pure fiction, but only scratches the surface. (Holy Blood, Holy Grail and the Messianic Legacy are some good places to start looking into what I am talking about here)
To even go further down this rabbit hole, there are the findings of John Allegro - I have yet to track down a copy of his book "The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross" - but he was originally one of the main translators of the Dead Sea Scrolls (Qumran Library) and came to the conclusion, after studying the oldest copies of the Torah known to exist, that Judaism and Shamanism are both derived from some of the same sources in nature. The late James Arthur goes into some detail on this - you can find a lecture of his on YouTube broken into many parts.
This is by no means to indicate that any of this has any bearing on what calls itself "Christian" or even "Jewish" today. The bulk of both of these religions have been so perverted away from their original meanings that they would crucify those they claim to venerate. But in both cases, these have the same root of corruption - the Roman Empire. However, both of them still have enough of the original truths left in them to appeal to people. Things like "love your neighbor as yourself" and "thou shalt not kill" should ring true for all of us. By saying "Christians are the problem" or "Jews are the problem" is to be blinded to the fact that "Rome is the problem".
Face it, many many people see the good in Christianity that escaped the Roman censors at Nicea and will immediately cut off any serious thought when you blame their religion for the world's problems. But if you point out that the Romans who killed Christ later took over and perverted the Teachings of Christ - which led to many of the world's problems... you MIGHT be able to open some hearts and minds.
Jesus WAS a shaman.
Ever-increasing growth is an inherent flaw embedded in the corporate capital structure. Shareholders have expectations of a rate of return. Every corporation in every industry has growth expectations. Grow to what? Doesn't matter, just grow. Whether its the prison industry, weapons industry, fast food industry, or cosmetics industry, they all have compounding-growth expectations. And as growth gets stressed, as it is, methods to grow become more extreme and questionable.
As with every ponzi scheme, which is what compounding-growth is all about, collapse is inevitable.
An investor wants to recover his equity before investment failure; hence, the search for the greater fool, the greater fool being the investor who buys the stock of a corporation just as perpetual growth slows or ceases. The public stock market is the most opportune market to find the last buyers, hence the greatest fools.
http://theformofmoney.blogharbor.com/blog?nc=1
If you have stock, sell.
Supreme Court Justice Stevens said on corporate campaign spending:
"Today’s decision is backwards in many senses. Their conclusion that the societal interest in avoiding corruption and the appearance of corruption does not provide an adequate justification for regulating corporate expenditures on candidate elections relies on an incorrect description of that interest, along with a failure to acknowledge the relevance of established facts and the considered judgments of state and federal legislatures over many decades.
In a democratic society, the longstanding consensus on the need to limit corporate campaign spending should outweigh the inflexible application of judge-made rules. At bottom, the Court’s opinion is thus a rejection of the common sense of the American people, who have recognized a need to prevent corporations from undermining self-government since the founding, and who have fought against the distinctive corrupting potential of corporate electioneering since the days of Theodore Roosevelt. It is a strange time to repudiate that common sense. While American democracy is imperfect, few outside the majority of this Court would have thought its flaws included a dearth of corporate money to unfairly bias the public political debate."
An eloquent refutation to be sure. I would question Justice Stevens' assessment only insofar as it assumes something about the "majority of this Court" the validity of which I doubt very much.
That the current majority themselves actually deem "a dearth of corporate money to unfairly bias the public political debate" would seem highly questionable. But I suppose Justice Stevens is too overburdened with "professional courtesy" to attribute any more likely motivation to his colleagues.
The public wasn't stupid last January. When the Supreme Court handed down that decision, polls showed outrage at over 70%. With that as a cover, Congress could have moved to correct the problem, but didn't. The corporations already own both parties. The Democrats never even proposed anything stronger than weak "disclosure" laws that wouldn't stop the ads and the unbalanced money flood.
We need the Fairness Doctrine reinstituted, and strengthened to *require* the media to offer equal time, even to those who can't afford to pay. That would be the best campaign finance reform ...
I don't believe that the corporations suddenly invaded the planet. If anything, they have been around for centuries ever since the days of William the Conqueror.
From
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/City_of_London_Corporation
"The corporation's first recorded royal charter dates from around 1067, when William the Conqueror granted the citizens of London a charter confirming the rights and privileges that they had enjoyed since the time of Edward the Confessor."
The next major assault came when SCOTUS granted corporations "personhood" in the 19th century. There is plenty more history on the rise of corporations gone amuck that deserves looking into as well. From there, we might have a better way of "slaying the dragon".
I see what you mean JB but the city charters of old were a bit different. The Dutch East India Company (VOC) (and later versions in Britain and elsewhere) was the first multinational corporation and can be seen as the beginning of the era.
There is a web site out there called JOBVENT. It used to be a great site to go to and get HONEST opinions of companies from the workers that work at them. Needless to say most of the reviews were not good, but it did shine a light on how companies treat their employees.
Well guess what, today I went there and the site has been pretty much purged, and the few remaining posts are either positive, or tepid in their negativity. It appears that that little free speech zone for us carbon based humans was just too much for the corporate persons. I guess they value their free speech much than they value ours...
I personally found this quite disturbing and pretty creepy...
Re: Seaglass comment
“One big difference is they are winning this war we are fighting against them aren't they?”
Rebecca Solnit and her work and writings have long been appreciated and taken to heart by Tom Dispatch readers and activists in the Bay Area. Her article today is a fine example of investigative writing and pregnant with many sub topics that one would think would make splendid discussion for the elite forum of CD commentators. Yes, there was an appreciated token “Thank you Rebecca, for an interesting and informative piece, but most of all thank you for your long and untiring environmental and political activism together with ‘I honor the efforts of all those who work for environmental organizations..” mixed in with other off topic and uninteresting remarks.
Seaglass somehow you and many other commentators seemed to have missed the final paragraphs of her piece about:
“the West County Toxics Coalition, the Asian Pacific Environmental Network, the Green Party mayor, and the activists working with them who know better than anyone how to act locally and think globally, and even sometimes how to act globally and think locally.
Maybe collectively they’re not so little. They’re allied with antiwar groups, with Burmese human rights groups, with the people of Ecuador and Nigeria who have suffered petro-contamination at least as bad, if not worse than BP’s Gulf spill this spring, with groups around the world fighting the petrobeast”.
There’s a movement out there ,Seaglass and sometimes, as Rebbeca attests "it even wins amazing victories."
Even though the Book of Revelation is a dream only of anthropological relevance to the spiritual/political/economic situation of its author, his description of the Anti-Christ, or Beast, defines exactly the effects of the corporation as the corporation manifests in our s/p/e situation. only globally, now, and with the survival of civilization at stake.
So, is the search for the Anti-Christ over?