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Corporate and Congressional Disasters
Corporate crime and wrongdoing is an everyday fact of life in the United States and around the world. Still, the last year has been remarkable for a series of high-profile, deadly corporate disasters: the BP Deepwater Horizon catastrophe that killed 11 workers and spewed millions of gallons of oil into the Gulf of Mexico, the deadly explosion at Massey's Upper Big Branch mine, and unintended acceleration of Toyota cars.
You might think that these disasters, singly and together, would impel desperately needed legislative reform. You might think that, but if you did, you would be wrong.
Despite blanket TV and newspaper coverage of the corporate wrongdoing in each case, despite deep public outrage and fear, despite public clamor for action to prevent the same things from happening, Congress has done ... exactly nothing.
And the situation is about to get worse.
To be fair, the House of Representatives in each instance took at least some action, and might have done more if things looked better in the Senate. But Senate Republicans -- sometimes with Democratic allies -- acting on behalf of corporate patrons have blocked reform efforts. There's still a small chance of overcoming the corporate blockade, but with the lame duck session winding down, the window of opportunity is closing fast.
* For much of the summer, the nation was transfixed by underwater video feeds of the BP oil gusher. Less visually grabbing was the gusher of evidence of the recklessness of BP and its corporate partners. This was not a disaster that could reasonably be considered an "accident."
The House of Representatives responded by passing legislation that would
remove the $75 million liability cap for oil damages -- an invitation
to corporate irresponsibility -- remove an exemption from environmental
analysis for projects like Deepwater Horizon, and bar companies with
poor safety and environmental records from receiving new offshore
drilling leases. But oil industry-allied Senators prevented passage of
the bill. (Take action: http://www.citizen.org/Page.
* The explosion at the Upper Big Branch mine killed 29 miners, and served as yet another reminder of the failure of existing law to protect America's workers. It also introduced the country to a caricature of a heartless CEO, Massey Energy's Don Blankenship.
If ever there was a moment for forward progress on workplace health and
safety, it was in the wake of the Massey tragedy. The Robert C. Byrd
Mine Safety and Health Act would modestly increase the size of fines for
endangering workers, make it a felony to cause the death of a worker by
knowingly violating safety rules, protect whistleblowers who call
attention to workplace hazards, and deter employers from delaying
resolution of citations for violations of workplace health and safety
rules. But the business lobby has prevented the bill from moving ahead. A
House committee approved it, but the full House, shamefully, voted down
even a stripped down version of the legislation; and the bill never
even received a Senate committee vote. (Take action: http://www.citizen.org/Page.
* Reports of sudden acceleration in Toyota cars broke through in the major media over a year ago. They were followed by ever more revelations of problems with Toyota vehicles, disclosures that the car giant had suppressed consumer complaints, major vehicle recalls, public apologies from Toyota, and damning indictments of inaction by the National Highway Traffic and Safety Administration (NHTSA).
The Motor Vehicle Safety Act of 2010 would upgrade NHTSA safety
standards, make more safety information public, and get more funding to
the resource-starved federal auto safety agency. Yet thanks to the auto
lobby -- amazingly, including lobbying from the very General Motors in
which the U.S. government (i.e., the public) remains the primary
shareholder -- Congress has failed to make these common-sense responses
to the Toyota debacle into law. (Take action: http://www.citizen.org/motor-
There's no mystery as to the Congressional failure. It is simply a reflection of the same corporate power that led to the under-regulation and under-enforcement that made each of the corporate disasters possible.
Yet the ability of corporations and industries to block remedial regulatory efforts at the very moment when they are most vulnerable -- due to adverse publicity and an outraged public's call for action -- speaks to the extraordinary political power of Big Business.
That power is certain to be enhanced in the incoming Congress.
Most remarkable of all, with evidence all around of the need for stronger rules to control corporations and protect Americans, the business lobby is gearing up for a campaign to roll back existing regulations.
Led by the Chamber of Commerce, corporations are ramping up a campaign claiming that the way to jumpstart the economy is by rolling back regulations.
Yes, corporations have earned record profits in the past quarter -- U.S. corporations raked in profits at an annual rate of $1.659 trillion in the third quarter of 2010.
Yes, it was the failure to regulate Wall Street that cost 8 million jobs and plunged us into the current recession.
In a world ruled by power not logic, however, facts are not enough to defeat corporate propaganda and destructive policy agendas.
Doing that will require overcoming public disgust with Washington's failures. It will also require moving beyond mere outrage with corporate wrongdoing to organized outrage. As deeply flawed as the policy making process is, an organized citizenry can still make change for good. It's not going to come any other way.

17 Comments so far
Show AllI wish I had some clue as to how to get the "organized outrage" that Mr. Weissman is correct in saying needs to happen started.
By the way, government bureaucracies and large corporate bureaucracies differ very little -- I've worked in both and, on operational and employee relations levels , and in the mindsets of the senior managers, they do not differ at all.
I keep thinking there has to be a way to use all these new media contraptions and channels to create a resistance, remembering that the Shah of Iran was brought down by audio cassettes. But since I don't trust Facebook, rarely text, have few email pen pals and few phone friends, thus am one of the least "connected" computer savvy people alive, it won't come from me.
I am watching and waiting for somebody to get something going. What Julian Assange did is a start.
"I keep thinking there has to be a way to use all these new media contraptions and channels to create a resistance"
Perhaps if activists can come up with one website that people can go to in order to search for activism in their area that is easy to navigate. One that would have anti war protests, corperate abuse protests, human rights abuse protests etc. Maybe there is one already. Does anyone know of one?
Theseus asked "Perhaps if activists can come up with one website that people can go to in order to search for activism in their area that is easy to navigate. "
indymedia.org used to be a good source of information on such matters and more including at the international and local level. I'm not sure about the "easy to navigate" part.
Thanks 4thefuture, I found it and it isn't that hard to navigate through. You can find your closest big city on the left hand column of the site and click on it to find news stories and event in your area. The main site is a pretty vast site and looks like a person could spend all day there reading news from around the globe. I was thinking that perhaps craigslist could get a heading "activism" and people could place events in that section. I suppose a bunch of activists would have to get together and request a section like this from the craigslist organization for it to happen.
"Corporate crime and wrongdoing is an everyday fact of life in the United States and around the world."
True, and a searing indictment of our entire economic-political system which is based on the continuation of such murderous criminality.
Only by dismantling this entire corrupt system can we stop this insanity, but that seems more and more impossible each day.
The "murderous criminality" is aided, abetted and funded by USG mostly by Treasury bond proceeds for the national debt, a propaganda term because the 'national' debt is doled out to the WEALTHY PREDATORY CAPITALIST WELFARE KINGS, which makes it corporate debt, attributed to the Pentagon funding which is for the purpose of protecting the worldwide assets of the WELFARE KINGS many of which pay no taxes. The Pentagon funding is for murderous criminality.
If you aren't angry and enraged by our congress, our president, and our courts, then you are in a moral coma. Most Americans I encounter are ethically wanting, "Christians" being among the worst offenders. To see nothing wrong with killing innocent Iraqis, Afghans and Pakistanis is the height of hubris. The blood-lust and greed of this nation appalls me. If there is a God, may He smite the wicked (you know who you are).
Herein and in numerous other examples, the faces of fascism are glaringly visible, though not seemingly to most of the distracted US population. Corporate power/money/greed now essenitally owns the US govenment and most everything else. Welcome to Amerikkka!!
corporates and wall street have been doing what they are designed to do, maybe too successfully.
the question is, what alternative ways of life do people want, if they don't like what they have now under the parasitic financial elites?
people need the alternative way of re-organizing their life, around which they can organize their political activities.
but the self-appointed "left" of this country are too scared of socialism-communism, the only alternative known and articulated so far.
so good luck.
The cardinal FACT of the 21st Century is that democracy as we have known it for 50 years can no longer control Capitalism. It can and does corrupt 99.9 percent of elected public officials, in any developed nation.
My guess is that, unless and until capitalism is destroyed - organ by organ and cell by cell in a refiners' fire - we will never see real democracy again.
This is why I never bother voting. Voting makes an ass of you, and I refuse to allow that to happen to me. Rather, I makes asses of both democracy and capitalism, using satire and literary word cartoons that offend many people. Tough.
Trylon
Trylon: Your summation of the situation is wide of the mark. We have not known democracy, we have representative government, which is a poor substitute whose very structure makes it easily corruptible, with the consequences you rightly deplore.
Since it is so hard to 'destroy capitalism' the other approach makes more sense: Adopt real democracy, which alone would be strong enough to manage the beast. Political authority held by the people, without recourse to delegation, is not subject to easy corruption, if only because there are too many of us and the ballot is secret. In a real democracy wealth is made impotent so it no longer matters who owns the means of production and confiscation is not required.
"Real" democracy is either word play or a tautology. Canada's CBC did a long documentary series on the topic of Democracy, hosted by CEO Patrick Watson, in which I never heard the adjective =real= placed before the term. This is a bluff.
Nor is there a mark to be wide of. There are different ways of looking at the same thing - and differenct concepts of utopia. We exist, like it or not, in groups held together by social contracts, formal and informal. The narcissistic psychopath tries either to escape the contract terms or shape them to his testosteronic benefit rather than to the group's benefit. Capitalism, IMO, expresses psychopathic genes in the great ape, e.g. no upper limit. It is also an addictive phenomenon, like gambling, that receives biological expression in endorphins. It comes down to two alternative models of the human gene pool: a) hierarchical and pyramidal with the bottom serving the breeders at the top, b) round or circular, with order brought to egalitarian structure and breeding. The role of power is different in each.
General Strike.
Good idea! We already have 17% of the population on board...
I remember Reid from the bush years and will watch him give away what is left of the country and since the other dims "voted" him in they all will come back with the excuse like before; "we dont have the numbers" but, and this is my thought, this is exactly where they want to be. making it real easy to give it all away, starting with Social Security. Tony
We can halt production and some services with a general strike but the effects would last only as long as the populace could hold out, without an income.
Even if it were totally effective, and the powers that be capitulated, what would be our demands? Stop the killing and the raping of our planet?
As long as we insist on having things delivered half way across the world and using fossil fuels for everything from can openers to vibrators, it matters not who runs the show.
However, a general boycott, would remove dollars from corporations even as the masses accumulate them in the form of wages, if only temporarily. Wages that could be spent locally and intelligently to set up sustainable communities. Communities in which people work for themselves to live simpler yet more rewarding lives. We are not required to play by the rules of the elite, but we act as if we are...
Even without mass organization, we could simply boycott all of the large multinational corporations, or as many as we could. Remove our money from large banks. Stop using credit cards. Drive only when necessary. etc.
BP, Massey, Toyota. I am astonished that you place the Toyota recalls in the same class as BP and Massey. Every car company has recalls every now and then and often for the repair of dangerous flaws. In the Toyota case there is no evidence of deliberate cost-cutting nor has Toyota, unlike BP and Massey, been convicted in court or warned numerous times by plant inspectors. I accuse you of overkill.