The Corporate Control Of Society and Human Life
By Stephen Lendman
04/25/06 "ICH"
-- --
Large transnational corporations are clearly the dominant
institution of our time. They're preeminent throughout the world
but especially in the Global North and its epicenter in the US.
They control or greatly influence what we eat and drink, where
we live, what we wear, how we get most of our essential services
like health care and even what we're taught in schools up to the
highest levels. They create and control our sources of
information and greatly influence how we think and our view of
the world and them. They even now own patents on our genetic
code, the most basic elements of human life, and are likely
planning to manipulate and control them as just another
commodity to exploit for profit in their brave new world that
should concern everyone. They also carefully craft their image
and use catchy slogans to convince us of their benefit to
society and the world, like: "better things for better living
through chemistry" (if you don't mind toxic air, water and
soil), "we bring good things to life" (for them, not us), and
"all the news that's fit to print" (only if you love state and
corporate friendly disinformation and propaganda). The slogans
are clever, but the truth is ugly.
Corporations also decide who will govern and how. We may think
we do, but it's not so and never was. Those national elections,
especially the last two, only looked legitimate to most people,
but not to those who know and understand how the system works.
Here's how it really works. The "power elite" or privileged
class C. Wright Mills wrote about 50 years ago in his classic
book by that title are the real king and decision makers. He
wrote how corporate, government and military elites formed a
trinity of power after WW II and that the "power elite" were
those "who decide whatever is decided" of importance. The holy
trinity Mills wrote about still exists but today in the shape of
a triangle with the transnational giants clearly on top and
government, the military and all other institutions of
importance there to serve their interests. These corporations
have become so large and dominant they run our lives and the
world, and in a zero sum world and the chips that count most in
their stack, they do it for their continuing gain and at our
increasing expense. Something is way out of whack, and in this
essay I'll try to explain what it is and why we better
understand it.
The Power of Transnational Corporations and the Harm They Cause
As corporations have grown in size they've gained in power and
influence. And so has the harm they cause - to communities,
nations, the great majority of the public and the planet. Today
corporate giants decide who governs and how, who serves on our
courts, what laws are enacted and even whether and when wars are
fought, against whom and for what purpose or gain. It's for
their gain, who else's, certainly not ours. Once we start one,
they can even make profit projections from it like on any other
business venture. For them, that's all it is - another way to
make a buck, lots of them.
The central thesis of this essay is that giant transnational
corporations today have become so dominant they now control our
lives and the world, and they exploit both fully and ruthlessly.
While they claim to be serving us and bringing us the fruits of
the so-called "free market," in fact, they just use us for their
gain. They've deceived us and highjacked the government to serve
them as subservient proxies in their unending pursuit to
dominate the world's markets, resources, cheap labor abroad and
our own right here. And they've done it much like what happens
in the marketplace when a predator company attempts to take
control of another one that prefers to remain independent. They
launch a hostile takeover, going around or over the heads of the
target's management, their employees and the communities they
operate in. They go right to the target's shareholders and
promise them a better deal, meaning a premium price on the stock
they hold.
They do this, as in a friendly merger, for a variety of
financial and strategic reasons, but essentially it's to achieve
any possible immediate gain as well as over the longer term
greater market dominance that will build future profits. But
what happens in the wake of a takeover. Assets get stripped,
spun-off and/or sold-off. Plants are closed. Jobs are lost. And
all this is done for the primary bottom line goal - "the bottom
line," higher profits, whatever the cost to people, communities
or society.
Think of it this way. Large corporations today everywhere, but
especially the largest ones in the Global North, are a
destructive force, hostile to people, societies and the
environment. They're nothing less than legal private tyrannies
operating freely with virtually no restraint. Everything for
them, animal, vegetable or mineral, is viewed as a production
input to be commodified and consumed for profit and then
discarded when no longer of use. And to achieve maximum profits,
costs must be rigidly controlled. That means the lowest prices
paid for goods and services, the lowest wages paid to workers
(below privileged higher management who reward themselves
richly), as little as possible spent on essential benefits like
health care and pensions, and increasingly little or no concern
about the long-term cost of exploiting, plundering or even
destroying the natural environment and the future ability of the
planet to sustain life. These issues, however recognized and
grave, are for someone else to deal with later.
For now all that matters is today, the next quarter's earnings
and keeping the stockholders and Wall Street happy. They only
understand numbers on financial statements and are blind,
unconcerned and even hostile to human and societal welfare or a
safe environment that will protect and sustain all life forms.
They call it "free market capitalism." It's really the law of
the jungle. They're the predators, we're the prey, and every day
they eat us alive.
Does all this make sense? And do corporate chieftains who live
in a community, love their wives and children, contribute to
charities, attend church and believe in its teachings really go
to work every day and think - "who and what can I exploit
today?" They sure do because they have no other choice. No more
so than breathing in and breathing out.
How the Law Affects Corporate Behavior
Publicly owned corporations are mandated by law to serve only
the interests of their shareholders and do it by working to
maximize the value of their equity holdings by increasing
profits. That's it. Case closed. Think of these businesses as
gated communities of owners (large and small), the welfare of
whom is all that matters and the world outside the gates is to
be used and exploited for that one purpose only. Forget about
any social responsibility or safeguarding the environment. The
idea is to grow sales, keep costs low, increase profits, and if
you do it well, shareholder value will rise, the owners and Wall
Street will be happy, and you as a CEO or senior executive will
probably get a raise, good bonus and keep your job. Try being
worker-friendly, a nice guy, a good citizen or a friend of the
earth and fail to achieve the above objectives and you'll likely
face dismissal and even possible shareholder lawsuit for not
pursuing your fiduciary responsibility. Anyone choosing this
line of work has no other choice. To do the job well, you have
to think only of the care and feeding of your shareholders and
the investment community, ignore the law if that's what it takes
to do it, and obey the only law that counts - the one that helps
you grow the "bottom line."
There's nothing in the Constitution, which is public law, that
gives corporations the rights they've gotten. It never mattered
to them. They just crafted their own private law, piece by
piece, over many years with the help of corporate-friendly
lawyers, legislators and the courts. And today it's easier than
ever with both major parties strongly pro-business and the
courts stacked with business-friendly judges ready to do their
bidding. The result is big business is now the paymaster, or
puppetmaster, with government and the halls of justice their
faithful servants. There's no government of, for and by the
people, no public sovereignty, no democratic rights or any
choices but to accept their authority and bow to their will.
It's a democracy for the few alone - the privileged elite. Our
only choice is to go along to get along or get out of their way.
A Profile of the World's Largest 200 Transnational Corporations
In December, 2000 The Institute for Policy Studies released a
report called "The Rise of Corporate Global Power." It was a
profile of the 200 largest transnationals that showed just how
dominant they are. A summary of their findings is listed below.
1. Of the world's 100 largest economies, 51 are corporations.
2. The combined sales of these 200 corporations (called "The
Group" below) in 1999 equalled 27.5% of world Gross Domestic
Product (GDP) and are growing faster than overall global
economic activity.
3. The Group's combined sales exceed the total combined
economies of all nations in the world except the largest 10.
4. The Group's combined sales are 18 times the income of the
bottom one fourth of the world's population (1.2 billion people)
living in "severe" poverty.
5. Despite their combined size and percentage of world economic
activity, The Group employs only 0.78% of the world's workforce.
6. From 1983 to 1999 The Group's workforce grew only 14.4% while
their profits increased by 362.4% or about 25 times as much.
7. The largest employer in the world, Walmart, employed
1,140,000 in 1999 (1.6 million in 2005) or 5% of The Group's
total employment. It's also a model (and increasingly a target)
for corporate union-busting, widespread use of part-time workers
and a practice of avoiding giving its workers needed benefits
like health insurance.
8. 82 US corporations are in The Group, twice as many as Japan
with 41, the next highest contributing country.
9. 44 of the US corporations in The Group didn't pay the full
35% federal tax rate from 1996 - 1998. 7 of them paid no tax in
1998 and also got tax rebates, including Enron and Worldcom now
exposed as corporate criminals.
10. The percent of The Group's sales from the service sector
(not manufacturing) grew from 33.8% in 1983 to 46.7% in 1999. In
the US, the service sector comprised 79% of the total economy in
2004.
How Corporate Behavior Affects the Public Interest
Big corporations have almost always thrived in the US. But a
crucial, defining moment happened in 1886 when the Supreme Court
granted corporations the legal status of personhood in Santa
Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railway - a simple tax dispute
case unrelated to the issue of corporate personhood. Incredibly
it wasn't the Justices who decided corporations are persons, but
the Court's reporter (J.C. Bancroft Davis) who after the
decision was rendered wrote it in his "headnotes." The Court did
nothing to refute them, likely by intent, and the result was
corporations got what they had long coveted.
That decision granted corporations the same constitutional
rights as people, but because of their limited liability status,
protected shareholders from the obligations of their debts,
other obligations, and many of the responsibilities individuals
legally have. Armed with this new legal status corporations were
able to win many additional favorable court decisions up to the
present. They also gained much regulatory relief and favorable
legislation while, at the same time, being protected by their
limited liability status. As a result, corporations have been
able to increase their power and grow to their present size and
dominance.
Although corporations aren't human, they can live forever,
change their identity, reside in many places simultaneously in
many countries, can't be imprisoned for wrongdoing and can
change themselves into new persons at will for any reason. They
have the same rights and protections as people under the Bill of
Rights but not the responsibilities. From that right,
corporations became unbound, free to grow and gain immense power
and be able to become the dominant institution that now runs the
country, the world and all our lives. Most important, they got
an unwritten license from all three branches of the government
to operate freely for their own benefit and others of their
privileged class and do it at the public expense everywhere.
They've exploited it fully as they're grown in size and
dominance, and the result has been lives destroyed, the
environment harmed and needless wars fought on their behalf
because they open markets and grow profits. It's no exaggeration
to say these institutions today are real "weapons of mass
destruction."
In the early days of the republic it all might have been
different had Thomas Jefferson and James Madison prevailed over
Federalists John Adams and Alexander Hamilton. Jefferson and
Madison believed the Bill of Rights should include "freedom from
monopolies in commerce" (what are now giant corporations) and
"freedom from a permanent military" or standing armies. Adams
and Hamilton felt otherwise, and the final compromise was the
first 10 Bill of Rights amendments that are now the law but not
the other two Jefferson and Madison wanted included. Try to
imagine what this country might be like today had we gotten them
all.
We didn't, of course, so the result, as they say, is history. It
allowed small corporations to grow into giants and so-called
"free market capitalism" to become the dominant state religion
of this country and the West. We may say it's free, but it only
is for those own and control it, and notice we never hear the
system called "fair." That's because in most key industries a
handful of corporate giants dominate and now work in cartel-like
alliance with their "friendly" competitors here and abroad to
control (read: exploit) the markets they serve. They're also
able to co-opt the leaders and business elites of countries in
the developing world, or work in partnership with them in the
larger ones like China, India and Brazil, to allow them market
entry. As an inducement, they offer to invest their capital and
offer their technology in return for a business-friendly climate
and access to the host country's cheap labor. It's an alliance
based on pure exploitation for profit at the expense of people
who are used, abused and discarded when they have no further
value.
This essay is mainly about how these same corporate giants
dominate and exploit here in the US. They can't get away with
the flagrant abuses commonplace in sweatshop labor countries,
but they're moving in that direction. It's no longer like the
past in this country when I was young and beginning my working
life (a distant memory of better times) when manufacturing was
strong, jobs paid well and had good benefits, and workers were
protected by strong unions that served their interests even
while partnering with management and willing to do the bidding
of government.
I still remember well an incident early in my working life when
as a newly minted MBA I worked as a marketing research analyst
for several large corporations prior to joining a small family
business. At one of those companies in the early 60s, my boss
called me into his office on my first day on the job. He
jokingly told me he was so happy with my work he was giving me a
raise. We both chuckled, and he then explained on that day
everyone in the company got an inflation-based increase. It was
automatic from the lowliest worker to top management because the
unions (then strong) got it written into their labor contract.
In that company, everyone got the same benefits as union
members. Try finding anything like that today even for union
members alone. It's almost unheard of.
Today, the country is primarily dominated by service industries
many of which require little formal education, only pay low
wages and few if any benefits, and offer few chances for
advancement. The US Department of Labor projects that job
categories with the greatest expected future growth are
cashiers, waiters and waitresses, janitors and retail clerks.
These and other low wage, low benefit jobs are what many young
people entering the workforce can look forward to today. You
don't need a Harvard degree for them or even one from a junior
college - and for the ones listed above, no degree is needed,
not even a high school one.
The continuing decline of good job opportunities is a key reason
why the quality of education in urban schools has deteriorated
so much in recent years and school dropout rates are so high. In
my city of Chicago, half of all students entering high school
never graduate and of those who do 74% of them must take
remedial English and 94% remedial math at the Chicago City
Colleges according to a report published in the Chicago Sun
Times. The situation isn't much better in inner cities
throughout the country, nor is the level of racial segregation
that's grown to levels last seen in the 1960s according to
Jonathan Kozol in his new book The Shame of the Nation. Again in
Chicago, a shocking 87% of public school enrollment was black or
Hispanic, and the situation is about as bad or even worse in
most other big cities.
The lack of good job opportunities for a growing population of
ill-prepared young people is also a major reason for the growth
of our prison population that now exceeds 2.1 million, is the
largest in the world even ahead of China with over four times
our population, and is incarcerating about 900 new prisoners
every week. I wrote a recent heavily documented article about
this called The US Gulag Prison System.
The US Has Always Been the Unthinkable and Unmentionable - A
Rigid Class Society
The US has always been what the "power elite" never admit or
discuss - a rigid class society. But once there was a thriving
middle class along with a small minority of rich and well-off
and a large segment of low paid workers and the poor. That
majority in the middle could afford their own homes, send their
kids to college and afford many amenities like new cars, some
travel, convenience appliances and decent health care. I can
still remember buying a health insurance plan while finishing my
graduate work in 1959 that cost about $100 and change total for
respectable coverage for a full year. Honest, I'm not kidding.
Fewer people each year can afford these "luxuries" now,
including decent health care coverage, because of the hollowing
out of the economy, stagnant wage growth (to be discussed below)
and skyrocketing costs of essentials like health insurance,
prescription drugs and college tuition for those wanting a
higher education. Services now account for nearly 80% of all
business while manufacturing has declined to about 14%, and
total manufacturing employment is half the percentage of total
employment it was 40 years ago and falling. Also, financial
services of all types now comprise the largest single sector of
the economy at 21% of it. But most of it involves investment and
speculation running into the hundreds of trillions of dollars
annually worldwide (and the US is the epicenter of it all) just
for transactions involving currencies and so-called
over-the-counter and exchange-traded financial derivatives. It's
not the purpose of this essay to explain the nuts and bolts of
this kind of trading except to say they produce nothing anyone
can go in a store and buy or that enhance the well-being of the
majority public that doesn't even know, let alone understand,
that this kind of activity goes on or what the inherent dangers
from it may be.
The dismantling of our manufacturing base, however, is a subject
that should make daily headlines but is seldom discussed in the
mainstream. It's crucially important because one has to wonder
how any nation can avoid eventual decline when it allows its
manufacturing to be done abroad, reduces its need for a highly
trained work force and ends up destroying its middle class that
made it prosper in the first place. There are distinguished
thinkers who believe as I do that the US has seen its better
days and is now in a downward trajectory economically. Unless a
way is found to reverse this destructive trend, the US will be
Number One only in military spending and waging wars. And no
nation in history based on militarism and conquest has ever not
failed ultimately to destroy itself.
I'd like to quote two distinguished thinkers who've addressed
the issue of growing inequality in the US. On most social
matters they'd likely disagree, but not on this one. One was
former liberal Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandeis who
explained: "We can have democracy in this country, or we can
have great wealth concentrated in the hands of the few, but we
can't have both." The other was distinguished "free market"
economist and Nobel laureate Milton Friedman. In his view: "The
greatest problem facing our country is the breaking down into
two classes, those who have and those who have not. The growing
differences between the incomes of the skilled and the less
skilled, the educated and the uneducated, pose a very real
danger. If that widening rift continues, we're going to be in
terrible trouble.....We cannot remain a democratic, open society
that is divided into two classes."
The Downward Trajectory of American Workers
Over the past generation working people have seen an
unprecedented fall in their standard of living. In the past
(except for periods of economic downturn), workers saw their
wages and benefits grow each year and their living standards
improve. Today it's just the opposite. Adjusted for inflation,
the average working person in the US earns less than 30 years
ago, and even with modest annual increases is not keeping up
with inflation. In addition, the federal minimum wage is a
paltry $5.15 an hour and was last increased in 1997. That rate
is now at the lowest point it's been relative to average wages
since 1949. It's incentivized individual states to raise their
own which they have the right to do, and, as of mid-year 2005,
17 of them and the District of Columbia have done it covering
nearly half the US population. That helps, but not enough.
Some of the world data is especially shocking, appalling and
indicative of the economic trend in the US. According to the UN
2002 Human Development Report, the richest 1% in 1999-2000
received as much income as the bottom 57% combined, over 45% of
the world's population lived then on less than $2 a day, about
40% had no sanitation services and about 840 million people were
malnourished. In addition, 1 in 6 grade school children were not
in school, and half the global nonagricultural labor force was
either unemployed or underemployed. Most shocking and disturbing
of all is that many millions (likely tens of millions) of people
in the less developed world die each year from starvation and
treatable diseases because of abuse and/or neglect by rich
nations that could prevent it. And these numbers reflect the
state of things at the end of a decade of overall impressive
economic growth. But it shows how those gains went mainly to a
privileged upper class who got them at the expense of the
majority below them, especially the most desperate and needy.
The same trend is evident in the US although not as stark as in
the less developed world. Except for the mild recession in
2001-2002, overall US economic growth for the past 15 years has
been strong and worker productivity high. But the gains from it
went to the privileged at the top and were gotten at the expense
of working people who saw their wages fail to keep up with
inflation and their essential benefits decline. In 2004 the
average CEO earned 431 times the income of the average working
person. That was up from 85 times in 1990 and 42 times in 1980.
It's hard to believe and even harder with the real life example
below.
I'd like to nominate a "poster executive" who for me symbolizes
classic gross corporate excess and greed. He's the chairman and
CEO of Capital One Financial, the giant credit card company
that's awaiting the finalizing of its acquisition of North Fork
Bancorp. At completion of this deal, the Wall Street Journal
reported on March 24 this lucky fellow will realize a gain of
$249.3 million from stock options he exercised last year. That's
in addition to the $56 million he earned in 2004. What on earth
will he spend it on, and how many less fortunate ones will have
to ante up to pay for this in the de rigueur job cuts that
always follow big acquisitions.
And what will all those other lucky CEOs and top executives
spend theirs on as well. If you're not already gagging, let me
make you choke. According to a study just released by two Ivy
League academics based on interviews with CEOs and top managers
of the largest 1,500 public US companies, the top five
executives collectively at those companies pocketed $122 billion
in compensation from 1999-2003 plus at least $60 billion more in
supplemental benefits from SERPs (Supplemental Executive
Retirement Plans). Also, other data show average annual CEO pay
rose from about $1 million a year in 1980 to an estimated $14.4
million in 2001 and rising - plus all those juicy benefits. I
repeat - what on earth can they spend it on. They could never
even count it.
Reasons for This Unabated Downward Trajectory
The reasons for this decline were as follows:
The shift away from manufacturing to services.
The growth of so-called "globalization" sending many jobs abroad
including high-paying ones.
The decline of unions to levels last seen before the mass
unionization struggles of the 1930s because of government and
corporate antipathy toward them and corporations using the
threat to close plants and move jobs offshore to force workers
to take pay cuts and accept lower benefits. And then they still
move jobs abroad.
Deregulation of key industries including transportation,
communications and finance, which opened these industries to low
cost competition that put pressure on unions and forced workers
to accept lower pay and benefits to keep their jobs.
The growth of high technology allowing machines (mainly
computers) to do the work of people, thus reducing the need for
them.
The effects of racism and sexism (in a society with deep-rooted
racism, sexism and classism) as seen in the data showing 30% of
black workers and 40% of Latino workers earning poverty wages
with women in both categories most affected. And the average
black family owns only 14% as much as the average white family.
The unabated downward trajectory of workers' real income already
discussed. The only family income gains have come from two
income households, in many cases because wives were forced to
enter the workforce out of necessity.
Statistics Documenting the Decline
Hot off the press from the latest US Federal Reserve triennial
survey (and most comprehensive one of all) of household wealth
published in late February, 2006:
--Median American family income grew a paltry 1.5% after
inflation between 2001 and 2004, but there was a widening gap
between upper and lower income households.
--While the richest 10% rose an inflation adjusted 6.5%, the
bottom 25% fell 1.5%.
--Stephen Brobeck, Executive Director of the Consumer Federation
of America, explained - "While the typical American household
basically ran in place, less affluent households actually lost
ground."
Even hotter off the press, the US Department of Labor and
Congressional Budget Office reported in late March that in the
last 5 years ending year-end 2005, inflation adjusted GDP per
person rose 8.4% but the average weekly wage fell 0.3%.
Following a long-term trend since the 1970s, those in the upper
income percentiles gained the most while those in the lower half
of them lost the most. And the income gap between rich and poor
continued to widen.
--The racial disparity was especially dramatic. The median white
family's net worth in 2004 was $140,700 compared with $24,800
for the typical nonwhite family.
According to the 2005 Federal Poverty Guidelines, 12.7%, or 37
million people, lived in poverty in 2004. However, because of an
acknowledged flawed model to measure poverty, the true number is
far higher - at least many millions more and increasing even in
times of prosperity.
In December, 2004 the New York Times reported the US ranked 49th
in world literacy, and the US Department of Labor estimates over
20% of the population is functionally illiterate (compared to
about 1% in Venezuela and Cuba, two of the countries we demonize
the most). It's also true, as discussed above briefly, that the
quality of public education has been in decline in urban schools
for many years. In addition (also mentioned), the extent of
racial segregation is now as great as in the 1960s, despite
supposed but unrealized gains from the civil rights legislation
of that time. Further, state and local education budgets aren't
keeping up with a growing need or are being cut. It's also no
better for those needing college aid as federal Pell grants have
been frozen or cut for three straight years, and it was just
reported in late March by public college finance officials that
state higher education funding has fallen sharply from $7,121
per student in 2001 to $5,833 in 2005. It means a growing number
of lower income students are now deprived of a chance for higher
education - and it's getting steadily worse.
The World Health Organization ranked the US 37th in the world in
"overall health performance" and 54th in the fairness of health
care. And in 2004 about 46 million people had no health
insurance and millions more were underinsured. These appalling
numbers are in spite of the fact that the US spends far more on
health care per capita than any other country. And all developed
countries in the world, except the US and South Africa, provide
free health care for all its citizens paid for through taxes.
The European Dream reported US childhood poverty ranked 22nd or
second to last among developed nations.
The US ranked last among the world's 20 most developed nations
in its worker compensation growth rate in the 1980s with
conditions only slightly better in the 1990s.
The New York Times reported 12 million American families, over
10% of all households, struggle to feed themselves.
The NYT also reported the US ranks 41st in world infant
mortality.
All this and many more depressing statistics are happening in
the richest country in the world with a 2005 Gross Domestic
Product of $12.5 trillion.
The dramatic effects of social inequality in the US are seen in
the Economic Policy Institute's 2004 report on the State of
Working America." It shows the top 1% controls more than
one-third of the nation's wealth while the bottom 80% have 16%.
Even worse, the top 20% holds 84% of all wealth while the
poorest 20% are in debt and owe more than they own.
Corporate Gain Has Come at the Cost of Worker Loss
Not coincidentally, as workers have seen their living standards
decline, transnational corporations have experienced
unprecedented growth and dominance. And that trend continues
unabated. How and why is this happening? Begin with the most
business-friendly governments the country has had over the last
25 years since the "roaring" 1920s when President Calvin
Coolidge explained that "the business of America is business."
He, and two other Republican presidents then did everything they
could to help their business friends. But they were small-timers
compared to today, and the size, dominance and global reach of
big business then was a small fraction of what it is now. And
back then, job "outsourcing", GATT and WTO type trade
agreements, and the concept of globalization weren't in the
vocabulary. Now they're central to the problem as they've put
working people in corporate straightjackets and created a severe
class divide in the country (not to mention the developing world
where it's far worse) that keeps widening.
How World Trade Agreements Destroy Good Jobs and the American
Dream
World trade between nations is nothing new, and the General
Agreement on Tariffs and Trade (GATT) has been around since it
was formed in Havana, Cuba in 1948. But with the signing of
NAFTA that went into effect on January 1, 1994, the notion of
so-called globalization emerged big time. NAFTA brought Mexico
into the 1989 Canada-US Free Trade Agreement as part of a
radical experiment to merge three disparate economies into a
binding one-size-fits-all set of rules all three had to abide by
regardless of the effect on their people. To sell it to each
country's legislators and people, NAFTA's backers made lofty
pie-in-the-sky predictions of new jobs that "free trade" would
create. They never were nor was this a plan to do it. It was a
scam to outsource jobs and thus eliminate many others, enrich
the transnationals and make working people pick up the tab and
take the pain.
NAFTA was just the beginning. It was planned as a stalking horse
and template for the World Trade Organization (WTO), that
replaced the GATT one year after NAFTA went into effect. The WTO
along with an alphabet soup of trade agreements (passed and
wished for) like GATS (covering all kinds of services), TRIPS
(for intellectual property), MAI (on investments and most all-encompassisng
and dangerous one of all if it ever passes even in separate
pieces) and all the regional agreements like CAFTA and FTAA are
intended to establish a supranational economic "constitution."
It's to be based on the rules of trade the Global North nations
want to craft that would override the sovereignty of all WTO
member nations. In other words, the plan was and still is for
the US primarily, along with the EU, Japan and other dominant
Global North countries to establish a binding set of trade rules
(a global constitution) they would write for their benefit for
an integrated world economy and then force all other nations to
abide by them. NAFTA, and what was to follow, were and are not
intended to create jobs and raise living standards in the
participating countries, despite all the hype saying they would
and will. These agreements are solely plans to benefit big
corporations, legally allowing them the right to dominate world
markets, override national sovereignty to do it, and exploit
people everywhere for their gain. Bottom line - these
"agreements" mean big corporations win and people everywhere
lose.
So far the jury is very much out on whether the grand plan will
succeed as key countries in the Global South have caught on to
the scam and aren't buying it - Brazil, India, Venezuela,
Argentina, Bolivia and others. And China is big enough to be a
club member, agree to the rules, and then bend them at times to
protect its own interests.
But if NAFTA was a template to disguise a WTO attempted world
"hostile takeover," look at all the carnage it's created so far.
Instead of creating jobs in all three countries, it destroyed
hundreds of thousands of them. In the US alone it's responsible
for the loss each year of many thousands of high paying, good
benefit manufacturing jobs now exported to low wage countries
like Mexico, China, India and many others. And most of the
workers losing them only are able to find lower paying ones with
fewer or no benefits if they can find any job at all. This is an
ongoing problem in good as well as poor economic times and gets
worse every year. It's also led many older workers, who wish to
work but can't find jobs, to drop out of the work force or take
lower paying part-time ones when they can find full-time ones.
The result has been a huge shift upward in income, wealth and
power in the US (and in Canada, Mexico and all other WTO member
countries) benefitting the business elites and corrupted
politicians. And it's cost working people billions of dollars,
many thousands of good jobs and a permanent drop in the average
American worker's standard of living. It's also created an
enormous migration problem all over the world comprised of
desperate people looking for work because there's none at home.
I wrote at length about this in the US in my recent article
called The War on Immigrants. The problem gets worse every year
including in the US. And here a low unemployment rate hides the
fact that many workers have dropped out of the work force or
must take whatever part-time jobs they can find because they
can't get full-time ones as mentioned above.
I'm now working on a new article in which I discuss the view of
some US economists who explain that if the unemployment rate
today was calculated the same way it was during The Great
Depression when it rose to a peak of 25% of the working
population, the true current figure would be about 12% instead
of the reported 4.7%. The current calculation method includes
part-time workers who work as little as one hour during the
reporting period. It also excludes discouraged workers who wish
to work but who've stopped looking because they can't find jobs.
One might logically wonder why big US corporations run by smart
people wouldn't be trying to ameliorate this problem to build
rather than weaken the purchasing power of people in their home
country - the ones they need to buy their products and services.
It's not just for their obvious need to control or reduce costs
to enhance profits. It's because these companies are only
nominally US ones. They may be headquartered here, but they
could as easily be home based anywhere. The US may be their
biggest market and most important source of revenue and profit,
but their operations and markets span the globe. If they
desired, they could pick up and leave and set up shop in
Timbuktu or Kathmandu. That's why they're called "transnationals."
Once Our Government Protected Working People
At one time US governments had a social contract with its
citizens, imperfect as it was. Most governments in Western
Europe still do, although they're being weakened. But since the
1980s and especially after the election of George W. Bush, that
contract here is being dissmantled, program by program, year
after year with the ultimate goal of making every one
self-sufficient with little or no safety net for protection. The
most vulnerable poor are hurt most and their numbers grow each
year, but the middle class is suffering too as those in it are
declining as a percent of the total population. And the very
definition of a middle class is changing as the wealth gap keeps
widening between top and bottom along with the hollowing out of
the middle.
Bush and his cabal of acolytes are so intent on destroying the
US social contract with its citizens that their motto might as
well be: you can have anything you want - as long as you can
afford to pay for it. If not, you're on your own.
The Balance Sheet Documenting Corporate Gains
Worker loss has been corporations' gain - big time. In 2004 the
world's largest 500 corporations posted their highest ever
revenues and profits - an astonishing $14.9 trillion in revenue
and $731.2 billion in profits. And top corporate officials,
mainly in the US, are raking it in, rewarding themselves with
obscene amounts of salaries, bonuses in the multi-millions and
lucrative stock options worth even more for many of them. That
level of largesse is only possible at the expense of working
people here and everywhere. Oliver Stone may have been thinking
of them when he made his 1980s film, Wall Street. In it was the
memorable line spoken by the character portraying the
manipulative investor/deal-maker when he explained that "greed
is good."
Except for two brief and mild recessions, corporations in the US
have prospered since the 1980s in a very business-friendly
environment under both Democrats and Republicans. The result has
been rising profits to record levels, enhanced even more by
generous corporate tax cuts (and personal ones as well mostly
for the rich), especially after the election of George Bush.
Under this president, one of their own in the White House, US
corporations have never had it better. It's been so good that 82
of the largest 275 companies paid no federal income tax in at
least one year from 2001-2003 or got a refund; 28 of them got
tax rebates in all 3 of those years even though their combined
profits totaled $44.9 billion; 46 of them, earning $42.6 billion
in profits, paid no tax in 2003 and got $4.9 billion back in tax
rebates. And the average CEO pay for these 46 companies in 2004
was $12.6 million.
Along with big tax cuts and generous rebates, big corporations
are on the government dole big time in the form of subsidies,
otherwise known as "corporate welfare." It's also known as
socialism for the rich (and capitalism for the rest of us). In
1997 the Fortune 500 companies got $75 billion in "public aid"
even though they earned record profits of $325 billion. They got
it in many forms - grants, contracts, loans and loan guarantees
and lots more. Today there are about 125 business subsidy
programs in the federal budget benefitting all major areas of
business.
Some examples of this government largesse include:
Selling the rights to billions of dollars of oil, gas, coal and
other mineral reserves at a small fraction of their market
value.
The giveaway of the entire broadcast spectrum to the corporate
media, valued at $37 billion in 1989 dollars.
Charging mostly corporate ranchers (including big oil and
insurance companies) dirt cheap grazing rates on over 20 million
acres of public land.
Spending many billions of dollars on R & D and handing over the
results to corporations free of charge. "Big Pharma" is
notorious for letting government do their expensive research and
then cashing in on the results by soaking us with sky-high
prices and rigging the game with through WTO rules that get them
exclusive patent rights for 20 years or longer when they're able
to extend them through the courts.
Giving the nuclear industry over $100 billion in handouts since
its inception and guaranteeing government protection to pick up
the cost in case of any serious accidents that otherwise might
cost the company affected billions and possibly bankrupt it.
Giving corporate agribusiness producers many billions in annual
subsidies.
You and I, the individual taxpayers, pay the bill for this
generosity. But we actually pay these corporations twice - first
through our taxes and then for the cost of their products and
services. And they don't even thank us.
The Biggest Recipient of Government Handouts
In the old game of "guns vs. butter", guess who wins? Clue -
they have shareholders, and their chiefs are called CEOs. Guess
who loses? You know that answer chapter and verse by now.
The Wall Street film character who explained that greed is good
might have added war is even better. Call it greed made easy or
without even trying. Since WW II the Pentagon and
military-industrial complex have always been at the head of the
handout queue to get their king-sized pound of flesh in
appropriations. The amounts gotten varied in times of war and
peace or with the whims or chutzpah of a sitting president, but
they're always big. The Pentagon, defense contractors and all
the other many and varied thousands of parasitical corporations
servicing the defense industry are umbilically linked. All these
corporations profit handsomely in our military-industrialized
society that takes our tax dollars and hands them over to them
by the hundreds of billions annually. Their gain is the public's
loss. If the process were audible we'd be able to hear a "giant
sucking sound" of public resources wooshing from our pockets to
theirs. It's also the sound of our lifeblood being sucked away
as we have to pick up the tab and give up our social benefits as
well.
Once the cold war ended after the Berlin wall came down and the
Soviet Union became 15 independent republics, there was some
hope for a peace dividend - meaning less for the military and
more social spending. That wasn't what the first Bush
administration and Pentagon had in mind as they frantically
searched for and easily found new potential enemies as a way to
make the case for continued militarized state capitalism. Our
language manipulation experts came up with and sold to the
Congress and public the threat of "growing technological
sophistication of Third World conflicts" which "will place
serious demands on our forces" and "continue to threaten US
interests," even without "the backdrop of superpower
competition." Our defense strategy would thus be based on
maintaining global "stability" (more code language meaning
assuring obedience to US dominance).
In the 1990 National Security Strategy, the Pentagon presented
its defense budget to the Congress using the above stated
pretext to justify what they wanted. It called for strengthening
"the defense industrial base" (code language for the high-tech
industry in all its forms) through generous subsidies as
incentives "to invest in new facilities and equipment as well as
in research and development." They got what they wanted, and it
set off the high tech stock market boom that lasted until the
speculative bubble burst in March, 2000 when the economy slowed
and slipped into recession. Three years later in a post 9/11
environment, the economy was again growing as was annual defense
spending, and the stock market began another ascent that's so
far continuing.
The many corporations now benefitting from Pentagon largesse are
so addicted to it that they become the main promoters of and
cheerleaders for conflicts or preparations for them because they
guarantee bigger handouts that are so good for business. It's a
dirty business, but isn't that the fundamental predatory nature
of large-scale capitalism that relies on a state policy of
imperialism to thrive and prosper. Senator Henry Cabot Lodge
explained it in 1895, in an unguarded moment, when he said
"commerce follows the flag." He might have added that the flag
also follows commerce. The great political economist Harry
Magdoff, who died this year on New Year's day, also explained it
well in his 1969 book The Age of Imperialism when he wrote:
"Imperialism is not a matter of choice for a capitalist society;
it is the way of life of such a society." And historian Henry
Steele Commager wrote about how a national security police state
and its bureaucracy lends its great talents and resources "not
to devising ways of reducing tensions and avoiding war, but to
ways of exacerbating tensions and preparing for war." I guess
the conclusion is that in a capitalist society dominated by big
business this "bad seed" must be in our DNA and we can't help
ourselves as a result. In another article I'm working on I refer
to our addiction to war. So far we haven't found an effective
antidote.
The reason, of course, is because war is so good for business.
In the last 6 years alone, and especially since 9/11, along with
all their other largesse and waste, the Pentagon outsourced on
average $150 billion a year in work to corporations. Almost half
of it was in no-bid contracts and three fourths of that was to
the five largest defense contractors headed by Lockheed Martin
and Boing. L-M is the undisputed king of contractors. They
literally run the enterprise of empire from the inside and out.
They're not only its biggest beneficiary, they also help shape
the policy guaranteeing it - to the tune of $65 million every
day (from our pockets into theirs). And they collect their loot
even when their killing machines don't work right.
Then, of course, there's Halliburton and Bechtel. They're always
big time winners in the handout sweepstakes. These two
well-connected companies have been at the head of the queue in
the looting of Iraq and the US Treasury. They've gotten huge
no-bid contracts worth many billions which they then freely
supplemented with gross (read: criminal) overcharges and gotten
away with most of it. And we can't ignore the notorious Carlyle
Group, the nation's largest privately held defense contractor
with the tightest of ties right to the Oval Office. They
practically sit in the traditional Kittinger chair there, or
whatever other brand George Bush may prefer. His father, and
former president, of course, is on their team (and payroll), and
they use him as needed as their main "door-opener" and
"wheel-greaser" (especially in the lucrative Middle East). And
the old man reportedly earns a hefty half million dollars for
every speech he makes on behalf of his generous employer. At
that pay scale he must be hard-pressed to keep his mouth shut.
Guess How Big Funding National Defense Really Is
The Center for Defense Information reported that since 1945 over
$21 trillion in constant dollars has been spent on the military.
And it's been done largely to benefit US corporations even
though the country had no real enemies all through those years -
except for the ones we attacked with no provocation or invented
to scare the public so they'd buy into the scam that we needed
industrial strength military spending for national security.
Ronald Reagan was very adept at scare tactics and duping the
public. He fathered the Contra wars in the 80s in Nicaragua and
scared half the public into believing the ruling Sandinista
government was a threat to invade Texas and threaten the whole
country. He tried and failed to get Mexican president Miguel de
la Madrid to go along with him. The Mexican president said if he
did 70 million Mexicans would die laughing. It's hard to believe
the US public could ever fall for a threat about as great as I'd
be (all 120 lbs. of me) in the ring against Mike Tyson in his
prime. But although there was none and the nation was at peace
during his tenure, Reagan expanded the military budget by 43%
over what it was at the height of the Vietnam war (and ran up
huge budget deficits doing it). The public suffered for it with
the loss of social benefits, but business loved it and him, and
the stock market took off on an 18 year bull run.
But after the 9/11 attack, the floodgates really opened wide. In
fiscal year 2000 the military budget was $289 billion, but up it
went steadily after that reaching $442 billion in 2006 and
currently is requested to increase to $463 or higher in 2007.
Add to that over $41 billion for Homeland Security in 2006
(another public rip-off as part of a move toward a full-blown
national security police state) and annual multi-billions in
funding off the books for the Iraq and Afghanistan wars that in
fiscal 2006 alone amounts to about $120 billion now and may
increase. Add it up and the current budget for the military, 2
wars off the books and Homeland Security, and it comes to over
$600 billion this year. That kind of spending, with billions
more available at the drop of an add-on presidential emergency
request gives a whole new meaning to the term "war profiteer."
And while the big defense contractors reap the biggest benefits,
many thousands of US corporations are in on the take as the
Pentagon is a big buyer of everything from expensive R & D and
high tech weapons to breakfast cereals and toilet paper. Using
the false Bush slogan about leaving no child behind for his
failed education program, the Pentagon for sure leaves no
corporation behind in its generosity. Corporations wanting a
piece of the action need only remember and abide by the
scriptural message from John 16:24: "ask and you shall receive."
And probably a lot as the Pentagon is notorious about being
sloppy, "spilling" more than many good sized corporations earn.
Here's the 2 key questions to ask. Does anyone feel safer, and
who'll pick up the tab? If you hadn't noticed, you, the average
worker, didn't share in those big tax cuts, your income is
losing the war to inflation, your benefits are eroding, and
someone some day has to pay that $8.275 trillion national debt
that keeps rising $2.2 billion every day. And along with that
burden, we've never been less safe, and we, the public, have to
pay the bill because corporate America never does. They're in
another queue for more tax cuts, and we'll see more social
benefits cut to pay for them too. In the political game of
musical chairs, corporations get them all every time, and John
Q. Public is always left standing (out in the cold).
How Did We Get Into this Mess, and How Can We Get Out of It
I've already explained what happened. As to how, it's because we
let them. They delivered the message, and we bought it like
lambs led to the slaughter or believing the "foxes" were really
"guarding" us. Back in school we all learned and sang those
lovely lyrics that began "Oh beautiful for spacious skies, For
amber waves of grain." We believed it and most of us in our
stupor still do. It's long past time we realized it was just a
song intended to lull us into complacency to accept the message
and go along with it. It was a false message, although there is
an America the Beautiful, but only for the privileged few and no
one else. And every year it gets worse - a race to the bottom
with no end in sight until we either get there or wake up in
time and do something about it. Unless we act to cauterize our
collective wounds we'll never begin the healing process; in
fact, we'll bleed to death. We have to find a way to reclaim the
democracy we're always being reminded we have, but don't. If we
really had it, they'd never have to remind us about it.
People Power Is How We Get Out of It
It's not too late to turn it around - yet. And it's simple to
know what we need to do but always hard knowing how to go about
it - take to the streets, throw the bums out (we've tried that
one before and only put in new bums). Anyone have some good
suggestions? I don't have sure-fire ones, but I've got a piece
of good wisdom based on the past and the present. History shows
that when things get bad enough people first stir and then
react. If nothing changes and the pain gets bad enough, then at
some point down go the barricades, and people power steps into
the breach. The many always win out over the few when they're
fully committed to do it. I"ve quoted famed Chicago community
activist Sol Linowitz before who understood it and once said
"the way to beat organized money is with organized people."
Three recent and current examples make the point and show us
how.
All over France for two months up until April, millions of angry
young people and union members mainly engaged in strikes,
sit-ins and mass street protests to demand the revocation of the
new First Employment Contract (CPE) for workers under 26 years
of age. French youth refused to become what they called "a
Kleenex generation" - to be used and thrown away at the whim of
employers who want the "flexibility" to do it. The law was based
on the insane notion that indiscriminate firing was a way to
create more jobs and reduce unemployment. If it had gone into
affect, it would have given employers the right to hire young
workers on a two year trial basis and fire them at will at any
time during that period. The protesters understood the sham and
how it would hurt them and stayed out long enough to get the
Chirac government to back down and effectively cancel this
outrageous law.
A second example is now happening on the streets in Nepal as
many thousands of people from all walks of life including
professionals have been protesting since early April in a mass
civil uprising against King Gyanendra demanding an end to
autocratic monarchal rule and the restoration of democracy. At
this writing they still don't have it, but the king had to go on
national television and promise to meet their demands. The
protests continued after his first public statement forcing the
king to go further and agree to the major demands of the main
seven-party alliance including reinstating the lower house of
parliament and giving power back to elected officials. Doing
that would then clear the way to create a new constitution,
hopefully a more democratic process and an end to the mass
protests. At this writing it remains to be seen whether
resolution has now been reached, but it appears a major step has
been taken toward it.
The third example has been happening here in the US as millions
of immigrants and working people of all races have taken to the
streets in cities all over the country. They've seen their
rights denied or threatened, their jobs exported, unions
weakened or destroyed, wages stagnated and essential benefits
reduced, lost or never gotten. Their protests are continuing,
and they demand equity and justice. Congress has already taken
note and softened some of their hostile anti-immigrant rhetoric.
But it remains to be seen how this will turn out. The Congress
will resume its immigration legislation debate in its post
Easter break session with a final resolution now unclear. What
is clear is that if a final bill emerges it will be less harsh
than the original House version that passed and the Senate one
still being debated prior to and during the mass protests.
The lesson is clear. Mass people actions, if large and strong
enough, get results. Lots of great thinkers through the years
knew this and said it many different ways. I quote some of them
often for inspiration, and I'll end by doing it again - 2 jewels
from one of my favorites - the Mahatma. Ghandi wisely observed
that "even the most powerful cannot rule without the cooperation
of the ruled." He proved it. He also famously said - "First they
ignore you, then they laugh at you, then they fight you, then
you win." He proved that too.
Anyone ready for a fight? I hope you are, and if so, you and we
too can win. And just in case I need to remind you what you're
fighting for, it's for your future, the kind your parents
hopefully had, the kind you want for your children, the kind
where you know you live in a country with a real democratically
elected government that works for all the people and one where
there's equity and justice for everyone, not just for the
privileged the way it is today. It's also to save the republic
and reverse the present course we're now on that may destroy it.
Think about it, and start fighting for it. Your future depends
on it.
Stephen Lendman lives in Chicago and can be reached at
lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net. Also visit his blog address at
www.sjlendman.blogspot.com.
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