What a
conundrum we find ourselves in and depending on who’s talking and
who’s listening, it would appear we’re damned if we do and damned if
we don’t. One thing is for certain, there’s only one winner…and it
isn’t us, you, me, and the rest of us working folk.
Nope. It
ain’t us.
It
doesn’t take a rocket scientist to determine who that winner is –
it’s the mega bucks corporations. The corporations that rule the
world. There was a time; however, when corporations knew their place.
They didn’t like that very much; hence, that is why we find ourselves
in this predicament.
It’s
not as if we didn’t have fair warnings. From as far back as the
beginning of our nationhood there have been forebodings. Thomas
Jefferson, Samuel Adams, Thomas Paine, Ben Franklin, Abraham Lincoln,
Teddy Roosevelt, even as late as Dwight D. Eisenhower – they all
forewarned of the tidings they feared…
President
Grover Cleveland in his address
to Congress on
December
3, 1888
,
said, “As we view the
achievements of aggregated capital, we discover the existence of trusts,
combinations, and monopolies, while the citizen is struggling far in the
rear or is trampled to death beneath an iron heel. Corporations, which
should be the carefully restrained creatures of the law and the servants
of the people, are fast becoming the people's masters.”
Why,
then do we find ourselves in such a pickle? Perhaps, just maybe if we
all know the truth of it, if we all take it to heart we will be able to
undo this travesty; we will be able to join together in an unprecedented
conjoining of humanity and turn our destiny around. Here’s the story,
the long and the short of it. Listen well; read it until your eyes burn
because our lives may depend upon it.
Once
upon a time in
America
, after we won our independence from the disreputable dominion of
monarchial
England
, our forefathers set about to write our Constitution. Foremost in the
minds of our framers was the protection for its citizens and the
deep-rooted concern to prevent the
United States
from becoming that which they fought so hard to free themselves.
When it
came to corporations, our founding fathers had learned their lessons
well. It is why our fledgling country was adamant to protect its people
from the plutocracy and evil authoritarian rule aspired by corporations.
Before you wince, consider just a bit of our history prior to our
Independence
.
Before
our independence, the
America
’s were governed by
Britain
. Two companies, the East India Tea Company and the Hudson Bay Company
ramrodded their will upon the businessman and in actuality were the true
rulers of the early colonists. As for
Great Britain
, it was distracted in numerous battles and wars with countries in
Europe
. Not until its victory in 1763 with
France
in the Seven Years’ War, or the French and Indian War, did
Britain
give the
Americas
’ the full weight of its attention.
The
colonists, however, were unwilling and unresponsive to this control. Nor
were they willing to bear the brunt of
Britain
’s war expenses. According to Howard Zinn’s, A
People’s History of the United States, “The war had brought
glory for the generals, death to the privates, wealth for the merchants,
unemployment to the poor.”
The
atmosphere was ripe for a battle. Grievances ran high. The wealth
confined to the few; the hunger, beggars, and poor were many;
Britain
wanted to raise taxes and the colonists were fighting angry. It was in
this temperament that
Britain
gave the East India Tea Company an edge that would be a defining moment
in history.
In 1773,
The East India Tea Company over-stocked with tea and struggling to fend
off bankruptcy, used their considerable connections and succeeded in
having
Britain
pass the Tea Act. This Act permitted their export of tea without the
encumbrance of paying taxes. An advantage clearly over that of companies
in the colonies, who prior to this occurrence, had acted as the East
India Tea Company middlemen. Now the East India Tea Company had the
benefit of offering the cheapest price and thereby monopolizing the tea
business.
Furthermore,
Britain
ruled all tea had to be purchased through the East India Tea Company.
The law enraged the colonists and put a stranglehold on the businessmen.
This single event was the culmination of the colonies growing distaste
for British rule and corporate shenanigans. On the fateful evening of
December 16, 1773
, Samuel Adams led three contingencies of fifty men each, to board the
ships carrying the East India Tea Company’s shipment. Disguised as
Mohawk Indians they ceremoniously tossed the contents of 342 chests of
tea into the
Boston
harbor.
However,
the East India Tea Company was not the lone corporate abuser.
Corporations conspired with the permission of British lawmakers and many
obscenities befell the colonists. Indentured servants were one such
abominable iniquity. As many as two-thirds of the colonists were
indentured slaves. These workers owed their souls to the company store
for seven long years for the promise of 100 acres at the termination of
their servant-hood.
It is the accumulation of disgust for the corporate
mentality that prompted Thomas Jefferson to proclaim, “I hope we shall
take warning from the example of England and crush in its birth the
aristocracy of our moneyed corporations which dare already to challenge
our Government to trial, and bid defiance to the laws of our country
"
Therefore,
when our founding fathers deliberated on the text and content of our
Constitution the despicable maneuverings of the East India Tea Company
and other British corporations favored high in their collective
memories. This new country was going to assure corporations would know
their place.
In the
finality, the decision was made to allow each state to grant their own
charters for corporations. In the beginning and for many years, of the
United States of America
corporations could exist only if they were granted a charter by the
state in which they would conduct business.
The
Charter was a very precise and demonstrative agreement and the statutes
within were strictly adhered. Charters were issued with the combined
approval of the citizenry and the legislators. They were given for a
limited number of years and only one at a time. Rules were clearly
defined and any deviation would result in the revocation of the charter;
likewise, if their operating conditions were unacceptable, this too
would result in the loss of their charter. If the corporation was
dissolved its assets were divided among its shareholders.
Additionally,
corporations were held liable for any harms or injuries and were
terminated if they caused public harm. Incorporated businesses were not
permitted to land holdings or make any political contributions or
attempt to influence legislation. They could not purchase or own stock
in other corporations. They were strictly and explicitly charted for the
purpose of serving the public interest.
All
shareholders, large or small, had equal voting rights and the
shareholders had the right to remove directors at will. Conversely, in
Europe
charters protected the corporation and not the citizenry.
Today,
dear reader, we have mammoth, gargantuan, giant, mega corporations that
rule our country. They rule our legislature. They rule our government.
They rule the workers. They are ruthless behemoths conspicuously without
conscience. They are led by their greed and their allegiance is to no
one; their drive for profit has no national loyalty.
How
else could one explain the avalanche of wealth built on the sweat and
tears and broken backs of its workforce? After years of promising job
security and pay commensurate with their work; healthcare for their
families; decent working hours, equal pay for equal work to its American
workers and its Canadian workers, they are leaving them high and dry in
the midst of their departure to lands and new workers far from our
shores. They’re leaving for only one reason: money. The gold that
lines their despicable pockets.
They
care not that in their departure they leave our lands stripped, our
forests barren, our water undrinkable, our earth diseased, our resources
diminished. They care not that they have polluted our air, destroyed our
farmlands, infected our cattle, poisoned our children.
Their
malfeasance is legendary. They’re a heartless and bloodless entity.
Their
elitist thirst for more and more wealth is insatiable and in their
clamor to hoard more of the world’s wealth, they rape and plunder and
leave destitution of monumental proportions in their wake. As they
depart
America
for a workforce of starving, beleaguered peoples of the world their
vision and determination is to own the world – to secure the wealth
for a very few.
They
care not that they’re building vehicles that are recalled because
motors are falling out or tires shredding. They care not that their
drugs have side effects more deadly, more toxic than the disease
they’re supposed to cure. They care not that their garments are
threadbare and fall apart. They care not that everything they build
self-destructs after a few uses. They’re only devotion is to fulfill
their love for the almighty Yen, the almighty Deutsche Mark, the
Almighty Euro; the almighty Franc; the almighty Rupee; the almighty
Dinar – the almighty dollar.
They
care not that they will destroy the will and the heart of every worker
in every land in which they bring their belligerence, their haughty
self-important ravenous avarice.
In
the end, it is not just jobs they are outsourcing; they are outsourcing
our corporate mentality and their complete and utter disdain and
disregard for humankind. It is time to rope them in, turn back time and
allow the citizenry once again to divvy out the corporate charters,
oversee, monitor, discipline, and rule the corporate entity.
For, if we do not dear citizens, “I
see in the near future a crisis approaching that unnerves me and causes
me to tremble for the safety of my country. As a result of the war,
corporations have been enthroned and an era of corruption in high places
will follow, and the money power of the country will endeavor to prolong
its reign by working upon the prejudices of the people until all wealth
is aggregated in a few hands and the Republic is destroyed.” —
Abraham Lincoln 1865
©
Norma Sherry 2003
Norma Sherry is co-founder of
Together Forever Changing an organization devoted to educating,
stimulating, and invigorating personal responsibility particularly with
regards to our diminishing civil liberties. She is also an award-winning
writer/producer. Norma welcomes your comments: norma@togetherforeverchanging.org