February 10, 2010
By Curt Day
Corporations not only control our government, they control us. They do so by making us dependent on them for almost everything we need. As a result, the general public has neither the ability nor the willingness to break away and become free from its influence.
::::::::
It would be difficult to say if our
country has become something else but we must face the possibility that
our government has experienced a coup. Our Democratic Republic either
has or soon will become a Corporate Republic. Not only have
corporations hijacked our government, they have used the courts to gain
recognition as persons in every way except for the right to vote.
Should we be surprised if that soon occurs?
We have already discussed how corporations have effectively silenced any meaningful opposition in the government(see Corporate Republic).
We will now focus on how corporations have done the same to the public.
Just as with elected government officials, corporations quiets dissent
by creating dependence. This dependence stifles dissent through fear of
being perceived as being ungrateful and the reluctance people have to
biting the hand that feeds them. We are simply afraid of losing that
which we treasure. The treasure that the corporate hand feeds us
consists of income, goods, services, and influence.
Despite statistics showing how much small businesses provides for us,
the wealth of our country is measured by the financial health of the
corporate sector. That is why when the stock prices collapsed and some
of the major banks failed, the economy of the country took a sharp
nosedive and everyone, including small businesses, were affected.
College students whom I have listened to tend to defend corporations
because they see their college costs being redeemed by employment with
a corporation. But loans are not the only corporate inroad to colleges.
Some corporations pay colleges so that they can act provide services
and goods to the students. Food services and bookstores are often owned
by corporations. Soft drink companies pay universities to exclude all
competitors from a college while they get to corner the market at a
particular university. And the televising of major sporting events also
brings necessary revenue to many universities. We should also note that
universities are also dependent on corporations for research funds.
One result of the corporate subsidies and provision for colleges is a
change in college education. Chris Hedges notes this in his book Empire Of Illusion.
Education today is becoming nothing more than a glorified tech school
education where kids are trained in how to take orders in order to
succeed in the system. They are no longer taught how to step back,
understand, and then be able to criticize the system.
Education is not the only commodity provided by corporations. Most of
what the average consumer buys is either directly or indirectly
provided by some corporation. This applies to the big ticket items we
buy to the small priced items. One has to go out of one's way to buy
anything that does not come from a corporation. This is true even when
one goes out to eat. Though many of the places we frequent are
technically small businesses, many of them operate franchises for
corporations.
But perhaps the biggest hold that corporations have on us is in terms
of influence. Corporations use the influence from different media to
herd Americans toward a consensus. This control is exerted both in
informational programs and entertainment. Past and present works show
how corporations exert this type of control. Perhaps the classic work
showing how corporations guide American opinion is the book Manufacturing Consent by
Edward Herman and Noam Chomsky. Dependence on corporations by the news
media started with the introduction of advertising in newspapers. This
caused a significant increase in operating costs of newspapers as
advertising became the prime source of income resulting in lower
newspaper prices for the consumer. Newspapers that relied on the
customers to pay most of the costs could no longer compete in terms of
prices. Newspapers then became reluctant to report stories that put
their advertisers in a bad light or made their readers less inclined to
buy products from the advertisers.
This introduction of outside control over the media has established a
narrow set of parameters for acceptable new stories. Most, if not all,
stories to be published must serve our "national interests" or those of
our allies. The problem is that these interests are all too often
merely business interests. So stories that criticized national policies
that benefited businesses were filtered out. Critical stories, and
their writers, that get through the filters often have to pay a high
public relations price. The result, and this is reflected by our
political parties as well, is that the American public is given a
limited information representing a narrow range of views. Thus the
American public is guided by those who provide the news. As I talk to
colleagues who came from or lived in other countries, they tell me that
the number of stories and perspectives that do not reach the American
public is significant.
But perhaps the biggest exercise of control over Americans can be seen
in corporate ownership of entertainment. Entertainment, in a country
where leisure time reigns supreme, could be the nose ring that, with
just the slightest tug, creates the most willing following. It is
through entertainment that we have seen the Triumph Of The Spectacle, the subtitle of Hedges' Empire Of Illusion.
Hedges points out that the more we rely on "spectacle," the less we are
inclined to do the hard work of learning "nuance" and "complexity" that
comes from relying on the printed word. As we become attached to
spectacle we become even more dependent on corporations as, it is not
hard to see that, those with the largest resources, corporations, are
the most probable producers of the biggest spectacle. The spectacle we
embrace removes us from the real world in which we live. This year's
Super Bowl is just an example of the corporate ties to spectacle and
how we, like bugs to a light, are drawn to it.
Corporations have used the media to make us, the common people, both
unwilling and unable to garner the resources and do the necessary work
that would allow us to address our country's real problems that have
put so many at risk. As a result, we continue our free fall from where
we have been. According to Hedges, our country has been in this free
fall since the Presidency of LBJ when we transitioned from being a
nation of producers to being a nation of consumers.
So as we fall, we seem to only blame others, which is one of the
reasons why we continue to fall. And we should note that our fall is
being directed by corporations. For the more we fall, the more
dependent we become on others. The more dependent we become, the more
we are under the control of others. The more we are under the control
of others, the closer our democracy comes to death. Will we continue
our current course or will we stem the tide of corporate control
regardless of the immediate costs? The answer to that question will
determine whether we will either have or keep our corporate republic.
Authors Bio:Curt Day is a religious flaming fundamentalist and a political extreme moderate. Curt's blogs are at http://flamingfundamentalist.blogspot.com/ and http://violenceorsurvival.blogspot.com/