Real men, real human beings, with feelings and families, fought and died at Gettysburg to preserve the Union, to ensure, as their president, Abraham Lincoln, would say later, that “government of the people, by the people, for the people, shall not perish from the earth.”
Perversely, afterwards, non-humans commandeered the constitutional amendment intended to protect the rights of former slaves. Corporations wrested from the U.S. Supreme Court a decision based on the 14th Amendment asserting that corporations are people with rights to be upheld by the government – but with no counterbalancing human responsibilities to the republic. No duty to fight or die in war, for example. Earlier this year, the Supreme Court expanded those rights – ruling that corporations have a First Amendment free speech right to surreptitiously spend unlimited money on political campaigns.
Today, Lincoln would have to say America’s got a government of the people by the corporations, for the corporations.
The proposed trade agreement with South Korea illustrates corporate control of government for profit. It’s the same with efforts to revive the moribund trade schemes former President George W. Bush also negotiated with Panama and Colombia, the world’s most dangerous country by far for trade unionists, with 2,700 assassinated with impunity in the past two decades, 38 slain so far this year.
Nobody likes these trade deals – except corporations. They’re all modeled on the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) and the Central American Free Trade Agreement (CAFTA), both of which killed American jobs while giving corporations new authority to sue governments (read: taxpayers) for regulations – like environmental standards – that corporations contend interfere with their right to make money. . . .
The Economic Policy Institute estimates that the South Korea so-called Free Trade Agreement (FTA) would cost America 159,000 jobs and enlarge its trade deficit by $16.7 billion in its first seven years.
Americans, now suffering though corporate-caused 9.6 percent unemployment, know a deal when they see one – and the South Korea FTA is not one. In a September poll by NBC News and the Wall Street Journal, 53 percent of Americans said so-called free trade agreements have injured the country. Only 17 percent said those trade schemes benefited the United States. Disgust with these deals spans party lines, including Tea Partiers, 61 percent of whom said they’re bad for America.
Many politicians, particularly Democrats, abhor the schemes as well. In July, just after President Obama announced that he would try to get the South Korea pact passed, 110 House Democrats described their disdain for the deal:
“We oppose specific provisions of the agreement in the financial services, investment, and labor chapters, because they benefit multi-national corporations at the expense of small businesses and workers.”
In addition, during this fall’s midterm election campaign, 205 candidates, Republican and Democrat, ran on platforms condemning job off-shoring and unfair trade, and house Democrats who ran on fair trade were three times as likely to survive the GOP “shellacking” as Democrats who supported so-called free trade schemes.
Significantly, the South Korean public and some South Korean politicians also oppose the trade proposal. In the week leading up to the G-20 meetings in Seoul, trade unionists, farmers, peasants and students filled the streets in marches and candle light vigils to express outrage with the proposed agreement, including its provisions giving U.S. corporations the right to challenge South Korean laws in private tribunals.
In October, 35 South Korean lawmakers joined 20 U.S. Representatives in writing President Obama and Korean President Lee Myunk-bak to protest the proposal.
Despite all that opposition, when Obama and Lee emerged from talks without an agreement, the American press, pundits and “analysts on both sides of the aisle,” described the situation as a major diplomacy failure, “a serious setback for the president.”
They were wrong. It wasn’t a setback for Obama. It was the president refusing to sign a bad deal for American workers.
It was, however, a humiliation for the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which just spent at least $50 million from secret corporate donors to elect Republicans who will do its bidding. The South Korea deal is a priority for the Chamber. Here’s what Chamber senior vice president for international affairs Myron Brilliant told the New York Times after the South Korean negotiations broke down and Obama pledged to attempt to complete the deal over the following six weeks:
“This will be an early test for this president with the new Congress, particularly the House leadership.”
The “Brilliant” test is whether the president of the United States will comply with Chamber demands to complete trade deals that kill jobs and that Americans despise.
When Obama went to Seoul, Chamber President Thomas J. Donohue was there to, as he put it, help win the trade deal. He also was among 120 executives given exclusive access to international leaders including German Chancellor Angela Merkel and Russian President Dmitri A. Medvedev in a conference before the G-20 meeting.
The international organizers didn’t invite to the trade talks or the conference the students, farmers, environmental groups, organized labor and untold millions of individuals who oppose the so-called free trade deals. The human beings who will be hurt most by the trade deals didn’t get a seat at the table. The corporate-people who stand to gain everything did.
Brilliant’s comments express the corporate sense of entitlement. They spent tens of millions to get what they wanted from politicians to increase profits. Now they expect it to be delivered. It’s their recompense, their corporate reward.
If fatter profits mean fewer American jobs and wider trade deficits, that’s simply not a problem for corporations. That’s among the perks corporations got when the Supreme Court awarded them the privileges of personhood in America but none of the pesky personal and patriotic responsibilities of actual people in American society.



13 Comments

I’m not understanding a major premise of your post, this whole notion of “personal duties” owed by all human citizens. As far as I know, my only legal “duties” are to pay taxes and to follow the law. I certainly don’t have a “duty to fight or die in war.”
Could you expand on what you are referring to?
You have heard of the draft? Doesn’t apply to women, but I remember very well when life for the men I knew rose and fell on how high or low their draft lottery number was or whether they could get a deferment. Just ask Dick Cheney.
http://usgovinfo.about.com/od/defenseandsecurity/a/draftreg.htm
What can I say, I’m only 28, the draft has been suspended by entire life.
Although I’d argue that the draft’s male-only application still makes it a poor example of a universal human duty. If a hundred million women are exempt from a duty, is it really that big of a deal that corporations are as well?
A societal duty needn’t be mandated by law. It’s a moral obligation that a human being feels in order to participate in the benefits of society. My grandmother wasn’t drafted. She volunteered to serve in World War I. Same with all soldiers, male and female now.
I see.
I guess when I read:
“That’s among the perks corporations got when the Supreme Court awarded them the privileges of personhood in America but none of the pesky personal and patriotic responsibilities of actual people in American society.”
I was thinking legal duties. It seems weird to start off talking about legally protected rights, and then compare them with voluntary duties and values held by some people.
But I see your point.
Excellent, Leo. Recommended.
Corporatism is rewarding capital and corporations and destroying citizens, democracy and hope. It values greed and the acquisition of wealth and power, no matter the cost, at the expense of the fabric of society.
The people’s government has been replaced by the Corporate Chamber of Commerce.
I think in America we assume our legal rights are protected. Many of us feel an obligation to give back to society in return for those wonderful rights. And that includes many small businesses that sponsor Little League teams and hand out turkeys at Thanksgiving. That contrasts strongly with the sentiment expressed by Vikram S. Pandit, Citigroup CEO, when he was in Seoul getting special access to heads of state: “I kind of feel like I’m living in parallel universes. I’m here in Korea and I feel this warmth and the need and the sense of trying to have a dialogue with each other, but then when I get back to my real universe it’s cold in that universe.” He and the other banksters took down the economy, demanded a taxpayer bailout, then handed themselves bonuses. and yet he doesn’t understand why he’s getting the cold shoulder from people who are, actually, cold — foreclosed on and homeless.
Speaking of those assasinations, a really wierd thing happened in my investment club. One of the members, right wing in his politics but socially activve in his church, went to Central America to build a school for orphans. When he came back, he told us about his experience. I asked him why there were so many orphans and he said, The government killed the parents on suspicion of being against the government.
Nice people.
Even if the Supreme Court rules that the big corporations are people… they sure as hell are not American.
The big corporations have no national identity. National sovereignty cramps thier style. If anything, they are more like the villains in the James Bond films. Example: Oil Finger (aka Tony Hayward) in operation “Deep Blow”. And the activities of the US Chamber of Commerce seem to mimick SPECTRE rather well.
For those that don’t remember the old Bond films, this short clip of a SPECTRE board meeting paints the picture:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dW9-llaIS-g
…my only legal “duties” are to pay taxes and to follow the law.
Well, that’s more duties than corporations have right there. If you get called for jury duty, “to follow the law” you would go to jury duty.
You pay taxes, but many international corporations shuffle their earnings around so they don’t owe any US taxes… (because an international corporation, with an HQ here, and a left foot in Asia [that made $1Billion profit] and a right foot in Madrid [that made $1Billion profit], etc, can say “We lost money in our HQ office in NY so you owe us a refund, and they just store their cash in their left and right shoes… see GE for an example.)
And, like stack says below,”a societal duty needn’t be mandated by law.” Heck, as far as I can tell, the US Chamber of Commerce and Fox are actively trying to undermine and destabilize the USA much more than bin Laden is… and while that may be an exaggeration, spreading anti-American propaganda and working to kill jobs sure aren’t the acts of patriots…
Corporations actively work against America everyday, from BP to GE, and we should probably let them, but we damn sure shouldn’t treat them as citizens while they are doing it. Heck, we shouldn’t have ever let a foreigner like Murdoch, with no allegiance to the USA, own a US TV network… [and Fox's second biggest owner is Arab…]
But heck, now any Arab or Chinese corporation could just pour a few million into any campaign and basically buy judges and politicians … oh, wait, that has already happened.
oh but, Obama is going to renegotiate NAFTA. He wouldn’t pass another one and lie to us – would he? Dump Obama in 2012.
No doubt this man and his fellow parishioners consider themselves “good” Christians. Sadly, they can’t see the forest for the trees. I know they mean well, but that school isn’t a substitute for the parents who are dead at the hands of the government.
Chin up soldier. :o)
(a) The militia of the United States consists of all able-bodied males at least 17 years of age and, except as provided in section 313 of title 32, under 45 years of age who are, or who have made a declaration of intention to become, citizens of the United States and of female citizens of the United States who are members of the
National Guard.
10 US 311
http://codes.lp.findlaw.com/uscode/10/A/I/13/311
As for trade policy, let’s enact Warren Buffett’s import certificate plan already.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Import_Certificates