"The price of apathy towards public affairs is to be ruled by evil men."Plato, ancient Greek philosopher
...“The 20th century has been characterized by three developments of great political importance: The growth of democracy, the growth of corporate power, and the growth of corporate propaganda as a means of protecting corporate power against democracy.”Alex Carey, Australian social scientist
“The most effective way to restrict democracy is to transfer decision-making from the public arena to unaccountable institutions: kings and princes, priestly castes, military juntas, party dictatorships, or modern corporations.” Noam Chomsky, M.I.T. Emeritus Professor of Linguistics
On Tuesday, January 19 (2010), the Obama administration got a kick in the pants from the Massachusetts voters when they filled former Senator Ted Kennedy's seat by electing a conservative Republican candidate. The essence of their message was: stop dithering and start governing; stop trying to satisfy the bankers and please the editors of Rupert Murdoch's Wall Street Journal, and start caring for the ordinary people.
Two days later, President Barack Obama seemed to have understood the people's message when he announced a “Volcker rule” that will forbid large banks from owning hedge funds that make money by placing large bets against their own clients, using information that these same clients gave them. It was time. Such a policy should have been announced months ago, if not years ago.
On the same day, however, a nonelected body, the U.S. Supreme Court, threw a different challenge to the Obama administration. Indeed, on Thursday January 21 (2010), a Republican-appointed majority on the U.S. Supreme Court took it upon itself to profoundly change the U.S. Constitution and American democracy. Indeed, in what can be labeled a most reactionary decision, the Roberts U.S. Supreme Court, ruled that legal entities, such as corporations and labor unions, have the same purely personal rights to free speech as living individuals. Indeed, the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution says:
“Congress shall make no law ... abridging the freedom of speech"
The only problem with such a wide interpretation of the U.S. Bills of Rights The first ten amendments to the United States Constitution are known as the Bill of Rights) is that this runs contrary its letter and its spirit, since it clearly states later on that "the enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people, and reserves all powers not granted to the federal government to the citizenry or States.” The words “people” and “citizenry” clearly refer here to living human beings, not to legal or artificial entities such as business corporations, labor unions, financial organizations or political lobbies.
Such entities, for example, cannot vote in an election. Indeed, laws governing voting rights in the United States clearly establish that only “Adult citizens of the United States who are residents of one of the 50 states have the right to participate fully in the political system of the United States”. No mention is made of corporations or other legal entities.
However, with its January 19 (2010) decision, the majority on the Roberts U.S. Supreme Court is saying in effect that even if artificial entities cannot vote in an election, they can spend as much money as they like to influence the outcome of an election. Money is speech for them, and the more a legal entity has of it, the more it has a right to become powerful politically and control the political agenda.
In fact, what Chief Justice Roberts and his conservative Supreme Court majority have done is to overcome a century-old democratic tradition in the United States in granting a constitutional right to business corporations and to banks, (because they are really the ones with a lot of money), to use their enormous resources to not only participate in debates about public issues, but also, and above all, to de facto dictate the election of candidates of their choice to public office.
That's plutocracy, not democracy!
Plutocracy is defined as a political system characterized by “the rule by the wealthy, or power provided by wealth.”
Democracy, on the other hand, is defined as a political system where political power belongs to the people. This means “a political government either carried out directly by the people (direct democracy) or by means of elected representatives of the people (representative democracy). The terms "the power to the people" are derived from the words "people" and "power" in Greek.
This fundamental idea of democracy was well summarized by President Abraham Lincoln, in his 1863 Gettysburg Address, when he said that it is “a government of the people, by the people and for the people.” This is a definition that is based on the basic democratic principle of equality among human beings.
But now, the Roberts Court's decision must have made President Lincoln turn in his grave, because that decision, in effect, transfers political power from the living “people” to artificial corporate entities, with tons of money to spend.
If Congress does not act quickly to reverse this decision, legal entities will be able to spend freely in the media to support or oppose political candidates for president and Congress, and this, as far as the last moment of a political campaign. This is quite something!
By a stroke of the pen, the Roberts Court has thus abolished the laws governing American electoral financing and removed limits to how much special money interests can spend to have the elected officials they want. The government they want will largely be “a government of the corporations, by the corporations, for the corporations.” Truly amazing!
To reflect the new political philosophy of the five-member majority of the Roberts Court, the Preambule of the U.S. Constitution that says:
“We the People of the United States, in order to form a more perfect Union...” should, maybe, more appropriately be changed for “We, the business corporations of America...”
It is that much more ironic that the word “corporation” appears nowhere in the U.S. Constitution or in the Bill of Rights.
It is scarcely conceivable that the drafters of the Constitution had anything resembling corporate entities in mind when they drafted the Bill of Rights. But the Roberts Court majority does not seem to agree with Washington, Jefferson, Franklin, Madison, Mason...etc. Because of their decision, the five conservative members of the U. S. Supreme Court of today have become the new Fathers of the U. S. Constitution.
For nearly a century, it has been assumed that the U.S. Bill of Rights protected persons, not corporations. Even if sometimes the courts have extended the rights of the14th Amendment banning the deprivation of property without due process or equal protection of the law to the property of corporations, it was never thought that the purely personal rights of the first Amendment of the Bill of Rights applied to corporate entities as well as to human beings.
This is understandable. Business corporations are created through legislation that gives them potentially perpetual life and limited liability to enhance their efficiency as economic entities. While such characteristics can be beneficial in the economic sphere, they represent special dangers in the political sphere. That is the rationale for not extending constitutional rights to purely legal entities.
But now, the five-member majority of the Roberts Court have said that such legalized artificial entities have the same constitutionally protected rights to engage in political activities as living individuals.
This is clearly revolutionary or, more precisely, counter-revolutionary.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Word of the Day
Word of the Day
provided by The Free Dictionary
Quote of the Day
Quote of the Day
provided by The Free Dictionary
Article of the Day
Article of the Day
provided by The Free Dictionary
This Day in History
This Day in History
provided by The Free Dictionary
Today's Birthday
Today's Birthday
provided by The Free Dictionary
In the News
In the News
provided by The Free Dictionary
Learn more about green stocks at GreenChipStocks.com
Archives
-
▼
2010
(146)
-
►
November 2010
(12)
- The Axis of Greed
- Radical Difference Between Monetization 1 and QE2
- Fed’s “QE 2″ Actions Will Likely Go Down As Financ...
- Why the Federal Reserve's Quantitative Easing Stra...
- Hunger in America
- The Mythical United States of America
- The Fed and the Debased “Imperial Dollar”
- Death Of Bond Bull
- Dismantling the Iraqi State, Destroying an Entire ...
- The 21st Century World: Time for a New Theory of M...
- Time for a New Theory of Money
- The scary actual U.S. government debt
-
►
June 2010
(9)
- Controlled-Burn Inflation
- The Third Depression
- Risks to Canada's Financial Stability in an Uncert...
- Following the Worst Crisis Since the Great Depress...
- U. S. Financial Reform
- Twenty-Two Reasons Why American Working People Hat...
- The Collapsing Western Way of Life
- Some Big Lies of Science
- The Psychopathic Criminal Enterprise Called Americ...
- ► April 2010 (4)
-
►
March 2010
(23)
- China to Exceed Predictions by 50 Percent
- Inbred Fear
- Greenspan Signals warnings for Bubble-maniacs
- Krugman’s Chinese renminbi fallacy
- The pen is censored and its might extinguished
- Mass Unemployment and the Current Economic Crisis
- Pressure Increasing on China to Revalue Yuan
- "The Second Coming"
- Beyond Orwell: The Electronic Police State, 2010
- ► February 2010 (22)
-
▼
January 2010
(68)
- Attack Of The Socialist-Luddites
- Victoria British Columbia
- The Battle of the Titans
- Quotes from the Dow theory founding fathers on non...
- The China Controversy and the Stock Market
- CUBA: Zeolite, Mineral of a Thousand Uses
- The Ultimate Bubble and the Mother of All Carry Tr...
- Legalize Competing Currencies
- “Sell and Fold” the New “Buy and Hold”
- The Space Between ... Job Losses and Gains
- STUBBORN FACTS
- Incredible 'Real' Reason for Carbon Trading?
- Ben Bernanke: Understanding the Chairman
- If Bernanke Told the Truth…
- The Truth Behind GDP
- Top 10 Pieces of the Peak Oil Puzzle during the 20...
- Durable Goods "Mistake" Or FRAUD?
- Gold – Lows Right Around the Corner
- Is this it? Is this the beginning of the end?
- Inflation distorts the economy
- The thrill is gone
- The Case for Commodities in 2010 (And Beyond)
- Stay the course as gold is the only real money
- The United States of Corporate America: From Democ...
- Squirming of the Fed
- Investing For The Long Haul
- Are Low Interest Rates Bad?
- The most overrated economic indicators
- Stop annoying IMAP error message in Outlook
- “China’s lending curb sparks a rush for safety.”
- Global Debt Bomb
- Is there such a thing as too much of a good thing
- Buy Gold in late summer and Oil in late Winter
- Is Copper Signaling Lower Gold Prices Ahead?
- How Goldman Sachs Made Tens Of Billions Of Dollars...
- Why the Fed Likes Independence
- A trade scam worth trillions
- Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics
- Inflation 101
- The greatest show on earth
- Jobs at what cost?
- This is looking awfully like Steinbeck’s Grapes of...
- Deconstructing Social Darwinism, Part II
- Never Mind the Facts, Let’s Have a War...
- Deconstructing Social Darwinism - Part I
- US Fed Rigs Stock Market
- And The fight goes on!
- Market Interest Rates Need to Tell the Truth, or W...
- Free Market Thinking
- "Let the Plunder Begin": The Return of Robert Rubi...
- Deflation: Making Sure "It" Doesn't Happen Here (2...
- U.S. spending its way to stagflation
- U.S. regulators failed investors, taxpayers
- Labor Market ‘Not Out of the Woods’
- Gold Jumps, Dollar Falls on 23rd Month of US Job L...
- Greeks Will Get No Help From EU... Women Become Ma...
- It's Not Our Fault
- Rates cannot stay where they are
- Gold is Recharging
- Canada a hot property for foreign investors
- U.S. dollar rising, but can't match the loonie
- Economy USA 2010: From the Scandalous Past to the ...
- Lost decade looms for United States
- Is The Government Misrepresenting Unemployment By ...
- A Study Of Denial ▬The Fed Bubble
- Investment Profit Vehicles for the Intensifying Fi...
- Junior Base Metals Stocks
- The New Year comes with Prospects for Economic Rec...
-
►
November 2010
(12)
-
►
2009
(386)
- ► December 2009 (22)
- ► November 2009 (48)
- ► October 2009 (73)
- ► September 2009 (35)
- ► August 2009 (31)
Categories
- 2002 Speeches (1)
- 2009 (2)
- Adam Hamilton (1)
- Adrian Ash (1)
- AIFA (1)
- Alan Nasser is professor emeritus of Political Economy at The Evergreen State College in Olympia (1)
- Albert Einstein (1)
- Ampontan on Sunday (1)
- Andrew Ross Sorkin (1)
- Appenzell Daily Bell (2)
- Armageddon (1)
- Augustin de Romanet is CEO of the Caisse des Dépôts et Consignations. (1)
- author of Gods of Money (1)
- Bangkok Post (1)
- Bill Bonner (29)
- Bill Bonner London (2)
- Bill Walker (1)
- Bob Hoye Institutional Advisors (1)
- Brian Milner and Tavia Grant Globe and Mail Update (1)
- By (1)
- By Bill Bonner (1)
- by Eric Michael Johnson (1)
- By Frank Holmes CEO and Chief Investment OfficerU.S. Global Investors (1)
- by Kieran Manjarrez (1)
- by Matthias Chang (1)
- By Michael Parenti (1)
- By Patrick J. Buchanan (1)
- by Roy W. Spencer (1)
- by Stephen Lendman (1)
- by: Ellen Hodgson Brown J.D. (1)
- By: Gary_Dorsch (1)
- CFA (1)
- Christopher Hitchens (1)
- Christopher Swann (1)
- CIGA Richard B. (2)
- Clif Droke (3)
- CPA (1)
- Craig Roberts (1)
- Daily Bell Newswire (1)
- Daily Bell Newswire staff (1)
- Daily Bells by Staff Report (1)
- Dan Denning (1)
- Dana Gabriel (1)
- Daniel Fisher Forbes Magazine (1)
- Daniel Gross (1)
- Daniel M. Harrison (1)
- Daniel R. Amerman (1)
- Darryl Robert Schoon (1)
- dave.aspoatgmail.com (1)
- David DeGraw (1)
- David Edwards (1)
- David Pett (2)
- DAVID PITT ASSOCIATED PRESS (1)
- David Roman contributed to this article. (1)
- David Swanson (1)
- December 1 (1)
- DeepCaster LLC (1)
- DeepCaster_LLC (1)
- Denis Halliday-Public Lecture (1)
- Dian L. Chu (1)
- Diane Francis (1)
- Dirk Adriaensens (1)
- Disclosure: (Long SPY) (1)
- Doug Ward (1)
- Dr David Evans and Joanne Nova (1)
- Dr. Denis G. Rancourt (1)
- Dr. Jeff Lewis (1)
- Dr. Paul Craig Roberts (1)
- Dr. Richard Ebeling (1)
- Dr. Ron Paul (2)
- Economic insight and analysis from The Wall Street Journal. (1)
- Economist.com/blogs/buttonwood (1)
- Ed Steer (1)
- Editor's Picks Theodore "Ty" Andros (1)
- Ellen Brown (2)
- England (1)
- Eric Sprott and David Franklin Financial Post (1)
- Euro Pacific Capital. (2)
- F. William Engdahl (1)
- Financial Post (5)
- Finian Cunningham (1)
- FT (1)
- Gary Dorsch (1)
- Global Money Trends (1)
- Global Research (1)
- Global Research Article (1)
- Greg Hunter (1)
- Hera Research (2)
- History of the United States (1)
- Ian McGugan (1)
- Imagine paying as little as $1.25 a gallon to run your car. (1)
- IMFSurvey Magazine (1)
- Inc (1)
- India (1)
- Isabel Sawhill and Ron Haskins (1)
- James Anderson (1)
- James Quinn (2)
- James Turk (2)
- Jason Simpkins (1)
- JD (1)
- Jean-Pierre Lehmann (1)
- Jim Willie (1)
- Joachim Fels Manoj Pradhan | London (1)
- John Browne - Senior Market Strategist (2)
- John Greenwood (1)
- John Kozy (3)
- John Lounsbury (1)
- John Winston (1)
- Jon D. Markman (1)
- Joseph Quinlan (1)
- Julian_DW_Phillips (1)
- Julie Tate (1)
- Kozy (1)
- Lawrence Tout (1)
- Len Hart (1)
- Liz Ann Sonders (1)
- Liz Capo McCormick and Daniel Kruger (Bloomberg) (1)
- LLC (2)
- LLC Ron Hera (1)
- LLC. (1)
- MALCOLM RITTER (1)
- Mark Anderson and Dee Phat (1)
- Mark J. Lundeen (1)
- Mark Milke (1)
- Market Ticker - Karl Denninger (1)
- Market Ticker - Karl Denninger · (1)
- Martin D Weiss (1)
- Martin Duvander - Seeking Alpha (1)
- Martin Hutchinson (1)
- Maurice R. Greenberg (1)
- Megan Mcardle (1)
- Michel Chossudovsky (1)
- Mike "Mish" Shedlock (1)
- Mike "Mish" Shedlock global economic analysis (1)
- Mike Whitney (2)
- Mohamed A. El-Erian Pimco’s chief executive officer (1)
- Montreal (1)
- Mumbai (1)
- Myra P. Saefong (1)
- Nouriel Roubini (2)
- Nouriel Roubini Professor at New York University’ (1)
- November 29 (1)
- NYT (1)
- Oliver Weeks | London (1)
- Olivier Garret (1)
- Pamela Heaven (1)
- Patrick Holden- Michael Wale Toby Glanville (1)
- Patrick J. Buchanan (1)
- Patrick Martin (1)
- Paul Craig Roberts (1)
- Paul Krugman (1)
- Paul Vieira National post (1)
- Peggy Noonan (1)
- Peking University and ANU (1)
- Peter Coy (1)
- Peter Schiff talking to Vanessa Drucker. (1)
- Ph. D (1)
- Phil Levy Economics | Finance (1)
- Phil Levy Economics | Finance (2)
- Prof Rodrigue Tremblay (1)
- Prof. Michael Hudson (1)
- Prof. Michel Chossudovsky (1)
- Prof. Rodrigue Tremblay (1)
- Published on zero hedge (http://www.zerohedge.com (1)
- Puru Saxena (1)
- Qing Wang | Hong Kong (1)
- REBECCA CHRISTIAN (1)
- retired professor of philosophy and logic (1)
- ReverseEngineer (1)
- RGE Monitor (1)
- Ricardo Lago (1)
- Rich Miller Bloomberg (1)
- Richard Benson (1)
- Richard Berner David Greenlaw New York (1)
- Richard C. Cook (1)
- Rick Bookstaber (1)
- Rick Rozoff (2)
- Robert Fisk (1)
- Robert J. Samuelson (1)
- Robert Parry (1)
- Rodrigue Tremblay (1)
- Ron Garan NASA Astronaut (1)
- Ron Hera - the founder of Hera Research (1)
- Scott Lanman and Craig Torres (1)
- Scott Wright (1)
- SFGroup (1)
- Shah Gilani (1)
- Shaily (1)
- Shamus Cooke (2)
- Shanghai Securities News (1)
- Sharon Lam Korea (1)
- Sid Riggs (1)
- Spyros Andreopoulos (1)
- Stephan R. Ernharth (1)
- Steve Andrews (1)
- Susan Lund and Charles Roxburgh (1)
- t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed (1)
- Tavia Grant and Boyd Erman (1)
- Texas Straight Talk (1)
- the Daily Bell (1)
- The Daily Bell Newswire (2)
- The Daily Reckoning (2)
- The Futurist (1)
- The Globe and Mail (1)
- The Hera Research Monthly newsletter (1)
- Theory (1)
- This story was originally published by Latin American newspapers (1)
- THOMAS I. PALLEY (1)
- Tom Burghardt (1)
- Tom Burghardt contributor to Global Research (1)
- Tom Eley (1)
- Tyler Cowen is a professor of economics at George Mason University. (1)
- Washington's Blog (1)
- Washingtonpost.Newsweek (1)
- Washingtonpost.Newsweek Interactive (2)
- Water Exports and the Water War Crimes (1)
- William H. Gross - Founder of PIMCO (1)
- Yiping Huang (1)
- Zeal (1)
- —Brien Lundin (1)






0 comments:
Post a Comment