Jon Lebkowsky on Mon, 23 Dec 2002 17:52:12 +0100 (CET)


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<nettime> Americans Revolt in Pennsylvania


Americans Revolt in Pennsylvania - New Battle Lines Are Drawn
by Thom Hartmann

The good citizens of Pennsylvania have done it again.

Back in 1776, they hosted at Liberty Hall in Philadelphia a gathering of
people radicalized by the predations of the East India Company. The
world's first multinational corporation then held a virtual stranglehold
on commerce and politics in North America, and brazenly used British
troops as its enforcers. On the first week of December, 1600, when she
created the East India Company, Queen Elizabeth I became the first CEO
monarch, and by 1776 King George II was following in her footsteps with
his sizeable holdings in and open advocacy of corporate rule.

The American colonists were offended by the idea they should be vassals of
a corporation and a kingdom that supported and profited from it. Thomas
Jefferson wrote the Declaration of Independence, which explicitly stated
that humans were born into this world endowed by their Creator with
certain rights, that governments were created by humans to insure only
humans held those rights, and "That whenever any form of government
becomes destructive of these ends, it is the right of the people to alter
or abolish it?"

Stating flatly that "it is their right, it is their duty," to alter their
government and thus claim their unique human rights, 56 men defied the
East India Company and the government whose army supported it by placing
their signatures on the Declaration of Independence, saying, "with a firm
reliance on the protection of divine Providence, we mutually pledge to
each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor."

Thus began America's first experiment with democracy.

The first week of December of that same year, Thomas Paine wrote in a
pamphlet he published a few weeks later that, "Tyranny, like hell, is not
easily conquered? What we obtain too cheap, we esteem too lightly: it is
dearness only that gives every thing its value. Heaven knows how to put a
proper price upon its goods; and it would be strange indeed if so
celestial an article as FREEDOM should not be highly rated."

Exactly 226 years later, another small group in Pennsylvania also met in
early December to sign a document that claimed the same right - their duty
- to alter their government in a way that would restore the democracy the
original Founders were willing to fight and die for. The democratically
elected municipal officials of Porter Township put their signatures to an
ordinance passed unanimously on December 9, 2002. It reads, in part:

"A corporation is a legal fiction created by the express permission of the
people?;

"Interpretation of the U.S. Constitution by the Supreme Court justices to
include corporations in the term 'persons' has long wrought havoc with our
democratic processes by endowing corporations with constitutional
privileges intended solely to protect the citizens of the United States or
natural persons within its borders;

"This judicial bestowal of civil and political rights upon corporations
interferers with the administration of laws within Porter Township and
usurps basic human and constitutional rights exercised by the people of
Porter Township; ?

"Buttressed by these constitutional rights, corporate wealth allows
corporations to enjoy constitutional privileges to an extent beyond the
reach of most citizens;

"Democracy means government by the people. Only citizens of Porter
Township should be able to participate in the democratic process in Porter
Township and enjoy a republican form of government therein;?"

And then, with an audacity and willingness to take on overwhelming
multinational corporate power similar to that displayed by the Founders,
the elders of Porter Township said that "Corporations shall not be
considered to be 'persons' protected by the Constitution of the United
States or the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania within the
Second Class Township of Porter, Clarion County, Pennsylvania."

It became the law of that land five days later.

In 1773, the East India Company had claimed the "right" to participate in
the political processes of England and, with wealth and power greater than
the average citizen, got passed for themselves a huge tax reduction on tea
and an overall tax rebate so large they could undersell and wipe out their
small Colonial competitors. The response of the entrepreneurial colonists
to the Tea Act of 1773 was the Boston Tea Party revolt against that
transnational corporation, setting the stage for the Declaration of
Independence and the beginnings of what Lincoln called "government of the
people, by the people, for the people."

Similarly, in 2000, one of the largest sludge hauling corporations in the
United States sued Porter Township, claiming that as a "person" the
corporation had rights equal to the citizens of the township, and
therefore they couldn't "discriminate" against the corporation under the
due process and equal protection clauses of the 14th Amendment, which was
passed after the Civil War to free the slaves.

Porter Township, supported by a coalition including the Pennsylvania
Farmers Union, the Pennsylvania Association for Sustainable Agriculture,
The Sierra Club, the AFL-CIO, the United Mine Workers of America, Common
Cause, the Program on Corporations, Law, and Democracy (POCLAD), the
Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund (CELDF), and other
pro-democracy groups, fought back. They bluntly asserted that - as it was
from the founding of this nation until the bizarre Santa Clara County v.
Southern Pacific Railroad Supreme Court case in 1886 - only humans are
entitled to human rights in their community.

In the law they passed on December 9, 2002, they explicitly said, "The
judicial designation of corporations as 'persons' grants corporations the
power to sue municipal governments for adopting laws that violate the
purported constitutional rights of corporations. For example, in September
2000, Synagro Inc. filed a federal lawsuit against Rush Township (Centre
County) Supervisors, forcing the Township to spend tens of thousands of
taxpayer dollars to defend its health-related sewage sludge testing
ordinance against claims that the ordinance violated the corporation's
constitutional rights."

The implications of this are staggering. For example:

Before 1886, it was a felony in most states for corporations to give money
to politicians or otherwise try (through lobbying or advertising) to
influence elections. Such activity was called "bribery and influencing,"
and the reason it was banned was simple: corporations can't vote, so what
are they doing in politics? Their concern is making money, and they don't
need clean air to breathe or fresh water to drink; leave them to making
money and leave the administration of the commons to We, The People.

Before 1886, it was a crime in most states for corporations to own others
of their own kind. The need to keep corporations from becoming so large
that they could usurp democracy was so clear to the Founders that
Jefferson and Madison proposed an 11th Amendment to the Constitution that
would have banned "monopolies in commerce," restricting each company to
performing a single purpose, making it responsible to its local community,
and barring it from owning other corporations. The amendment didn't pass
because everybody at the time knew that the states already had such laws
in place.

Before 1886, only humans had full First Amendment rights of free speech,
including the right to influence legislation and the right to lie when not
under oath. Now corporations have claimed that they have the free speech
right to influence public opinion and legislation through deceit, and a
case based on a multinational corporation asserting this right is poised
to go before the Supreme Court as you read these words. That corporation
reserves the right to fire and even prosecute human employees who lie to
it, however.

Before 1886, only humans had Fourth Amendment rights of privacy. Since
then, however, corporations have claimed that EPA and OSHA surprise
inspections are violations of their human right of privacy, while at the
same time asserting their right to perform surprise inspections of their
own employees' bodily fluids, phone conversations, and keystrokes.

Before 1886, only humans had Fifth Amendment rights against double
jeopardy and the right to refuse to speak if they'd committed a crime.
Since 1886, corporations have asserted these human rights for themselves:
the results range from today's corporate scandals to 60 years of silence
about the deadliness of tobacco and asbestos.

Before 1886, and following the Civil War, only humans had Fourteenth
Amendment rights to protection from discrimination. Since then,
corporations have claimed this human right and used it to stop local
communities from passing laws to protect their small, local businesses and
keep out predatory retailers or large corporations convicted of crimes
elsewhere.

Porter Township has fired the first shot in the New American Revolution
with this first binding law denying corporate personhood. It's a
revolution that will be fought not with guns but in the courts, in the
voting booths, and on the battlefield of public opinion. (Far from harming
corporations, returning human rights solely to humans will lead to an
entrepreneurial boom in America - only a small handful of very large
corporations abuse these rights to deceive people, hide crimes, or make
politicians violate the will of their own voters. The millions of ethical
corporations will thus be freed from the tyranny of the few while
democratic government will be returned to its citizens.)

As Thomas Paine - another Pennsylvania resident - wrote on that 1776
December night and published 2 days before Christmas, "Let it be told to
the future world, that in the depth of winter, when nothing but hope and
virtue could survive, that the city and the country, alarmed at one common
danger, came forth to meet and repulse it."



+++++++++++
Thom Hartmann is the author of "Unequal Protection: The Rise of Corporation
Dominance and the Theft of Human Rights," a book containing a version of the
above ordinance customized for each of the 50 states.
www.unequalprotection.com. He holds the copyright to this article, but
grants permission for reprint in print, web, and email media as long as this
credit is attached.

jon lebkowsky
http://www.weblogsky.com
jonl@weblogsky.com




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