Corporate America Speaking Out

by: Jim Hightower, t r u t h o u t | Op-Ed

Jim Hightower | Corporate America Speaking Out
(Photo: republicanconference / Flickr)

Congressional Republicans have spent the first two years of the Obama administration as the rock-solid party of "no," "uh-uh," "no way," "forget about it," "nothing doing," "we're-against-it-and-we'll-kill-it." This is one reason their job approval rating is lower than that of BP executives.

But now, GOP leaders in the House say they are shifting from pure negativity. Instead, they intend to step forward with their own bold policy ideas. Terrific! What are some of those ideas? "Uh ... um ... well," say the leaders, "we don't know yet, but that's why we've launched an exciting new campaign that we call America Speaking Out. We'll go directly to the grassroots people, asking for their ideas, giving them a voice and letting them shape 'the new Republican agenda.'"

Again, terrific! Where are you starting your grassroots campaign? "Uh ... um," stumble the leaders, before mumbling: "Washington, D.C."

Indeed, only six weeks after America Speaking Out was introduced as "an unprecedented initiative to listen to the American people," ASO did not rush out to hold open policy-crafting town hall forums in places like Fargo, Fresno and Freeport. Instead, they held a closed session in the snug confines of House minority leader John Boehner's Capitol Hill office.

And just who were the plain folks the GOP leader invited? His e-mailed solicitation went to 20 top lobbyists representing big corporations and such business front groups as the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and the National Association of Manufacturers. Apparently, this is the bunch Republican leaders consider to be their real "grassroots" constituency.

Well, sniffed an ASO spokesman, it's important to "receive input" from the nation's largest employers.

Bovine excrement! These corporate lobbyists give their input every day, usually with campaign donations attached. They're the problem, not the solution, and ASO is just more of the same -- listening to the money interests at the top rather than the workaday majority of Americans who are barely scraping by.

Speaking of corporate campaign spending, the dam was dynamited back in January by the Supreme Court's infamous decision in the Citizens United case, and the deluge is now upon us. By decreeing that corporations are now free to spend unlimited sums of cash from their vast treasuries to elect or defeat anyone they want, the court is allowing these narrow special interests to swamp America's elections, displacing our democracy with their plutocracy.

You might recall that the five-man judicial majority that pulled off this black-robed coup argued disingenuously that there was no evidence that corporate spending would even increase under the court's ruling, much less flood the process. Nice theory, but -- look out! -- here comes the flood.

In addition to unfathomable sums that corporations will pour directly into this fall's congressional elections, they are also channeling unparalleled amounts of cash into assorted front groups. For example, in 2008, a presidential year, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce put $36 million into elections, which was the most ever by a corporate organization. This year the chamber intends to more than double that, funneling $75 million into campaigns, with practically every penny going to corporate-hugging Republicans.

American Crossroads, a new corporate outlet run by former Bush operative Karl Rove, collected more than $8 million in June alone and expects to put $52 million into this year's elections. Various laissez-faire, anti-government extremist groups will also add to the rising tsunami, including $45 million from Americans for Prosperity, $25 million from American Action Network, $24 million from The Club for Growth and $5 million from FreedomWorks.

With such gross levels of spending, moneyed corporations intend to overpower America's democratic process and purchase a government that'll do their bidding. To stop them, We the People must repeal the Supreme Court's malicious, anti-democratic ruling. To help, connect with a grassroots campaign pushing for a constitutional amendment that will overturn the Citizens United decision. Find them at www.freespeechforpeople.org.

National radio commentator, writer, public speaker, and author of the book, Swim Against The Current: Even A Dead Fish Can Go With The Flow, Jim Hightower has spent three decades battling the Powers That Be on behalf of the Powers That Ought To Be - consumers, working families, environmentalists, small businesses, and just-plain-folks.

Copyright 2010 Creators.com 

All republished content that appears on Truthout has been obtained by permission or license.





     

»




Comments

This forum is moderated by software. Please allow up to 15 minutes for your comments to go live and avoid posting the same comment multiple times.



Both parties (keyword: BOTH)

Both parties (keyword: BOTH) are enormously detached from the workaday American, but the Republicans are IMO far moreso than the Democrats. It does not surprise me that ASO is nothing more than another gangbang among congressmen and lobbyists. Democrats merely do a better job of keeping their corporate whoring under wraps.

(And it is indeed unfettered Corporate greed that is the core problem. Eliminate that, and you'll see a government more responsive to workaday Americans.)

What we have to realize is that politics, regardless of party, is not the solution. Changing politicians, as the upcoming elections will likely show, won't do, nor will it ever. We have to realize, as the collective workaday Americans, that true solutions will only come via outside-the-box thinking, but be aware that said solutions may be of the extreme nature.

Meaning, because the more peaceful avenues have proven to be totally ineffective (everything from changing politicians to signing petitions to picketing), it has indeed gotten to the point that more serious roads must be considered if there is any chance at making this country great. Because right now, it simply isn't.

Admittedly I'm not certain of what those more serious measures should be. I have my thoughts. But I am undeniably convinced that the soft-handed methods we've been doing for decades definitely won't solve a thing.



The first thing we need to

The first thing we need to do is get corporate and union money, money period, out of the electoral process. Use the PUBLIC airwaves rto conduct campaigns with equal time allotted to all legitimate candidates in a particular race. Then we have to ask the American public to actually watch something other than reality TV and spend time listening to and researching the candidates instead of (or in addition to) pursuing pleasure.



With the aforementioned

With the aforementioned Supreme Court 'decision',
they have unleveled the playing field in favor of the
corporate carpetbaggers. Woe to us small business types, and to the "Almighty Constitution"



I've said it before and I'll

I've said it before and I'll keep saying it until something is done. Remove the need for huge expenditures for election, and you remove the need for corporate take-over. All candidates for national office should be given equal amounts of TV time FREE. If any candidate buys more time, that network must GIVE all the other candidates the same amount of time. The networks don't won the channels, WE do. The FCC grants them a license, and part of the term of the license is providing public service. It's all there, we just have to enforce it. I don't know how, but some wiser people out there may be able to find a way.



Let's face it, America is

Let's face it, America is unequivocally married to that most abusive and greedy of spouses, Capitalism. And from the two major parties, no indication that the continued abuse is ever going to lead to the right decision, D-I-V-O-R-C-E!
The abusive spouse continues to whale away on the country, stealing and beating and emotionally terrifying everyone. Do the recipients of this abuse press charges? Do they sue for divorce? No, like so many abused partners, they plead: he/she didn't mean it, he/she really loves me, he/she only does it 'cos I've been bad.
And the Corporocrat abuser sits and smirks at the investigators of this vile domestic violence, counting his/her money, while the abusee struggles to get by on the pin money they receive to keep the household going.
For the most part, even the most virulent critics don't address the elephant in the room, because any alternative, other than unfettered Capitalism running amok, is apparently unthinkable.
Solution? Throw out the Corporocrats, lobbyists and politicians, Supreme Court justices and all. Clean house and start over, under a system that works, like the more enlightened social democracies of Europe.



MR says that "[B]ecause the

MR says that "[B]ecause the more peaceful avenues have proven to be totally ineffective [...], it has indeed gotten to the point that more serious roads must be considered if there is any chance at making this country great. [...] Admittedly I'm not certain of what those more serious measures should be. I have my thoughts."

I have mine too. Not about what they should be, but about what they may have to be. What was it JFK said, about a year before the CIA decided to blow his brain into a thousand pieces and scatter it to the winds? Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make what kind of revolution inevitable?

We may be past the point where those measures will do any good. I know we're past the point where any other measures would.



Paul W has it right.

Paul W has it right. Tightly regulated capitalism can work, but only for a short time, because capitalism's inescapable imperative is to concentrate wealth at the expense of all others. In a finite world, this inevitably leads to its own destruction.



@Austin Loomis. That was my

@Austin Loomis.

That was my suspicion also. Call it anarchist or whatever, but I wonder when the time will come when Americans will stop putting up with it and start dishing it out. Blood in the streets, people getting arrested, storefronts getting blown up. I dunno. Something akin to the Rodney King fallout.

Like you, I fully believe that (re)electing politicians, incumbents or new ones, is clearly not the answer. If they're not the answer, and picketing/petitioning/protesting isn't either, then what's left?

Of course, there is an alternative to revolt - mass expatriation. Maybe we'll see many leave this country. Then again, if there is a revolt, I mean a big one, it wouldn't surprise me to see the elite leave the country for fear of their own safety.

But I do think that our government isn't the core problem; they're just lapdogs. Corporate America is the one true villain in my mind behind our country's mess. Not the small business owner mind you, but the Corporate Giants. They need to be dealt with...and savagely.