When it was created, the American form of government was an experiment. Only once before in the 6000+ year history of
western civilization had people tried an egalitarian form of government, and that experiment - in Athens almost 2400 years
ago - died out when its people were conquered by Alexander the Great.
The crux of the experiment was the idea that
people could govern themselves without kings, popes, wealthy feudal lords, or warlords.
Thus, government would be made of, by, and for the
people and not for any particular special interest group other than the people.
In order for the experiment to work, it was necessary that humans be given unique and special rights and
powers - the powers and rights of personhood, guaranteed in the Bill of Rights and elsewhere in the Constitution.
(It took us almost two hundred years to extend them to minorities and women, but the model/archetype/idea,
at least, was in place.)
But then something bizarre happened.
In 1886 the court reporter of the U.S. Supreme Court claimed that the court had
ruled that "corporations are persons" in the Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad case. If you read
the case itself, you find that in fact the court ruled no such thing. But the reporter wrote it up in the headnotes
of the case - not a legal document, but only a commentary on the case - and subsequent generations of corporate
attorneys claimed it was so. Over time, it became so.
The consequences of this were tremendous.
Corporations are legal fictions created with the sole purpose of
being a vehicle for the aggregation of wealth. They can live forever. They can change identity in a day. They can
cut off parts of themselves and from them grow new selves. They can own others of their own kind. They don't need
fresh air or clean water and don't fear illness or death.
Yet now, because of this misinterpretation of an 1886
Supreme Court case, corporations have the rights of "persons."
Corporations now have free speech rights (even though they are not voters or citizens), and can work to
influence political campaigns and write laws. They have privacy rights and can deny OSHA and EPA inspectors access to
their properties. They have 5th Amendment rights against self-incrimination and double
jeopardy. They have 14th
amendment rights to equal protection under the law and can thus prevent local communities from " discriminating "
against them in favour of small, local businesses.
The result of this legal error has been the virtual takeover of our political and legal processes by corporations.
But some humans are working to take back government and return us to the intentions of this nation's Founders.
The movement is to deny corporate personhood and restore human rights to humans.
Before
1886: When Only Humans Had Human Rights
After
1886: After the Corporate Theft of Human
Rights
Rights
and Privileges
Only
humans were “endowed by their creator with certain inalienable rights”
and those human rights included the right to free speech, the right to
privacy, the right to silence in the face of accusation, and the right to
live free of discrimination or slavery.
While
to this day unions, churches, governments, and small unincorporated
businesses do not have “human rights” (but only privileges humans give
them), corporations alone have moved into the category with humans as
claiming rights instead of just privileges.
Politics
In
many states, it was a felony for corporations to give money to
politicians, political parties, or try to influence elections: “They
can’t vote, so what are they doing involved in politics?!”
Corporations
claimed the human right of free speech, expanded that to mean the
unlimited right to put corporate money into politics, and have thus taken
control of our major political parties and politicians
Business
States
and local communities had laws to protect and nurture entrepreneurs and
local businesses, and to keep out companies that had been convicted of
crimes.
Multi-state
corporations claimed such laws were “discrimination” under the 14th
Amendment (passed to free the slaves) and got such laws struck down; local
communities can no longer stop a predatory corporation.
War
Government,
elected by and for “We, The People,” made decisions about how armies
would be equipped and, based on the will of the general populace, if and
when we would go to war.Prior
to WWII there were no permanent military manufacturing companies of
significant size.
Military
contractors grew to enormous size as a result of WWII and a permanent arms
industry came into being, what Dwight Eisenhower called “the
military/industrial complex.”It
now lobbies government to buy its products and use them in wars around the
world.
Regulation
Corporations
had to submit to the scrutiny of the representatives of “We, The
People,” our elected government.
Corporations
have claimed 4th Amendment human right to privacy and used it
to keep out OSHA, EPA, and to hide crimes.
Purpose
Corporations
were chartered for a single purpose, had to also serve the public good,
and had fixed/limited life spans.
Corporations
lobbied states to change corporate charter laws to eliminate “public
good” provisions from charters, to allow multiple purposes, and to exist
forever.
Ownership
Just
as human persons couldn’t own other persons, corporations couldn’t own
the stock of other corporations (mergers and acquisitions were banned).
Corporations
claim the human right to economic activity free of regulatory restraint,
and the still-banned-for-humans right to own others of their own kind.
(c) Copyright 1996-2005,
Mythical Intelligence, Inc. and Thom Hartmann
Corporate personhood ordinances and constitutional amendments copyright CELDF
This site is for information purposes only and not intended to offer or substitute for legal advice.