Alternative futures
Robert Jensen
School of Journalism
University of Texas
Austin, TX 78712
work: (512) 471-1990
fax: (512) 471-7979
rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu
copyright Robert Jensen 2002
Texas Observer, June 21, 2002, pp. 26-27.
by Robert Jensen
review of
Defying Corporations, Defining Democracy
Edited by Dean Ritz
Apex Press
336 pages, $17.95.
There is no alternative. Capitalism is the only future. Free markets are
the essence of democracy.
How do we know? Because we are told repeatedly by smart guys from corporations
and government, and by the journalists and academics paid to explain why
the smart guys are right.
In the face of that “consensus,” the folks at the Program on Corporations,
Law and Democracy (POCLAD) have launched a direct attack on the nature of
the corporation, the institution at the core of modern capitalism.
So, are they crazy or just confused?
Neither. The POCLAD members are refreshingly clear, and the book of their
writings -- Defying Corporations, Defining Democracy -- makes a compelling
case for their analysis and strategy.
The key is that their critique is of the nature of the corporation. They
are not simply saying that corporations do bad things or sometimes distort
democracy (most liberals and even some conservatives admit that, especially
post-Enron). Instead, they argue that the rise of the contemporary corporation
has been the death of meaningful democracy. While I think their analysis
needs to broaden (more on that later), the POCLAD collective has done an
important service by framing the issue of economic justice in a language
accessible to people not yet persuaded by a left/progressive analysis.
Here’s the story POCLAD tells:
Our wealthy founding father devised a system that allowed them to maintain
power -- by restricting citizenship to propertied white men, and through
elite-controlled institutions such as the U.S. Senate and Supreme Court that
could corral any wild ideas that regular people might pursue through the
relatively more democratic House of Representatives, or state and local governments.
Still, the democratic principles on which the country was founded were real,
and popular movements over time expanded the franchise and agitated for more
democracy.
At the same time those battles have been going on, lawyers and lobbyists
have waged a war to expand corporate power. Often relying on judges to do
what even well-lobbied legislatures wouldn’t, corporations went from being
limited entities in the 18th and first half of the 19th centuries that could
be controlled by the people and their representatives, to today’s concentrations
of wealth and power that have almost completely escaped popular control.
In POCLAD language, corporations began as entities subordinate to the sovereign
people but eventually became masters, eroding the core concept of democracy
-- power resides in We the People. Key to this was the courts’ granting to
corporations the rights of persons, including 14th Amendment rights and eventually
even free speech rights. POCLAD points out the obvious: Rights can be claimed
only by persons, and corporations aren’t real persons but only fictional
ones, creations under law.
According to POCLAD, we should move beyond fighting corporations on their
terms -- battling to control the worst of their offenses through regulatory
law or asking them to curb abuses through voluntary codes of conduct. Instead,
citizen-activists should demand that corporations act responsibly in accord
with their charters or face charter revocation, the death penalty for corporations.
Along the way, POCLAD retells some American history, with two main effects.
First, it denaturalizes the corporation -- and by implication capitalism
-- showing that like any other system it is the product of human choices,
not some unchangeable natural order. Second, POCLAD members remind us of
past resistance to corporations -- from the first half of America’s history
when corporations were kept on a much shorter leash and such revocations
occurred, to the Populists’ activism in the late 19th century contesting
the legitimacy of corporations, to the work of the early labor movement to
articulate an alternative to capitalism. For progressive political change
to be possible, people not only have to understand the nature of the systems
and institutions that wield power, but also see that it is possible for systems
to change.
The book points out that corporations do not simply engage in business but
govern much of our lives, in a system that disadvantages natural persons
doing battle with these fictional persons. Defying Corporations, Defining
Democracy makes this point particularly well in discussing labor law, which
gives management huge advantages over workers trying to organize. The authors
also argue cogently that whatever short-term victories citizens and environmental
groups have won, or can win, in regulatory agencies, the ecological health
of the planet has deteriorated, and will continue to deteriorate. So long
as corporations can accumulate the wealth and power that contemporary law
and politics allows, progressive activists start out in a hole.
As these letters, essays, and speeches (all short and easy to digest) lay
out this case, it becomes clear quickly the POCLAD folks have made the strategic
choice to focus on corporations and avoid using the word “capitalism.” That
decision makes sense in a country where critiques of capitalism typically
are associated with foreign ideologies (European or Third-World socialism
and communism) and totalitarian systems (the Soviet Union and its satellites).
While it is true that spirited critiques of capitalism are a homegrown part
of American history (some are referenced in the book, such as the Knights
of Labor’s) and not foreign imports, at this moment in history a strategy
that focuses on the corporation is likely to resonate more with Americans.
No matter what people think about capitalism as a system (if they think about
it at all), virtually everyone has some reason to dislike or distrust corporations;
we’ve all been screwed by a corporation -- as a competitor, employee, consumer,
or bystander -- in some fashion at some point.
Given that corporations and modern capitalism can’t be separated or separately
defined, POCLAD’s critique of the corporation goes to the heart of the system.
It is possible to highlight the key problems inherent in capitalism -- its
need for constant expansion, the exploitation of workers, the commodification
of everything -- by focusing on corporations. Indeed, capitalism as we know
it couldn’t exist without the corporate form. Still, at some point in discussion
about politics and economics, people understandably ask, “OK, you don’t like
what we’ve got -- what kind of system do you want?”
Do left/progressive folks answer by saying we want capitalism without corporations?
Or capitalism with corporations that just have less power? It’s not clear
what the first claim would mean, nor is it obvious the second would bring
substantive improvements.
Or do we articulate a vision that -- whether or not we use the term -- will
sound a lot like what traditionally has been known as socialism: no private
ownership of the means of production, worker control over production, collective/council
structures throughout the economy, participatory planning, etc. Such a system
can go by other names; for example, Michael Albert and Robin Hahnel call
it “participatory economics” (see their book Looking Forward or the
web site www.parecon.org
). But in the end, it’s not unreasonable for people to expect an answer to
that question.
One might argue that the first step is to delegitimize the corporation, exposing
not only the way it corrupts democracy in the political sphere but crushes
people in the private. No argument there, but that first step quickly leads
to questions about vision for an alternative system. This is not a demand
for an alternative defined in great detail, which usually is a tactic to
derail criticism of the existing system. Indeed, when any system is oppressive,
it is in some sense enough to demand that the system end. But the effectiveness
of that demand is much enhanced by a clear articulation of the underlying
principles (which POCLAD offers) and some discussion of that vision, even
if tentative and sketchy (which isn’t included in this volume).
Another necessary step forward is to include a more specific accounting of
racism, sexism, and U.S. imperialism -- not as issues separate from corporate
capitalism but intricately bound up with it. It is clear POCLAD wants to
keep its eye on the prize of contesting corporate power, but expanding the
analysis can aid in that task.
In one sense, capitalism is not inherently racist or sexist -- corporations
are happy to exploit anyone in the drive for profit. But owners and managers
have used racism to divide workers and solidify control, and sexism has been
important in keeping certain jobs associated with women or “women’s work”
(such as the expanding customer service sector) low paying. Those stories
are also an integral part of the history of the corporation.
It’s also imperative, as the American empire seeks even greater domination
of the world, to link the corporate system to U.S. foreign policy and militarism.
At a time when expressions of patriotism run high, this may seem risky. But
it’s difficult to imagine making inroads against the corporate power at home
without challenging the brutality and violence of U.S. policy as it secures
resources and markets abroad for corporations.
These are issues that left/progressive movements have to hash out. In a world
of multiple systems of repression and oppression that are enmeshed, we have
no choice but to deal with them analytically. One person or group can decide
to focus on a particular issue, but the analysis that underlies that political
action can’t ignore this complexity.
Whatever differences in strategy and emphasis I might have with POCLAD, Defying
Corporations, Defining Democracy reminds us that this kind of political work
can be done in a language that speaks to ordinary people. POCLAD avoids long,
jargon-filled writing that will turn off most readers, and that’s all to
the good. But too many of these short, to-the-point pieces repeat the same
themes, sometimes in pretty much the same language. The book could have been
cut in half and conveyed as much information, making it more effective for
outreach tool to the general public.
Still, leftists and progressives should read Defying Corporations, Defining
Democracy -- and keep up with the group’s work through the website (
www.poclad.org
) and newsletter (By What Authority) -- not only for the history and
analysis it offers but for rhetorical strategies for taking the message to
the public. POCLAD reminds us the task is not to convince policymakers and
elites of the problem of corporations but to reach the public and build a
mass movement.
At a time when most people accept the big lie that there is no future outside
of capitalism, it’s time to move forward with political strategies grounded
in the recognition that there is no way to think about a decent future except
outside of capitalism.
--------
Robert Jensen is a professor of journalism at the University of Texas
at Austin, a member of the Nowar
Collective
, and author of the book
Writing Dissent: Taking Radical Ideas from the Margins to the Mainstream
. His pamphlet,
“Citizens of the Empire,”
is available at http://www.nowarcollective.com/citizensoftheempire.pdf.
He can be reached at rjensen@uts.cc.utexas.edu.
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