This article exemplifies more than any other I have come across, the
concerted effort of corporations to monopolize the western world, and the
failure of the public to effectively combat it. The public simply and naively
refuses to sing from the same hymn book. Nonetheless, their stubborn, and in
this regard self-defeating pursuit of ‘individuality’, is costing them their
freedom. Read on…
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The following is an excerpt from Nicholas
Freudenberg's new book, Lethal but Legal: Corporations, Consumption, and Protecting
Public Health (Oxford University Press, 2014).
On August 23, 1971, Lewis Powell sent a confidential memo to
his friend Eugene Sydnor, Jr., the director of the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.
The memo was both a call to arms and a battle plan for a business response to
its growing legion of opponents. Powell was a corporate lawyer, a former
president of the American Bar Association, and a board member of eleven
corporations, including Philip Morris and the Ethyl Corporation, a company that
made the lead for leaded gasoline. Powell had also represented the Tobacco
Institute, the research arm of the tobacco industry, and various tobacco
companies. Later that year, President Richard Nixon would nominate Powell to
sit on the U.S. Supreme Court, where he served for fifteen years.
Powell’s memo serves as a useful starting point for
understanding how the transformation of the corporate system that began in the
1970s set the stage for today’s global health problems. “No thoughtful person
can question that the American economic system is under broad attack,” wrote
Powell. “The assault on the enterprise system is broadly based and consistently
pursued. It is gaining momentum and converts.” “One of the bewildering paradoxes
of our time,” Powell continued, “is the extent to which the enterprise system
tolerates, if not participates in, its own destruction.” He enumerated the
system’s enemies: well-meaning liberals, government officials intent on
regulating business, news media, student activists, and an emerging
environmental and consumer movement— especially its most visible leader, Ralph
Nader, in Powell’s view “the single most effective antagonist of American
business.”
Powell called on business, especially the Chamber of
Commerce, to end its “appeasement” of its critics and launch an aggressive and
systematic counter-assault. The memo warned that “independent and uncoordinated activity by individual corporations,
as important as this is, will not be sufficient. Strength lies in organization, in careful long-range planning and
implementation, in consistency of action over an indefinite period of years ...
and in the political power available only through united action and national
organizations.”
Powell urged new, well-funded public media campaigns to
support the free enterprise system, the creation of think tanks and institutes
to develop policy proposals and “direct political action” in legislative and
judicial arenas. “It is time,” he argued, for “American business ... to apply
their great talents vigorously to the preservation of the system itself.”
Powell’s “confidential” memo was first circulated within the Chamber of
Commerce, then released in 1972 by investigative reporter Jack Anderson during
the Powell Supreme Court confirmation hearings. While the document may not have
been the blueprint for the rise of the Republican right that some analysts
claim, its real value is as the articulation of the corporate prescription for
capitalism’s ills.
To
read the full article, go to: http://www.alternet.org/books/mcdomination-how-corporations-conquered-america-and-ruined-our-health.
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