Focus On The Corporation
by Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman
Corporation as Psychopath
People ask: Rob, Russell, the world is going to hell in a handbasket.
What
can we do about it?
We say: Read one book, see one movie.
Unfortunately, the movie and the book are available now only in Canada.
But wait--before you head north of the border--they will be available
here
in a month or so.
And believe us, it is worth the wait. (Full disclosure--our work, the
Top
100 Corporate Criminals of the 1990s--is featured in the movie.)
The book is titled The Corporation: The Pathological Pursuit of
Profit
and Power. It is by Joel Bakan (Free Press, 2004).
The movie is called The Corporation. It is by Mark Achbar,
Jennifer
Abbott, and Joel Bakan.
We've seen an advance copy of the movie.
We're read an advance copy of the book.
And here's our review:
Scrap the civics curricula in your schools, if they exist.
Cancel your cable TV subscriptions.
Call your friends, your enemies and your family.
Get your hands on a copy of this movie and a copy of this book.
Read the book. Discuss it. Dissect it. Rip it apart.
Watch the movie. Show it to your children. Show it to your right-wing
relatives. Show it to everyone. Organize a party around it. Then
organize
another.
For years, we've been reporting on critics of corporate power--Robert
Monks, Richard Grossman, Naomi Klein, Noam Chomsky, Sam Epstein, Charles
Kernaghan, Michael Moore, Jeremy Rifkin.
For years, we've reported on the defenders of the corporate status quo
like
Milton Friedman, Peter Drucker, and William Niskanen.
But Bakan, a professor of law at British Columbia Law School, and Achbar
and Abbott have pulled these leading lights together in a 145-minute
documentary that grabs the viewer by the throat and refuses to let go.
The movie is selling out major theaters across Canada. And if it
detonates
here--which in our view is still a long shot (the US after all is not
Canada)--it could have a profound impact on politics.
The filmmakers juxtapose well-shot interviews of defenders and critics
with
the reality on the ground--Charles Kernaghan in Central America showing
how, for example, big apparel manufacturers pay workers pennies for
products that sell for hundreds of dollars in the United States--with
defenders of the regime--Milton Friedman looking frumpy as he says with
as
straight a face as he can--the only moral imperative for a corporate
executive is to make as much money for the corporate owners as he or she
can.
Others agree with Friedman. Management guru Peter Drucker tells Bakan:
"If
you find an executive who wants to take on social responsibilities, fire
him. Fast." And William Niskanen, chair of the libertarian Cato
Institute,
says that he would not invest in a company that pioneered in corporate
responsibility.
Of course, state corporation laws actually impose a legal duty on
corporate
executives to make money for shareholders. Engage in social
responsibility--pay more money to workers, stop legal pollution, lower
the
price to customers--and you'll likely be sued by your shareholders.
Robert
Monks, the investment manager, puts it this way: "The corporation is an
externalizing machine, in the same way that a shark is a killing machine
(shark seeking young woman swimming on the screen). There isn't any
question of malevolence or of will. The enterprise has within it, and
the
shark has within it, those characteristics that enable it to do that for
which it was designed."
Business insiders like Monks and Ray Anderson, CEO of Interface
Corporation, the world's largest commercial carpet manufacturer, lend
needed balance to a movie that otherwise would have been dominated by
outside critics like Chomsky, Moore, Grossman and Rifkin. Anderson calls
the corporation a "present day instrument of destruction" because of its
compulsion to "externalize any cost that an unwary or uncaring public
will
allow it externalize."
"The notion that we can take and take and take and take, waste and
waste,
without consequences, is driving the biosphere to destruction," Anderson
says, as pictures of biological and chemical wastes pouring into the
atmosphere roll across the screen.
Like Republican Kevin Phillips is doing as he crisscrosses the nation,
pummeling Bush from the right, Anderson and Monks are opening a new
front
against corporate power from inside the belly of the beast. They are
stars
of this movie and book.
The movie and the book drive home one fundamental point--the
corporation is
a psychopath.
Psychologist Dr. Robert Hare runs down a checklist of psychopathic
traits
and there is a close match.
The corporation is irresponsible because in an attempt to satisfy the
corporate goal, everybody else is put at risk.
Corporations try to manipulate everything, including public opinion.
Corporations are grandiose, always insisting that "we're number one,
we're
the best."
Corporations refuse to accept responsibility for their own actions and
are
unable to feel remorse.
And the key to reversing the control of this psychopathic institution
is to
understand the nature of the beast.
No better place to start than right here.
Read the book.
Watch the movie (http://www.thecorporation.tv).
Organize for resistance.
--Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, DC-based Corporate
Crime
Reporter, http://www.corporatecrimereporter.com. Robert Weissman is
editor
of the Washington, DC-based Multinational Monitor,
http://www.multinationalmonitor.org. They are co-authors of Corporate
Predators: The Hunt for MegaProfits and the Attack on Democracy (Monroe,
Maine: Common Courage Press; http://www.corporatepredators.org).
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