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-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [corp-focus] Who Owns America?
Date: Mon, 28 Feb 2000 17:19:32 -0600 (CST)
From: Robert Weissman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Organization: ?
To: undisclosed-recipients:;

Who Owns America
By Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman

The other day, at our local bookstore, we passed a book. And then
doubled
back.

The book is titled Who Owns America?: A Declaration of
Independence.
Sounded like it was written by people we should know. But on
further
investigation, we recognized none of the names on the cover.

Who Owns America? was written by 21 "conservative" decentralists.
And it
was first published in 1936.

Re-released this year, with a new introduction by Seton Hall
University
History Professor Edward S. Shapiro, Who Owns America? (ISI
Books,
Wilmington, Delaware, 1999), is highly critical of large
corporate
institutions that controlled the political economy in 1930s
America. Its
publisher believes the book is as relevant today as the day it
was
published.

Edited by Pulitizer Prize winning Louisville Courier-Journal
columnist
Herbert Agar and southern poet Allen Tate, Who Owns America? puts
forth
the type of scathing critique that you just can't find in today's
political debates.

Like today's corporatist conservatives -- George Will, James
Glassman and
Charles Krauthammer -- the conservatives who wrote Who Owns
America?
believed that the specter of big government threatened individual
freedom
and the ideal America.

But unlike the corporatists of today, Agar, Tate and their
colleagues
understood that public authority was the only antidote to the
excesses of
big corporate power.

Agar, Tate and their colleagues argued that to attain the
conservative
goal of less government, you'd first have to limit the size and
power of
the large corporate institutions that were roaming the land.

Typical of the 1930s conservatives writing in this volume is the
pro-decentralist economist Richard Ransom.

"The permanent lease on life which corporations possess tends
more and
more to concentrate within a few hands the ownership and control
of
general property," wrote Ransom in a chapter titled Corporate and
Individual Persons. "The disproportionate distribution of the
national
wealth is very evidently due in large part to the corporate
tendency to
mass larger and larger aggregates of ownership which are held
together by
corporate permanence and corporate inertia. ..."

Ransom's solution to the problem of corporate control of the
national
wealth? Federal chartering of corporations doing interstate
business.

And what should the states do about excessive corporate power?
The states
should limit the "profitable business life of the corporations
which they
charter."

And how could the states accomplish this end?

"This could perhaps be done by means of heavy selective
inheritance
taxation on the transfer of corporate shares or assets," Ransom
answers.

And what would this achieve?

"Such a shorter term of corporate life, either accomplished
indirectly as
suggested here or accomplished by more immediate means, will
produce a
more direct personal responsibility in corporate managements,"
Ransom
says.

Once interstate corporations are federally chartered, Ransom
proposes that
the personal liability of stockholders should be extended to an
amount at
least equal to twice the proportionate investment of each
stockholder
(currently, you can only lose what you put in.)

Can you imagine Will or Krauthammer contemplating these thoughts?

Lyle Lanier, a professor of psychology at Vanderbilt University,
wrote a
chapter titled "Big Business in the Property State," in which he
observed
that "the American people have long recognized the danger to
democracy of
economic power concentrated in the hands of big corporations."

Lawmakers passed the antitrust laws at the turn of the century,
"but these
laws have been impotent to stem the rising tide of big business
organization," Lanier wrote.

Industrial capitalism, Lanier wrote, "has followed a course of
development
which is both self-destructive and dangerous to democratic
institutions."

Lanier, like his co-authors, finds hope in a Jeffersonian ideal
of small
business and small farmers.

The publication of this volume today makes George Will, James
Glassman and
their conservative contemporaries look like empty suits compared
those who
wrote Who Owns America?.

Big corporations still roam the land and still threaten a fragile
democracy. But there is no Agar on the right to challenge them.

Needless to say, we cannot and do not agree with everything
written by
these 21 self-proclaimed "conservatives" of the 1930s.

But we do agree with the conservative sentiment put forth in the
book, as
summarized by Agar, that corporate concentration and democracy
are at
odds.

"When democracy goes down before monopoly capitalism," Agar
writes, "the
result has been a greedy tyranny, preserving all the vices of
capitalism
and extinguishing its virtues."

Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based
Corporate Crime
Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based
Multinational Monitor. They are co-authors of Corporate
Predators: The
Hunt for MegaProfits and the Attack on Democracy (Monroe, Maine:
Common
Courage Press, 1999, http://www.corporatepredators.org)

(c) Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman

_______________________________________________

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