(The item below may seem tangential to the area of information freedom
at first, but I think its implications and relevance will be very
clear with only short reflection.  It is a letter from POCLAD to the
Judiciary Committee with questions for Sotomayor that they also
recommended for the Alito hearings.  I don't think they need to depict
the Supreme Court's exercise of authority quite the way they do, and
while there is a relevant case imminent, I think they do not need to
emphasize the issue of campaign contributions so much as they seem
to.  The issue they are illustrating could easily have enormous, broad
appeal across the political spectrum.  There are *many* issues they
are touching upon, related to corporations, the commerce clause,
sovereignty and self-determination, the issues many of us are dealing
with in the international arena, the economy, trade and the market,
governance, democracy, and the general abyssmal condition that the
world is in right now, that POCLAD could also easily allude to, that
would resonate with all of us. -- Seth)


> http://www.poclad.org/media/SenJudiciaryReSotomayor.pdf


Program on Corporations, Law & Democracy
Instigating democratic conversations and actions that contest the
authority of corporations to govern
Box 246 S. Yarmouth, MA 02664
www.poclad.org
peo...@...
508-398-1145


OPEN LETTER TO MEMBERS OF THE US SENATE JUDICIARY COMMITTEE

from the Program on Corporations, Law and Democracy (POCLAD)


July 14, 2009


Dear US Senate Judiciary Committee Members,

The Program on Corporations, Law and Democracy (POCLAD) calls on you
to continue your questioning of US Supreme Court nominee Sonia
Sotomayor.  Judge Sotomayor's position on the larger issue of this
nation's democracy, trampled by the rights and powers of corporations
to govern, have so far been left untouched and unexplored in Senate
confirmation hearings.

The vast majority of non-criminal cases to be brought before the nine
robed ones of the Supreme Court in the next few years will relate to
matters of corporate "rights," protections, and dominance and their
impact on the rights of human beings in this so-called democracy.  It
is appropriate, therefore, that questions be asked concerning the
doctrines of corporate autonomy and authority that insulate these
collections of capital and property from control by the people and
their legislatures - a control that existed at one time in this
nation.

Have the judiciary's efforts been so successful over the last 200
years to find corporations within the US Constitution and bestow
constitutional "rights" upon them that current lawmakers fail even to
question this democratic and illegitimate reality? Indeed, for two
centuries Supreme Court justices, the closest institution we have to
Kings and Queens, have been at the center of affirming and expanding
corporate rule and placing corporations well beyond the authority of
the people. We hope you do not concur with this history and its
consequences.

We hope the questions on the following page are asked of nominee
Sotomayor during her Senate hearings. Only after she responds to these
concerns and her answers promptly made available to the general public
and to all U.S. Senators should voting on her confirmation occur. It
should be noted that these questions were the same that we requested
be put to Judge Samuel Alito during his January, 2006 confirmation
hearings. To our knowledge, none of them were asked.

The appointment for life of a person who will assume a position of
vast and seemingly ever growing power in our society demands an
exhaustive review of every issue area that he/she is likely to address
in the high court. Corporate constitutional rights and their impact on
our rights as self-governing human beings certainly qualify as one
such area of questioning. This decision is of the utmost importance to
the fate of the country.

Respectfully,

The Program on Corporations, Law and Democracy

Attachments:
Questions for Supreme Court Justice Nominee Sonia Sotomayer

Quotes from Previous Supreme Court Decisions and Justices on
Corporations


Questions for Supreme Court Nominee Sonia Sotomayor

First a bit of background. In a 1978 case, First National Bank of
Boston v. Bellotti, the Supreme Court decided, 5 to 4, that business
corporations -- just as flesh and blood like you and me -- have a
First Amendment right to spend their money to influence elections.
Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist dissented. "It might reasonably be
concluded," he wrote, "that those properties, so beneficial in the
economic sphere, pose special dangers in the political sphere." The
late Chief Justice went on to write: "Furthermore, it might be argued
that liberties of political expression are not at all necessary to
effectuate the purposes for which States permit commercial
corporations to exist."

-- Do you believe that corporate money in our elections poses "special
dangers in the political sphere"?

-- Do you believe "that liberties of political expression" are
necessary "to effectuate the purposes for which States permit
commercial corporations to exist"?"

-- Do you believe that money is speech? Or is it property?

In 1886, only eighteen years after the people ratified the Fourteenth
Amendment, the Supreme Court had before it Santa Clara County v.
Southern Pacific Railroad. The issue was whether the Amendment's
guarantee of equal protection barred California from taxing property
owned by a corporation differently from property owned by a human
being. Chief Justice Morrison Waite disposed of it with a bolt-from- 
the-blue pronouncement: "The Court does not wish to hear argument on
the question whether the provision in the Fourteenth Amendment to the
Constitution, which forbids a state to deny any person the equal
protection of the laws, applies to these corporations. We are all of
the opinion that it does." The conferring of Fourteenth Amendment
rights on the corporate form appeared in a clerk's headnote to the
case.

-- How would you characterize the Court's refusal to hear argument in
a momentous case before deciding it?

-- Was the "person" whose basic rights the framers and the people
sought to protect through the 14th amendment to the Constitution the
newly freed slave?

-- Was the "person" a corporation?

-- Is a corporation a person "born or naturalized in the United
States"?

-- In proclaiming a paper entity to be a person, was the court
faithful to the intent of the framers of the Amendment and to the
intent of the people who ratified it?

-- How would you characterize the court's refusal to hear argument in
a momentous case before deciding it?

-- Would you describe the court's action in Santa Clara as
conservative? As radical? As open-minded?

-- Would you characterize the Court's Santa Clara action as being an
example of judicial activism?

---

Quotes from Previous Supreme Court Decisions and Justices on
Corporations 

Standard Oil of New Jersey v. United States, 221 U.S. 1 (1911):

All who recall the condition of the country in 1890 will remember that
there was everywhere, among the people generally, a deep feeling of
unrest. The nation had been rid of human slavery-- fortunately, as
all  now feel--but the conviction was universal that the country was
in real danger from another kind of slavery sought to be fastened on
the American people: namely, the slavery that would result from
aggregations of capital in the hands of a few individuals and
corporations controlling, for their own profit and advantage
exclusively, the entire business of the country, including the
production and sale of the necessities of life.

Liggett Co. v. Lee 288 U.S. 517 (1933) (dissent by Justice Brandeis):

The prevalence of the corporation in America has led men of this
generation to act, at times, as if the privilege of doing business in
corporate form were inherent in the citizen; and has led them to
accept the evils attendant upon the free and unrestricted use of the
corporate mechanism as if these evils were the inescapable price of
civilized life and, hence, to be borne with resignation.  Throughout
the greater part of our history, a different view prevailed.  Although
the value of this instrumentality in commerce and industry was fully
recognized, incorporation for business was commonly denied long after
it had been freely granted for religious, educational and charitable
purposes.  It was denied because of fear.  Fear of encroachment upon
the liberties and opportunities of the individual.  Fear of the
subjection of labor to capital.  Fear of monopoly.  Fear that the
absorption of capital by corporations, and their perpetual life, might
bring evils. . . There was a sense of some insidious menace inherent
in large aggregations of capital, particularly when held by
corporations. 

Justice Brandeis warned ominously of the threat to democracy that
justifies sovereign control of corporations:

Able and discerning scholars have pictured for us the economic and
social results of thus removing all limitations upon the size and
activities of business corporations and of vesting in their managers
vast powers once exercised by stockholders--results not designed by
the states and long unsuspected. . . .  Through size, corporations,
once merely an efficient tool employed by individuals in the conduct
of private business, have become an institution--an institution which
has brought such concentration of economic power that so-called
private corporations are sometimes able to dominate the state.  The
typical business corporation of the last century, owned by a small
group of individuals, managed by their owners, and limited in size by
their personal wealth, is being supplanted by huge concerns in which
the lives of tens or hundreds of thousands of employees and the
property of tens or hundreds of thousands of investors are subjected,
through the corporate mechanism, to the control of a few men.

Ownership has been separated from control; and this separation has
removed many of the checks which formerly operated to curb the misuse
of wealth and power. And as ownership of the shares is becoming
continually more dispersed, the power which formerly accompanied
ownership is becoming increasingly concentrated in the hands of a few.
 The changes thereby wrought in the lives of the workers, of the
owners and of the general public, are so fundamental and far-reaching
as to lead these scholars to compare the evolving "corporate system"
with the feudal system; and to lead other men of insight and
experience to assert that this "master institution of civilized life"
is committing it to the rule of a plutocracy.  Liggett, pp. 564-565. 

First National Bank of Boston v. Bellotti, 435 U.S. 765 (1978)
Dissents by Justices White, Brennan, Marshall

...the special status of corporations has placed them in a position to
control vast amounts of economic power which may, if not regulated,
dominate not only our economy but the very heart of our democracy, the
electoral process... The State need not allow its own creation to
consume it.

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