[a key question: what is it that our friends at BP, Massey Energy,
UtahAmerican, and Goldman Sachs drunk on? they're drunk on power,
specifically, the ability to turn their big bucks into even larger
bucks via their extremely lucrative investments in energy, finance,
and politicians. They can accumulate capital like crazy and they do
it.]

Drunk Driving at BP

By Dean Baker

While BP has taken some heat over its spill in the Gulf, it is
remarkable how limited the anger actually is. Many defenders of the
company have made the obvious point: It was an accident. BP did not
intend to have a massive spill that killed 11 people, devastated the
Gulf ecosystem and threatens the livelihoods of hundreds of thousands
of workers.

Of course this is true, but it is also true that a drunk driver who
runs into a school bus did not intend to be involved in a fatal
collision. As a society, we have no problem holding the drunk driver
responsible for a predictable outcome of their recklessness. Driving
while drunk dramatically increases the risk of an accident. This is
why it is punished severely. A person who is responsible for a fatal
accident while driving drunk can expect to face many years in jail.
Even someone who drives drunk without being in an accident often faces
jail time because of the risk they imposed on others.

This raises the question as to why the public seems to accept that the
top officials at BP, who cut corners and made risky gambles in their
drilling plans, should be able to "get my life back," as BP CEO Tony
Hayward put it. The people who lost their livelihood as a result of
BP's spill will not get their lives back, even if BP does pay
compensation. Certainly the 11 workers killed in the original
explosion will not get their lives back. Why should the people
responsible for this carnage be able to resume their lives of luxury?

There are two separate questions. The first is a narrow legal issue
concerning the extent to which Hayward and other high-level executives
can be held criminally liable for the accident. It may be the case
that the laws are written so that even if companies commit gross
negligence that results in enormous harm, including multiple deaths,
top officials are not criminally liable. This is a question about the
status of current law.

The second question is a moral and economic one about what the laws
should look like. From either standpoint, it is very difficult to see
why we would want to say that reckless behavior that would be punished
with long prison sentences if done by an individual, somehow escapes
serious sanction if done as part of a corporation's pursuit of profit.
Do we give a "get out of jail free" card to people when they are
wearing the hat of a top corporate executive? This makes no sense.

Just to take the extreme case, suppose that Tony Hayward was racing
back to the office after a three-martini lunch in order to prepare the
paperwork for a big contract that he had just negotiated. On his way,
he hits a school bus, killing 11 children. Would it make sense to
absolve him of blame for these deaths because it was the result of his
efforts to raise BP profits? And, if that doesn't make sense, why does
it make sense to absolve him of responsibility for the deaths of 11
oil rig workers that were the direct result of his decision to cut
corners in order to increase profits?

We can ask the same question about the responsibility of the top
executives of the Massey Energy Company, whose shoddy safety practices
led to the explosion that cost 29 workers their lives. We should also
ask why the top executives of UtahAmerican Energy Company weren't
subject to criminal prosecution when their recklessness led to the
deaths of six miners and three rescue workers in a mine collapse in
2007. In these cases and many others the problem was not simply bad
luck. In all three cases, the accidents were the direct result of
reckless behavior on the part of the management of these companies.
They ignored standard safety measures in order to save money.

Of course most acts of recklessness don't result in fatalities, just
as the vast majority of incidents of drunk driving do not end in fatal
collisions. Nonetheless, when they are caught, we still punish drunk
drivers for their recklessness. This would be a good pattern to follow
more generally. The executives of the major oil companies whose
clean-up plans for the Gulf of Mexico involved procedures for rescuing
walruses would find the matter far less humorous if it involved jail
time. Is there any reason it should not?

The problem is that government has been controlled for far too long by
soft on crime conservatives. They are willing to look the other way
and give break after break to criminals, as long as they are the
white-collar types who belong to the best country clubs.

This must come to an end. The country can't afford special privileges
for high-class criminals. It is time to take a tough stand on
criminals who inhabit the corporate suites. We have to tell the top
executives at BP, Massey, Goldman Sachs and elsewhere that if you
can't do the time, don't do the crime.

--This article was originally published on July 12, 2010 by the
Guardian Unlimited.


-- 
Jim Devine
"All science would be superfluous if the form of appearance of things
directly coincided with their essence." -- KM
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to