With their ruling, five unelected guys in black robes have subverted our 
people's sovereignty with a semantical perversion that twists 
special-interest things into "people" and money into "speech." 
http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article24858.htm 




Fighting the Subversion of Our People's Sovereignty 

By Jim Hightower 

February 24, 2010 "Creators" -- As you've probably heard, corporations are 
now "people" - humanoids that are equivalent to you and me. This miraculous 
metamorphosis happened on Jan. 21. Accompanied by a blinding bolt of 
lightning, and a terrifying jolt of thunder, five Dr. Frankensteins on the 
Supreme Court threw a judicial switch that endowed these pulseless paper 
entities with the human right to speak politically. 

Never mind that inanimate corporate constructs have no tongue, brain, heart 
or soul - the five judicial fabricators breathed unprecedented legal life 
into corporations, decreeing that the vast wealth held in their corporate 
treasuries is their voice. With a cry of "Shazam!" the court ruled that, 
henceforth, every corporation - from Wal-Mart to Wall Street - is entitled 
to "speak" by spending unlimited sums from their treasuries to elect or 
defeat candidates for any and all public offices in our land, from city 
council to the presidency. 

By a bare five-to-four majority, the justices created an artificial, 
uber-wealthy, political monster that will overpower everyone else's voices. 
For example, just the 100 largest corporations have assets totaling more 
than $13 trillion. No combination of human people's political organizations 
can amass even a tiny fraction of that spending power. 

With their ruling, five unelected guys in black robes have subverted our 
people's sovereignty with a semantical perversion that twists 
special-interest things into "people" and money into "speech." In so doing, 
the Supreme Five have substituted their personal political views for the 
clearly-expressed wisdom of America's founders, every Congress since Teddy 
Roosevelt's time, 22 states, dozens of cities, the court's own precedents 
and the People themselves. 

Bizarrely, the five court corporatists seemed to think that their sneak 
attack on America's democratic ideals was so cleverly done that it would be 
meekly accepted by the public and even widely applauded. Hardly. The ink of 
their signatures on this absurd opinion wasn't dry before the justices were 
pelted with ridicule. 

"Hey," demanded one blogger, "it's time to reinstitute the draft." Others 
raised an intriguing constitutional conundrum that the Court obviously 
failed to contemplate. Since the 13th Amendment bans slavery, which is the 
ownership of a person, the newly born corporate "persons" cannot legally be 
bought and sold. Thus Wall Street - now a slave market - must be shut down! 
Let us all join hands and march for this new civil rights cause, chanting, 
"Free the Corporate Slaves!" 

Meanwhile, Americans of all political stripes have risen in overwhelming 
opposition to the court's contortion of both the Constitution and common 
sense. In a Washington Post-ABC poll published last week, 85 percent of 
Democrats, 81 percent of independents and - get this - 76 percent of 
Republicans reject this act of gross judicial overreach. 

So, with eight of 10 Americans decrying the decree and nearly as many 
demanding that it be reversed, we can expect swift and decisive action from 
Congress. Right? 

Uh ... no. First, Republican leaders (who've consistently proven to be 
tail-wagging kowtowers to corporate power) flatly say they will oppose any 
legislation to restrict the ruling. Second, Democrats have designated Sen. 
Schumer to lead their effort to undo the decision. Schumer is a notorious 
CEO-hugging Democrat who serves as the party's chief shaker of the corporate 
money tree, so sending him into this battle is like going lion hunting with 
a flyswatter. 

Sure enough, Schumer has started by declaring that he wants a reform that 
can get "bipartisan support" in the Senate, and he is not even considering 
anything as bold or effective as a constitutional amendment to force these 
corporate behemoths out of our elections. Instead, he's lamely offering a 
patchwork of regulatory fixes designed to cover up this theft of political 
power from actual people - fixes that corporate lawyers and lobbyists will 
riddle with loopholes. 

To get remedies that work, We the People will have to take direct grassroots 
action. Already, three major national coalitions have formed to retrieve our 
democratic authority from the court and its corporate clients: 
MoveToAmend.org, FreeSpeechForPeople.org and FixCongressFirst.org. Let's get 
connected and get moving. 

© 2010 Creators.com 

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