i thought this seemed appropriate~

The Real Thing: Democracy as a Contact Sport
By Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman

A couple weeks ago, we received an invitation
to attend an event at the
Library of Congress.

Coca-Cola was about to make an "historic
contribution" to the Library of
Congress, and the Library, and Coca-Cola,
were inviting reporters to cover
the event. We accepted the invitation.

We learned from the morning papers that the
"historic contribution" was a
complete set of 20,000 television commercials
pushing Coca-Cola into the
American digestive system.

Remember the one where the kid hands
Pittsburgh Steeler Mean Joe Greene
his bottle of Coke, and in return, Mean Joe
tosses the kid his football
jersey? Or what about on a hilltop in Italy
where the folks start sing
"I'd like to buy the world a Coke and keep it company"?

The event was at the Great Hall of the Thomas
Jefferson Building -- named
after the Thomas Jefferson who, in 1816,
wrote: "I hope we shall crush in
its birth the aristocracy of our monied
corporations which dare already to
challenge our government to a trial of
strength, and bid defiance to the
laws our country."

Anyway, we pull up at the appointed hour
(7:15 p.m. on November 29, 2000)
at the Thomas Jefferson building, and there's
a traffic jam created by
stretch limousines blocking the entrance.

In addition to lowly reporters, the 400 or so
guests included ambassadors,
members of Congress, corporate chieftains and
other dignitaries. Good
thing we dressed up.

The Main Hall is this absolutely stunning
room, with marble staircases. A
string quartet is playing. Waiters are
serving Coke in classic bottles.
The food is fabulous -- lamb chops, trout,
Peking duck. We rub shoulders
with the Ambassador from Burma.

The "aristocracy of our monied corporations,"
as Jefferson put it, had
taken over the place, and Coca-Cola wanted to
make sure that everybody
knew it.

After all, Coke could have just donated the
ads to the Library and left it
at that. But this wasn't about Coke's
largesse. It was about public
relations -- whether the public would view
the company as a racist company
(Coke had just agreed to pay $192.5 million
to settle allegations that it
routinely discriminated against black
employees in pay, promotions and
performance evaluations) or a junk food
pusher (consuming large quantities
of sugared Coca-Cola has led to ours being
one of the most overweight
generations in history) -- or instead, a
generous contributor to the
Library of Congress.

James Billington, the Librarian of Congress,
was called on to deliver good
things to Coke, and he did. He turned over
the keys of the Main Hall to
Coke, and Coke decked the place out with its
logo, stitched in red beside
the logo of the Library of Congress.
Television sets were placed
throughout the hall, the better for the
Ambassadors and members of the
Democratic Leadership Council to check out
the commercials.

Billington was selling the soul of the
library to one of the world's most
powerful corporations. In addition to the
ads, Coke was establishing a
fellowship at the Library for the study of
"culture and communication" --
one fellow will receive $20,000 a year for
the next five years.

Gary Ruskin, director of Commercial Alert,
was outside the event,
protesting. "It is not the proper role of the
taxpayer-financed Library of
Congress to help promote junk food like
Coca-Cola to a nation that is
suffering skyrocketing levels of obesity,"
Ruskin said. "It is crass
commercialism for James Billington to degrade
Jefferson's library and
founding ideals into a huckster's backdrop."

But without shame, Billington introduced Doug
Daft, the president of
Coca-Cola, who said that "Coca-Cola has
become an integral part of
people's lives by helping to tell these
stories." Nothing about profits.
Nothing about overweight kids. Nothing about racism.

After Daft spoke, the room went dark, and the
ads ran on the television
screens. Nostalgia swept the room. When the
ads were finished, the lights
went back on and the crowd cheered.

About 80 high school students, dressed in
Coca-Cola red sweaters, filled
the marble staircases and sang -- "I want to
buy the world a Coke." Again,
the crowd cheered.  Doug Daft, standing
downstairs, came back to the
microphone to continue his statement. We were
upstairs at this point, and
we looked down at him and asked, in a loud
voice -- "Why are you using a
public library to promote a junk food product?"

The room went quiet. Library of Congress
police charged up the marble
staircase. Doug Daft put his hand to his ear
and shouted back to us: "What
did you say?"

In a louder voice, we shouted back: "Why are
you using a public
institution to promote a junk food product?"

The next thing we know, we are on the ground.
The Library of Congress
police had tackled us. Again, the crowd
cheered -- not for our question,
but for the tackle.

We were dragged downstairs, past the
Ambassador from Burma, and hauled
outside, where police officers from the
District of Columbia were waiting
for us.

Out of the Thomas Jefferson building came
running a man from Coke. "This
is a private event," the man from Coke told
the police. "I'm from
Coca-Cola."

At first, the police wanted nothing to do
with the man from Coke. But the
man from Coke insisted. They huddled.

Apparently, the man from Coke didn't want us
arrested for asking an
obvious question. Apparently, the man from
Coke didn't want a public
trial. The man from Coke was standing up for
our First Amendment rights to
ask his boss a question.

The police said we were to leave the grounds.
And we weren't to come back.
Ever.


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).


--
The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver.

To join or quit silver-list or silver-digest send an e-mail message to: 
[email protected]  -or-  [email protected]
with the word subscribe or unsubscribe in the SUBJECT line.

To post, address your message to: [email protected]
Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html
List maintainer: Mike Devour <[email protected]>