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Whose Rights?

A new Supreme Court decision promotes corporate rights at the expense of the rights of citizens. What happens when the legal structure itself stands in the way of democracy?
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Supreme Court building, photo by dbking

In Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, the U.S. Supreme Court found that corporations have the right to contribute money to federal campaigns.

Photo by dbking

Today’s U.S. Supreme Court decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission—giving corporations the ability to spend money directly to influence federal elections under the Constitution’s First Amendment—was inevitable. It represents a logical expansion of corporate constitutional “rights”—which include the rights of persons which have been judicially conferred upon corporations. “Personhood” rights mean that corporations possess First Amendment rights to free speech, along with a litany of other rights that are secured to persons under the federal Bill of Rights.

The expansion of corporate rights and privileges under the law has been deliberate, beginning nearly two hundred years ago with the Dartmouth decision in which the Supreme Court ruled that private corporations had rights that municipal corporations—governments composed of “we the people”—did not.

For the past two centuries, new court decisions have only expanded corporate rights and privileges.  For those who think that the way to stem this tide is to find the perfect lawsuit, stop looking. It doesn’t exist, for there is no magic bullet.

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Video: As corporate power grows, what can citizens do to protect democracy?

Rather, in order to reverse decisions like Citizens United, the whole concept of corporate “rights”—and the way they interfere with the exercise of rights by people, communities, and nature—must be examined. And, it’s not simply that corporations have “personhood” rights. It goes well beyond that.

Today’s structure of law gives corporations a spectrum of legal and constitutional rights which they routinely wield against people, communities, and nature. Corporations have more rights, for example, than the communities in which they seek to do business. They can and do use those rights to lobby Congress, impact elections, and to decide for us what we eat, whether mountaintops are blown off or not, whether there are fish in the oceans, and on and on. Their constitutional and other legal rights, together with their wealth, guarantee that they can define the debates that lead to the adoption of new laws—and often write the laws themselves.

Thus the context for understanding today’s decision is that we have a minority set of corporate interests, empowered by government to wield their rights against a majority. It is the history of this nation. The abolitionists, the suffragists, and the civil rights movement all built movements of people in order to drive rights (for slaves, for women, for African Americans) into law—which necessarily meant eliminating rights for a minority, such as the slaveholder. In the end, it is our constitutional structure of law that purposefully places the rights of property and commerce over the rights of people, communities, and nature. History shows that strong peoples' movements can make change by changing the legal structure itself.

Barnstead kids, photo by Channing Johnson for YES! Magazine
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Barnstead, New Hampshire was the first town in the nation to ban corporate water mining.

In some ways, the Citizens United ruling is merely part of a predetermined destiny set by a 1700s constitutional structure that placed greater priority on the rights of property and commerce than on the rights of people and nature. Reversing Citizens United means reversing that constitutional legacy.

Today, to those who recognize that we do not have democracy when corporations located thousands of miles away are making decisions about our communities instead of us, who recognize that we cannot have sustainability so long as corporations are able to decide how clean our air and water can be, who recognize that we’ll never have true health care reform so long as corporations have greater access to our elected representatives than the people who voted for them—to those people, today’s decision should be understood as just another brick in the wall, another step down a path that will only continue unless and until a real movement for the rights of people, communities, and nature is built. That is the work we are doing. We hope you will join us.


Thomas LinzeyMari MargilThomas Linzey and Mari Margil wrote this article for YES! Magazine, a national, nonprofit media organization that fuses powerful ideas with practical actions. Thomas is executive director, cofounder, and chief legal counsel and Mari is associate director of the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund (CELDF), a public interest law firm that has worked with municipalities to question whether corporate “rights” can coexist with the democratic rights of communities to local self-government. Through the adoption of local, binding laws, these communities are pioneering a new structure of law which does not recognize the rights and privileges of corporations.

Interested?
Spokane Considers Community Bill of Rights :: Thousands of people voted to protect nine basic rights, ranging from the right of the environment to exist and flourish to the rights of residents to have a locally based economy and to determine the future of their neighborhoods. 

YES! Magazine encourages you to make free use of this article by taking these easy steps. Linzey, T., Margil, M. (2010, January 21). Whose Rights?. Retrieved July 29, 2010, from YES! Magazine Web site: http://www.yesmagazine.org/people-power/whose-rights. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons License

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Reader Comments

corporate plutocracy..

Posted by margaret at Jan 25, 2010 06:51 PM
can someone explain to me what the value of voting is as our representatives are bought and sold by corporations?

whose rights

Posted by debra derella cheren at Jan 25, 2010 06:51 PM
I am feeling dishearten with this legislation,the Corporations are controlling everything now. The DVD the Corporation is one to see, it parallels corporation as a psychopath that does not take the Whole into consideration. There needs to be caps on Corporations contributions and true political reform will not happen till we stop the way the money comes into the system. Europe and abroad only allows a small campaign budget for candidates. We as conscious consumers can make our point by being discerning on what we purchase. Use your w and let it shine!

Debra Derella-Cheren
Chief Inspiration Officer
Sage DC, Inc.
http://bethelightbetheone.com

Corporate Citizenship

Posted by John Ellis at Jan 25, 2010 06:59 PM
Yes, we don't need corporations. We'll all go back to farming and hunting for our basic needs, rocks and sticks for tools. How would you feel if you were taxed and not only couldn't vote but couldn't even express your opinions on proposals that affect your very existence. Get rid of them, you don't need'em. You say they've been in control since the 1700s, yet they had nothing to do with the abolishment of slavery, gender and racial equality, etc. How can that be? Corporations are owned and run by people, just like the groups you represent, the difference is they generate jobs which produce real goods and services. You have a place in the world but you're barking at the wrong tree, be specific, in your attacks. If something is wrong address it but stop damning every corporation as bad. Without them you wouldn't enjoy what you do. Make them be good citizens, don't condemn them to death. You make them pay taxes, let them at least express opinions in a way that counts.

Corporations are destructive.

Posted by mpx at Jan 26, 2010 11:20 AM
The major reason that human-based societies can exist succesfully for so long is that generally, at least within a society, most of the humans give ohters right to live, let them be. Not true with the corporations! Corporations are working heavily to destroy other corporations, so called "competitors", by either driving them to bankrupcy and so a cessation of existance, or simply "eating" them via a buyout. This destructive nature of corporations means a human-like system of them will not work.

Corporate Peoplehood

Posted by Michael Rogers at Mar 15, 2010 06:54 PM
I wonder if the above people are still living in their houses and driving around as they please. Very few of us are willing to go back to hunter/gather bands. Will those willing to be the ones to die to revert back to the old carrying capacity of the Earth, please raise your hands! I, for one, do not volunteer my children, or my family.

Corporations are just tools. They are neither good, nor evil. They are like a hammer -- you can build a home with them, or bash someone's skull in.

We need to look instead at how they are structured. The problem with corporations is not that they are big, but that they are not democratic. The democratization of capital is the great movement of our generation.

In 1770, a handful of people dreamed that a nation could be the embodiment of a people -- at the time they seemed naive at best, and at worst mad, but we are still enjoying the abundance of that dream today. If you doubt that, then let me tell you what living under a monarchy was really like.

Yes, Citizen's United v. FEC is indeed a corporate coup d'etat, but instead of trying to fight the body of law that established corporate personhood, let's use it and create corporate peoplehood. Strong, powerful, profitable corporations that are of the people, by the people, and for the people. Harnessing the engine of capitalism to drive the needs of community.

New, practical thinking is needed to address this critical issue. Knee jerk anti corporate rants do not serve us well. Sumpeople.org is a newly formed organization that is trying to build a framework for a collaborative economy that can be deeply sustainable, abundant, just, and loving. Come be a greater part!

We are at the apex of opportunity. New web based tools allow for non-hierarchical, sophisticated, effective, collaborative models that never before have been possible in the fossil history of life. Let us seize this moment, our moment, for the sake of our children unto the
seventh generation and beyond.

We must invent the future ourselves, no one else will do it for us, especially the existing institutions of power.

We are the people, the time is now!

Michael Rogers

David Korten's new book: 3 Ways to Get It Before It Hits Stores

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