Progressive Populism for the 21st Century

Populismo Progresista para el Siglo XXI!!!
JANUARY 27, 2012 1:36PM

Corporate America vs. The Mafia

Rate: 31 Flag

 

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Don Corleone, fictional gangster

 

Mafia capos, Dons and footsoldiers once went to jail for buying judges and politicians, for charging people more than 10% interest on loans, and for running widespread gambling and prostitution operations. When business was hurt by would-be competitors they would wage miniature wars that resulted in hundreds of deaths, although these were mostly confined to fellow gangsters and their criminal cohorts. 

 

America waged a massive, progressive campaign against the corruption and evil  that the Mafia, or "Cosa Nostra" perpetrated against the "commonweal" - - our shared democratic community and society. People such as Robert F. Kennedy and Estes Kefauver led the way and secured hundreds of indictments against the shadowy figures of America's "untoucheable" gangland.  

Today, the "untoucheables" of Corporate America contribute billions of dollars to candidates (but this isn't called a bribe). They wine and dine many judges and sometimes buy them gifts. They often charge more than 30% interest on standard credit cards and other loan instruments (compared to the mafia's notorious loanshark rate of 10%). They engage in the widespread patronage and financing of million dollar call-girl agencies (to entertain clients) and they are pushing for the widespread legalization of gambling and state lotteries across the land. Indeed, when they're not pushing for the legalization of casinos, they're turning our stock and commodity exchanges into larger and more volatile versions of Caesar's Palace, the Belagio and Circus Circus. At least when people played the numbers racket with the mob in South Philly, they only used their own money. When Corporate America plays the derrivatives market they gamble with other people's money, even if it comes from a fragile pension fund.

All of this, with the blanket approval of prostituted legislators who rubber-stamp their every act of greed, blind to all acts of financial avarice, deaf and indifferent to the cries of the 99%. 

When Corporate America's interests are harmed abroad they use their corrupt influence in Washington, D.C. and countless state capitals across the nation to wage aggressive, imperialistic wars across the globe. These wars are far larger and more violent than the petty gangland wars of Al Capone. They result in total devastation and the deaths of tens, if not hundreds of thousands of people. In Vietnam, millions died. 

Who is responsible for more misery?

Who is responsible for more trespasses against personal and private property?

Who is responsible for greater degrees of wanton political corruption and blatant bribery?

Who is responsible for more bloodshed across the world?

Who's worse? The Mafia or Corporate America?

 

Lloyd Blankfein, CEO Goldman Sachs

Lloyd Blankfein, the "untoucheable" Godfather-CEO of Goldman Sachs and real-life "bankster," responsible for the destruction of the American economy. He exerts a more corrupting, cancerous influence upon American politics than Meyer Lanskey, Bugsy Siegel, Lucky Lucciano and John Gotti combined. He is a "bankster." He's smiling, because he has our money and knows he'll never have to give it back. 

 

Do we need another Kefauver-like commission to investigate acts of widespread Corporate conspiracy, racketeering and corruption across our nation? Is it high-time we establish such a committee and give it sweeping powers to investigate, prosecute and punish corporate misconduct?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Senate_Special_Committee
_to_Investigate_Crime_in_Interstate_Commerce

 

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Corporate America, hands down.
I have longed contended that "savages" are far more civilized than we are. Or as I put it in plain language "even the most ignorant savage knows better than to shit in his own nest."

Sorry, my lawyer friend, but I believe on reason for our troubles is our reliance on Written Law rather than Natural Law. Both God and Moses saw where that lead. Or to put it another way, try explaining to an "ignorant savage" that something can be both immoral and legal.

Lloyd Blankein and Goldmine Sux are perfect examples of that folly, as is Mitt Romney and Baintheass Captial.
Corporate America is far worse than the Mafia. The Mafia had little or no influence in higher echelons of government, but corporations exert a direct influence at the state and federal level which the Cosa Nostra could only dream of. Look at the chairman of Obama's outside economic advisors, the CEO of GE, Jeffrey Immelt; GE gets tax breaks so generous it pays zero taxes in some years, yet it continues to move its operations overseas, and Immelt is the guy Barack uses as an economic advisor.

The more I think about it, the more I need to restate the earlier part of this comment: Corporations don't just exert undue influence on our government; in many ways they ARE our government. That is no less true under Democratic administrations than under Republican ones.
Italian Americans are laughing !

:-) / r
It seems to me that the Mafia did a lot of the things corporate America did, but they catered to a working class clientele. The gambling, prostitution, money laundering, wars, etc...were all small scale and concerned working folks. Corporate America does the same thing, but its much bigger, more violent, more damaging and destructive. Even worse, it has the total sanction of the US government.
The thing is, these guys take no chances. They cannot get hurt, they play with the houses (taxpayers) money and either get richer or pass the loss down to us. We are nothing but cash cows to them, until we are broke then they throw us away and find new suckers.
I suppose the key is to stop being cattle, and to start becoming a predator, like they are.
Let's do the comparison between Corporations, Government and the Mafia.

If either the Mafia or "Corporate America" tries to force me to do something against my will by threatening to kidnap and imprison me or mine, physically harm me, or steal money from me, I am perfectly within my rights to defend myself, with violence if necessary. That's why the mafia deals in "victimless" crimes-( things people want and government says they can't have), and corporations use their Huge advertising budgets to dupe, convince or cajole us into doing what they want.

The government, on the other hand, just sends around a thug with a gun, and I can't even resist him without becoming a "bad" person.

I've never actually had the opportunity to have a shootout with a mafia soldier or a corporate bodyguard, have you?
BUT, have any of us here NOT been offered the opportunity to "shoot it out" with some cranked up Barney Fife in one sort of Government police uniform or another ? (over a traffic stop?)- even if we obviously are not armed and had no idea what the hell they wanted ??
So far I've been smart enough to decline the opportunity.

Yes, regulate corporations. Destroy the mafia. But don't tell me either could exist at all without the corruption of the only people empowered to ENFORCE--your government.

Give me dealings with honest thieves anytime, over the "service" of petty (and not so petty) tyrants in government.
Token: but isn't the US government currently a tool of corporations? Its like a subordinate committee, no?
Absolutely it is- the government has always been full of tools- that's why we keep it from having too much power- so that no one group of people can use it to oppress- currently it is Multinational Corporations ( Mom and Pop and local are a different group entirely) mostly of the Money Changing profession- (speculators) Crony Capitalism at its finest!- but you can't take away the power from the "The Corporations" because the only Power they have is their ability to BUY politicians- who are ALWAYS for sale.
Oh, and what makes you think the Mafia isn't involved in the govt? It most certainly is involved in Wall Street. Can't prove it, but I'm willing to bet that's one reason AIG continued to pay a million dollars a month to Joe Cassano, former head of the Financial Products Division aka the London Casino, even after they fired him. A million a month buys a lot of silence.

Then there's Las Vegas casino maggot -- I mean magnate -- on second thought, I was right he first time -- Adelson financing Gingrich to the tune of $10 million in pocket change. Anybody want to try and convince me that money is all "clean"?
As a matter of fact, my cousin knows somebody who is a high school drop out, but sells stocks for drug dealers, mutual funds, so they can launder their money. Wall Street loves doing this, I am told.
Yes, but then I always suspect that analogies between corporate behavior and mafia-style behavior are predicated on some asssumption about the inevitability of corruption and predation--a kind of modern "Works and Days," sun comes up, sun goes down, and this sort of thing will be with us forever and ever...amen. No.

It's a conscious choice, even if the behavior fits in to a very particular, unconscious social-organic, a way of producing society and economy--capital, in this case--and the limitations, the horizons, provided within it. So I guess I'm against this kind of comparison, truthful as it may be, because the real point, I think, is to see how they really ARE businessmen, and what they're engaged in really IS business, of the garden-variety kind (as big and overbloated as it might seem), and yet these are the results: misery, predation, crisis, more predation, etc. If it's predictable, it's because that's the way the social-organic is set up. And it can be set up differently. Criminality may exist under any system, but we are certainly capable of consciously controlling economy and the reproduction of society. We just have to try...and one way to start is to stop providing excuses wrapped in naturalizing objectifications, the objectifications of the ideology of capital.

Remember, the guys who blew up Merril Lynch called themselves the "mob"...they love that sort of comparison, they revel in it because it suggests that they, and their awful, anti-social behavior, are somehow irreducible and inexorable.

Rated.
I wish the rules of the mob extended to the corporate world. I'd love for Richard Kuklinski to pay a visit to so many of these guys.
What Boko said.

Also, Token; you say on one hand that we need to keep government weak so its powers can't be co-opted by predatory private entities such as corporations or the Mafia, but on the other hand you admit that such private entities are unscrupulous enough to take over government. It's difficult to see what, if any, logic there is in such circular reasoning. If private entities could be trusted to be benign, weak government might indeed be preferable, but since by your own admission they aren't benign, weak government sounds to me like a way to give them a free hand to do as they will. How does any of that square with common sense?
Or, to put it another way, the harm done by corporations isn't empowered by a strong government. The exact opposite is true; corporations are allowed to work their will by a government subverted, weakened in fact, by corruption and an electorate so deluded and ignorant that it believes the lies pushed by libertarian and corporatist sloganeering. Note: libertarian and corporatist sloganeering are ultimately the same thing, designed as they are by corporofascists to give predatory private entities carte blanche to behave as they will.
[r] I don't understand the "vs". didn't they merge long ago? c'mon! banks launder money for drug cartels. now with Citizens United the mafia oligarchs don't need the proverbial middle people. oligarchs have a super-powered legal but unethical assassin now, the Prez of the US. Millionaires club of Congress, how did they get their millions? hmmmmm. pimped out by the not so nice and not so legal.
~nodding~ Yeah, Corporate America!! With the Mafia/Crime Bosses, you pretty much know what you're going to get!! With Corporations, not so much!!!
@Nanatehay

Let's get something straight. Neither the corporations nor the government (nor the mafia) exist to be benign. Theoretically, the government exists to carry out those duties for our nation that we cannot carry out for ourselves.

In fact, Public "Servants" like Obama take our money at the point of a gun and distribute it to their cronies in Chase, Solyndra, Fiskar, GE ,George Soros, etc etc etc. These cronies then kick part of it back to their buddies in government via campaign contributions and other forms of plunder, so that the government thieves can convince the credulous among us to vote to keep concentrating our wealth and power in one place so that it is worth the effort to steal it. ( Kind of like the weasel conning you to keep all your eggs in one basket, and hire the weasel to guard it- oh yeah, and the weasel also gets the power to go out and murder any hen who won't contribute. )

If the government did not have the power to redistribute wealth and power, it would not be worth buying congressmen. The “Evil” of corporations and the amount of damage they can do on their own is laughable- they only have the power that they can buy from the government. Do you actually think that any more authority to regulate would be turned against The Corporations? Who the hell have you just been telling us OWNS the government? They only have that power because we have allowed it to be concentrated among our rulers in washington

Think about it. When was the last time a corporation sent a tank down the main street of a US city to break up an OWS demonstration? A corporate tank would have been Molotov cocktailed within minutes. Mafia? Sure. The smallest unit of government ( city/state) suffices to control corporations- ( think not? How about if new York city decided to close Wall street? Think they couldn't- not from a legal standpoint, from an Enforcement standpoint.

The “Corporaate” hobgoblin that seeks to confuse the Multinational MegaCorp with the Mom and Pop auto dealership, is just so much idiocy. NEITHER sort of corporation has any more power than it can buy from the politician's sale of public power. The obvious answer to this, is not giving the politician any extra power to sell, and making it a death penalty offense to misuse that which he is given.

I repeat. Corporations do not HAVE power to co-erce. Only the government does. The Corporations have Money to buy that power- if we let the government have any to sell. The problem is not so much the corporations who would buy power- there are always going to be buyers-

The problem is in those who sell power- and they should be accountable for their use of what small power they are allowed on pain of death. Take care of controlling the government that sells power, and the problem of the corporations, (or any other entity) who buys power takes care of itself.
RW, I think this is truly a very fine piece of work. But it's been a vey long day and I just got in here.
I will certainly get back to this.
Great great thoughts on this comparison. Love it..grinning...
As long as our mind-set is focused on having "somebody else" - politicians, Mafia, corporations, etc., run our countries we'll have corruption. The inescapable fact is that "Those Who Rule Do So In THEIR OWN Best Interests" - not ours.

When we smarten up and learn to manage the nation ourselves we'll get out from under this corruption. Until then? Whine, cry, bitch, march, and occupy all you want. It isn't going to change one whit.
.
Do we need another Kefauver-like commission to investigate acts of widespread Corporate conspiracy, racketeering and corruption across our nation? I think its high-time we establish such a committee and give it sweeping powers to investigate, prosecute and punish corporate misconduct.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Senate_Special_Committee
_to_Investigate_Crime_in_Interstate_Commerce
Brilliant post. At least the Mafia had a code of honor.
ultimately this is a powers debate, which leads predictably either to syndicalism, or to other "strong from below" solutions, both of which seem equally unattractive. there is no limit to the degeneracy of capital because it starts with a degenerate basis: exploitation. and never departs from it, despite all its twistings and turnings. the fact that the logic of exploitation no longer works, that the neoliberal system can no longer pay people the price of their labor, even according to its own amputated, surplus-labor-subtracted criteria, does not phase its ideologues in the least. they simply prey upon people more. so...strictly speaking...there is only predatory capital. to be a progressive in this context means you want to get farther into the degenerate future faster. to be a radical means you want this system to end. to be a marxist means you want their heads.

"Anti-capitalism is not enough anymore. We have to go beyond..."-A. Negri
I think in terms of loyalty and a "code of conduct" all things being equal Corporations of America are worse! rated~!
What Stu Pot said.

Also, Token, you say:

"The “Evil” of corporations and the amount of damage they can do on their own is laughable- they only have the power that they can buy from the government"

Are you serious? Corporations very much have "the power to coerce" and that power is increased in the absence of strong government, not decreased it. By your "logic," the ills caused by the private sector such as a poisoned environment, child labor, lethal work environments, and etc. would never have occured in this country without the aid of government, yet the truth is that those things were only successfully ameliorated by the direct intervention of government. The problem with libertarian thinkers such as yourself is that the term "libertarian thinker" is a contradiction in terms.
Please add "by" in between "decreased" and "it." sigh
Nanny

let's see if I can make this simple enough so that you can understand it. I can sue a corporation, and if they haven't been able to buy the courts, I can collect. Ever try to sue the government? In the absence of government force, the coal miners in Matewan would have killed off the Greedy anti union thugs and taken over the mines. That the coal companies were able to buy the intervention of Government troops was the deciding factor. No government troops, no coal company victory.

You argue like the nine year old boy who twists words into rhymes and says "Nyah Nyah, I won't hear you, I won't hear you!- while making outrageous claims about what you say I believe.

To BE Clear - Government, Corporations, and Mafia all have greedy bastards who would sell their mother for a buck. There are also "Honorable Men" in each ( I'm gonna have to take Mario Puzo's word for the Mafia) The Mafia and the Corporations are both in the position of having to negotiate with me in order to take my money, and it's fine for me to shoot back if it comes to it. The government is the only one that claims a MORAL authority to take from me. The government is the only one I need worry about coming after me with actual co-ercive force- ( Mafia, no worry, I shoot back- Corporations? Have to go through the government ( courts, remember)- or I can shoot them (corporate thugs) too. )

I realize that mostly I am preaching the art of shaving to horses, when i answer you, but hey, it's amusing.
Token: when the centralized government of the ancient Roman Empire collapsed, and there was basic anarchy in Medieval Italy, the wealthiest families basically did whatever they wanted. They owned the means of production, namely, large plantations and tracts of land, which were the functional equivalent of modern corporations, which were the source of their familial/noble wealth.

Despite the fact that Roman Law ostensibly still governed the land, nobody listened to it, because there was no Roman Senate and no legions to enforce it. Instead, the private contractual law between nobles and their retainers (called feudalism) became the law of the land. This really wasn't public law, or state-based law. But private contractual based law.

And most of the wars during this time were private wars with private armies fighting over private familial ownership of private property (land). It had nothing to do with states or the power of government. We wouldn't see that until the late Renaissance with the birth of modern France and tiny city states in Italy.

The Orsinni, Colonna, Medici, Borgias. They all did this in Italy. Private wars. Private Armies. Feudal law (as opposed to public, governmental law).

A strong state need not exist for oppression and tyranny to reign. The vacuum can be filled by nobles, men who write their own rules and do what they please by fiat in an atmosphere of total anarchy and abandon. Just ask Cesare Borgia.
Strong nobles can also seize a government and use it as an instrument to perpetuate their own nobleman-based tyranny. But don't think for an instant that they need such tools, in order to exact tyranny or injustice upon people.

Slavery was a cruel and unjust system in the American south. Yet it happened during a time of zero government regulation. Indeed, the slave-holders were private property holders. Despite this, many of them ran their plantations with a viciousness and tyranical bloodlust, a wanton disregard for human rights that would make Ivan the Terrible blush.

These were PRIVATE actors who abused slaves. Not the state. And yet it happened.

In a vacuum, men will still be brutes. We must balance brute against brute, so that the equalize and cancel out eachothers' nasty tendencies, and minimize the chance that they may brutalize the citizenry in the process.
Nanny? I guess you zinged me there! Golly, you're the first person to ever use my screen name so cleverly! :P

Anyway, leaving your extreme wittiness aside for a moment, you can sue a corporation WHY? Oh yeah, because of a little something called the Rule of Law. And is the Rule of Law a thing maintained by corporations? Nah, it's maintained by governments, Token, so I guess that, once again, you've demolished your own libertarian logic. Such as it is.

By the way, I have many relatives in West Virginia, and trust me, no one there except for fools has faith in the intention of the mining companies to do the right thing. To the extent that those companies ever have done the right thing, it's to the extent that they were coerced into doing so by the federal government, because the state government there is nothing more than a wholly-owned subsidiary of mining interests. States rights, yeah, one of the mantras of the "DC is Evil" crowd; that amounts to the rights of whatever private, corporate interests have control of any given state capital to fuck people over without interference from mean ol' Washington. Said interests, I must add, are private entities which are, of course, doing no more or no less than what any other private entities do, i.e., maximizing profits. That you place your faith in such entities is a measure of your own personal stupidity, not a measure of any innate proclivity on their part to do the right thing. You wanna talk about Matewan and coercive force, you mental midget, but your little spiel makes no mention of the Baldwin Felts Detective Agency. Ever heard of the Baldwin Felts, Token? Privately employed and privately paid thugs of privately owned mining interests, that's what they were, and that's what caused the problems in Matewan that day; representatives of local government decided they were going to stand up against the aims of private entities who were exploiting the local population so they shot those privately employed motherfuckers dead in the street, and good riddance. Hahahahahaha!
RW

last comment tonight-

Don't do the "All or nothing thing" on me, you're too smart for that. Because we need a police force and courts to enforce civil law and a military force to defend us from foreign invaders, does not mean that we cede to the government our right and our duty to defend our selves- from the government gone awry if necessary.

Is it prudent to keep a police force necessary to keep bandits (corporate or otherwise) in check and enforce the decisions of justly constructed court? Yes, by all means.

Is it prudent to allow certain men to decide where they will distribute the largess of the government ( among there cronies) and no one to stop them because they control all "legitimate" force? No

Don't pretend that "small, limited government" means No government, or I'll decide it's as useless to discuss anything with you as it is with Nanny. ( which is to say, like discussing theology with a pit bull) Don't distort what I say. There is a place for government. There is a place for corporations.

If I remember my Roman history, the reason the Roman Empire fell in the first place was because they had degenerated from a Republic of fighting men into a Drunken orgy of Divine emperors and their courts ( Think Saddam Hussein) Kind of like we're doing - only here the Imperial Presidency has taken over.
Shoot, just noticed the nanny Goats remark-

let me see if i can come up with a comment witty enough for him to understand----

Ok Baaah! Baaaah Baaah !

( Just got the translation off of google English to goat)
I stand refuted by Token's barnyard noises, which of course serve as a perfect expression of libertarian *thought.* Nary a response about the Baldwin Felts privately owned thug company from ol' Token, nah, just a heartfelt "baaaah."
Never said a word about being "a Libertarian". I feel like the good guys at Matewan were the miners. Can't refute your logic. You have none. I simply observed that you ARE an obnoxious asshole who strokes himself off in great sweeps of mental masturbation, all the while crowing like a rooster, without bothering either to get his argument straight or read anything his opposition says. You still haven't any idea what I'm espousing, because you seem to be completely incapable of paying attention to anything except jerking off yourself and your playbuddies. It's closing time Nanny,
Go home.
The facts presented in the post are obviously true. But they have nothing novel in them. American history is glutted with this type of behavior. The Mafia was only a slight variation on standard business practices with harder edges. It's just, in these later decades, the small wiggle room that did exist is fast becoming an extinct item.

What puzzles me is who are the "we" who will suddenly become efficiently indignant to overthrow this master machine that is squashing civilization, and eventually, basic survivability on this planet that is being vandalized beyond the sustainability of life as we know it? This voracious complex is now in the evidently successful process of even destroying discussion on the internet of the problems with the suppression of information by legal forces and intimidation of comments. There is no effective "we" to do anything about it.
Token tells me to go home, yet he sidesteps the fact that the good guys at Matewan were working for GOVERNMENT and that the bad guys were working for PRIV ATE INTERESTS. How very antithetical to almost everything he's said here that is, but then that sort of contradiction is no more than I've learned to expect from him. Go home yourself, Token, to that special place you live where your personal ideology trumps anything resembling fact or logic.
nanatehay

Ok it's morning, and I really should just let you have the last word and forget about it. But--

Go Home wasn't an order, it was advice, as in you've worked yourself up into a "Tizzy" apparently.

The "good guys" at Matewan (and everywhere else) are those INDIVIDUALS who, for their own reasons and in their own conscience, decided they had put up with enough brutality by the Mine Owners and their detectives.

Sid Hatfield as Sheriff led them, In the confrontation between the Baldwin Felts thugs and the townspeople, most of the Baldwin Felts thugs were killed. (praise the Lord!)

Who was RIGHT? who knows- still a point of legality to be argued, and it is . Who had individual Justice and freedom on their side? the miners. Sid Hatfield was "government" only in that his neighbors looked to him for leadership.

The whole mess resulted in the battle of Blair mountain, where the miners forces were put down by federal troops.
So, what we have here is a perfect example of the federal government using it's overwhelming force to suppress the interests of the everyday citizen of the country, at the behest of the monied interests.

To hear my friends great grandfather tell it ( when I was growing up) they'd a whipped them Coal Barons and killed everylast one of their thugs, if the Federal Government hadn't intervened.

He may be right, and from what I hear, his cause was the JUST one.

It really irritates me when people insist that because I believe in the individual liberty and dignity of each individual person, I must be a "libertarian"- close, maybe- no cigar. As to Government? the small town county government was absolutely right and did it's job- Because it was composed of freedom loving INDIVIDUALS fighting for the lives of their families.

When you say "Private", you mean non-government.
The mafia is ( at least nominally ) non- government.
I am non- government. When I get myself elected to the city council around here, I will then be "government" My interest, and the interests I represent will remain "Private" in that I will still remain an advocate of the rights and dignity of the individual.

If I were elected President, I would still be "non-government", because i believe, as did the Founding fathers before us, in the rights and dignity of each individual to not be oppressed by ANY conglomeration of his neighbors, whether they call themselves General Motors ( How's that mandate to buy a Chevy volt doing? Didn't know there was one? who do you think paid for the development of them? that's right it was your 3 greats grandkids-) or Congress ( DEA, IRS, etc. etc) or just "The Mob".

When you've gotten to where you can track the interest in INDIVIDUAL freedom, dignity, and pursuit of happiness, across the hodgepodge of MOBS who control our "Elections" today, then you might understand my "politics".

Until then, open your ears and we'll discuss, otherwise all I see is a rabid pit bull who has been trained to bark to the tune of "Glory, Glory, Glory! Gott Mitt Uns!" ( Interesting footnote- Did you know that the warcry of the Jews of the Bible, "Emmanuel!", translates exactly as "Gott Mitt Uns!" ?
We all gott mittuns, even you communist atheists out there. Quit trying to show yours off for how fashionable they are , they all are just meant to keep us all warm, (ALL of us) Your barking just keeps us from concentrating on how best to patch the holes in them.
This makes me sick. I believe we need to clear out all current politicians, put 2 Joe Smoe's in office, require applications and let them do the hiring. Then we can all just start fresh. Or that plan will falter greatly and we'll end up worse off (which I don't see how it could get any worse)...
Well, I always had the suspicion that Countrywide was a Mafia front group. So, how can you tell the difference?
No we don’t need a Kefauver Committee we need a Pecora Commission but first we need to overturn the Citizens United decision or there will be no justice period! The mob got away with what they did because they owned all the judges and that vile little deviate J Edgar Hover. Corporate America now gets away with what it does because they own the Senate, the Congress, and another vile little deviate named Obama (deviates can always be locked in by blackmail when monetary incentive fails). The Citizens United Decision makes this all perfectly legal. Since the great Dubya ushered out his reign by having his ivory league ghoul Paulson initiate the looting of the western world Banksters ( led by Lloyd Blankfeind, or you can just call him Blankcheck, and the new Bush Dynasty Golem Timothy Geithner) have stolen 26 trillion dollars, as the NY Lotto guy says, that’s 26 trillion dollars, almost twice what the deficit now is.

http://johnhively.wordpress.com/2011/12/05/breakdown-of-the-26-trillion-the-federal-reserve-handed-out-to-save-rich-incompetent-investors-but-who-purchase-political-power/
Horses heads
in your beds,
cars blowing up
corporate dudes
"say whats up"
traveled down
the long long
road
"whats up Joe"
nuthin
no dough.
I've always thought the RICO laws should be used against Corporate America. Some economist once said, "There is a very fine line between free enterprise and criminal enterprise."
At least, the Mafia is reported to have a code of "ethics," however perverted or breached in the practice. Its code of ethics includes a duty of loyalty and fidelity to one another as "sworn members." The code is very specific and penalties for its breaches have historically been severe and exacted swiftly.

There is no such recognition of a comparable duty by corporate American to its employees, to the public at large or to the environment. A corporation's only fiduciary duty is to its shareholders and that duty is considered fulfilled when companies maximize profits, obtain the lowest possible cost of production, and minimize legal oversight, regulation and taxes to the maximum extent possible. The New York Times articles about Apple corporation offer a case in point.

Besides the need for public outrage, criminal indictments against corporate executives when shown to be engaged in wrong-doing, and concerted political action - all three of which appear to be lacking - it would take a multiplicity of initiatives to reign in corporate greed and restore a proper balance in the U.S. economy between the public interest and the needs of the few.

One requirement that is crucial in any such endeavor is the need to reform U.S. labor laws to enable all employees to unionize easily and bargain collectively without fear of employer retaliation, onerous obstacles to unionization, or being undercut by "right-to-work" laws and similar anti-union legislation, all of which have upset the power relationship between companies and their employees. The U.S. has the weakest labor laws in the Western world. All of the evidence shows that there is a positive correlation between economic prosperity and income equality when unions e flourished and an inverse correlation as unionization has declined.

A second closely related problem is the legal fiction of "at-will" employment - a legal principle that allows employers s to freely change the conditions of work or to discharge non-unionized employees for any reason or no reason, provided it is not discriminatory because of protected class. This legal fiction was created in U.S. state courts during the heyday of "Social Darwinism" and has never been revisited. Imposing by statute a fiduciary duty to employees on corporations by statute to share a fiduciary duty to their employees would be one additional step to perhaps slow this country''s race to the bottom.

A third requirement is to create an industrial policy similar to those that have been developed in all European countries as well as in China and other countries. China, after having identified industries it wants to develop for its future, has successfully provided massive subsidies to lure U.S. manufacturers to that country.

Fourth, China and other countries gave been permitted to impose tariffs to protect certain industries that they have identified as crucial to their prosperity against foreign competition. By contrast, the political rhetoric in this country continues to argue - contrary to the evidence - that government is the problem and not the solution. The U.S. not only lacks an industrial policy but a "fair trade" policy.

Fifth, Germany is prosperous, among other reasons, because its unionized workers participate in all corporate decision making along with management. The German work council model of co-determination - "Mitbestimmung" - has been created by statute. This model has enabled German companies to increase their market share and resist out-sourcing to the third world while paying its highly skilled workers hourly rates - often up to $47 automobile plants -that are unimaginable in the U.S. Is there as lesson to be learned form the German experience?

Lastly, the cooperative movement holds out promise. Workers cooperatives, food cooperatives, housing cooperatives, educational cooperatives and medical cooperatives, among others, are all pieces of viable model that can provide an alternative to the current incarnation of corporate capitalism that is concerned only with the economic well-being of the few, not the many.
I have heard that the Chinese character for "crisis" is the same one for "opportunity."

Perhaps this global crisis will give all of us Patriots, on the Right and Left alike, a great Godsend, century-task of winning the reins of government and changing our government, economy, society and way of like, for ourselves and those throughout the world, so that humanity can finally be free.

There are many ways to do this. The path will be hard, difficult and drawn-out. Occupy Wall Street and the Jasmine Revolution in the Middle East show us that elites don't like change, no matter how minor or how drastic the demands of the protestor.

Regardless, we must push the Establishment to the limit. There can be no turning back. Freedom or nothing. There can be no middle ground.
No contest--and they control the courts which are filled with Liberty University graduates--Being a crook has gone mainstream and is no longer looked down on.
I'll stick with importing olive oil, thank you very much. This business is not as lucrative as importing petroleum, but it can be just as satisfying as it still gives the boss a "power fix." Truth be told, both entities are organized and executed by psychopaths.
Thirty-percent is way to high a percent to pay on interests so I am for any way possible to lower credit card interest.
It's been kind of evident for a while that the future consists of a combination of "Robo Cop", "Blade Runner", and "Soylent Green". Why is it that fiction writers always manage to get it before everybody else?
some lawyers are like the mafia too; people have to pay protection money by expensive insurance of all kinds against law suit; lawyers are in the middle of everything and extact their cut

no offense if you are a lawyer; there are good and bad in all groups
We both know why it isn't called a bribe-

"Sometimes the law defends plunder and participates in it. Thus the beneficiaries are spared the shame and danger that their acts would otherwise involve. But how is this legal plunder to be identified? Quite simply. See if the law takes from some persons what belongs to them and gives it to the other persons to whom it doesn't belong. See if the law benefits one citizen at the expense of another by doing what the citizen himself cannot do without committing a crime." -- Frederic Bastiat

As is often quoted by multiple founding fathers, the greatest enemy this country will ever face will be amongst us. Internal.

The people who support political parties don't get it. Political parties are registered corporations. Corporate personhood and their freedom of expression, lobbying and money in government, create benefactors in the political parties. In other words, would we have a constitutional amendment to ban corporate personhood, the two political parties in this country would vanish. They are only able to keep a stranglehold on elections and put these incompetent dumbasses in front of us election after election because they are the benefactors of corporate personhood. The comingling of private, corporate money in politics is the very reason political parties exist. Otherwise, people elected to office would actually have to compete on merit. A meritocracy in government. Because they wouldn't be able to control who ran or keep independents off the ballots or outspend candidates who had compelling messages of merit and truth.

We need publicly funded elections and we need to ban corporate personhood. The entire political system as we know it would collapse. That includes both parties. Why would anyone ever run on a party platform without the benefits of endless money and rigging elections? They would run on their own merit. Cronyism and corruption have ensured only the most vile and willing to stomp on the face of their fellow man make it to the top of politics, corporate boardrooms, etc.

And, it is a self- reinforcing cycle. In other words, political corruption ensures only those most willing to bribe and manipulate get to the top of corporate ladders. Because, in order to be successful in big business, you have to be willing to rig the game through political bribes.

Our economy and our politics are a cesspool for one reason. Corruption.
Timing, but didn't political parties precede the birth of corporations? Isn't it natural for factions and coalitions to form in politics, groups of people who come together and work together on behalf of a common cause? Even for good causes?

Isn't this easier than forcing every political leader or politician to be isolated and atomized? Can't parties be helpful for a political leader?

For example, wasn't FDR and the New Deal facilitated by the Democratic Party? Would it have been harder to accomplish the reforms of the New Deal, without the Party apparatus that supported Roosevelt and his allies?
I mean, to make money, you need an organization. Even the smallest-scale entrepreneur needs an organization of some sort to be successful. A one-man show can only go so far. If he wants to change the world, he needs partners and allies and this means forming an LLC or some other form of business organization.

In warfare, the lone sniper, guerilla or terrorist is useless, unless he's part of a larger movement or military force. 100 random people committing acts of violence against the British Empire in 1770s America were not nearly as powerful as they could've been if they coordinated their actions or worked with George Washington and the Continental Army. This is why there are armies, guerrilla bands, platoons, etc...

There is something called a "collective action" problem. Atomized, isolated individuals are NEVER ENOUGH to overcome it. Even through swarming techniques, there needs to be some sort of independent organization that exists and some sort of loose hierarchy and command structure.

What you are proposing maximizes liberty, but at the same time, perpetuates slavery, because it ensures that millions of random, isolated individuals will never be able to work in concert with eachother.
Didn't Michael Corleone say to Kate "90% of the family's business is now legit?"