Print

Print


Unequal Uses for the Bill of Rights 
by: Thom Hartmann
Truthout
Berrett-Koehler Publishers
Serialized Book
9 August 2011 
http://www.truth-out.org/unequal-protection-unequal-uses-bill-rights/1312898624

Of the cases in this court in which the Fourteenth
Amendment was applied during its first fifty years after
its adoption, less than one half of one percent invoked
it in protection of the Negro race, and more than fifty
percent asked that its benefits be extended to
corporations.

- Justice Hugo Black, 1938

The statistic in this chapter's epigraph is sobering
indeed. It says corporations sought protection under the
Fourteenth Amendment a hundred times more often than did
the people it was intended to protect. And this is not a
victimless shift-there have been real and substantial
consequences. In the years following the Santa Clara
decision and the cases that referred to it, companies
have used their personhood rights in an amazing variety
of ways. What follows in this chapter is a small
selection.

First Amendment

Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. noted in
the landmark 1919 Shenck v. United States case that
shouting "Fire!" in a crowded theater does not
constitute free speech; the Bill of Rights guarantees
that a person's opinion can be expressed, not that there
are no limits on what one can do. But consider how this
fundamental freedom has been bent by corporations since
Santa Clara.

By claiming the same right as humans to express
themselves, companies won approval to spend whatever
they want on lobbyists in Washington. At one point there
was a full-time tobacco lobbyist for every two
legislators on Capitol Hill. As of 2005 there were
roughly 64 registered lobbyists for every member of
Congress, and 138 of them are former members of
Congress. Include state lobbyists, and there are more
than 60,000 (because of variations in state laws on what
is or isn't a lobbyist, and who and how they should
register, this may well be a significant underestimate:
nobody really knows the true number).1

As Jeffrey H. Birnbaum noted in the Washington Post in
June 2005, "The number of registered lobbyists in
Washington has more than doubled since 2000 to more than
34,750 while the amount that lobbyists charge their new
clients has increased by as much as 100 percent. Only a
few other businesses have enjoyed greater prosperity in
an otherwise fitful economy."2

He added that "lobbying firms can't hire people fast
enough" and that salaries started at $300,000 a year.
"Big bucks lobbying is luring nearly half of all
lawmakers who return to the private sector when they
leave Congress," Birnbaum noted, citing a study by
Public Citizen's Congress Watch. The situation has only
gotten worse since then.

And in a bizarre twist, during the administration of
George W. Bush more than a hundred very well-paid
lobbyists decided to forsake their big pay checks for,
relatively speaking, paltry Civil Service paychecks for
a year or two to become the actual regulators for the
agencies they used to lobby.

J. Steven Griles, for example, moved from a $585,000-
per-year paycheck as a lobbyist for oil and gas
interests to become the number two person in the
Department of the Interior, right under Interior
Secretary Gale Norton. The Department then opened 8
million acres of western lands for oil and gas
exploration and gave $2 million in no-bid contracts to
one of Griles's former clients-and Griles continued to
receive a four-year $284,000-per-year bonus from his
former employer.

Charles Lambert, a fifteen-year lobbyist for the meat
industry in its effort to block labeling and mad cow
disease investigations, went to work for the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA), where he officially
determined that mad cow disease wasn't a threat and
shouldn't be investigated and that meat shouldn't be
labeled with regard to its safety.

Watch: Thom Hartmann: The $1 Million Corporate
Personhood Mystery

Daniel E. Troy worked for a lobbying firm representing
Pfizer, Eli Lilly, and others. In 2001 he left the
lobbying firm and became the top lawyer (chief counsel)
for the Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
Mysteriously, the FDA's position on regulating the drug
companies became that it wants "to discourage frivolous
lawsuits, which drive up costs," making it harder for
consumers damaged by prescription drug side effects to
sue Troy's former employers.

Lobbyist Thomas A. Scully represented HCA, a huge
hospital corporation originally started by Bill Frist's
family; HCA was embroiled in a fraud investigation by
the Federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services,
started by a whistleblower, that looked like it was
going to cost HCA $250 million. In 2001 Scully left his
job to head the Federal Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid Services. By coincidence, the agency worked out
a settlement that kept the feds from looking further
into HCA's books and kept the Justice Department away.
Scully then left the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid
and is working again as a lobbyist for Medicare
providers.

Lobbyist Jeffrey Holmstead had represented big utility
companies and as a lawyer for them had proposed twelve
paragraphs of changes in EPA regulations affecting those
utilities. Holmstead then went to work for the EPA as a
regulator, and soon thereafter those twelve paragraphs-
which gave a pollution exemption to 168 of 232 western-
based power plants-appeared in proposed EPA rules
changes. The case was so blatant that forty-five U.S.
senators-including three Republicans-and ten states'
attorneys general wrote a letter asking the EPA to void
the proposed rule because of "undue industry influence."
Their complaints were largely ignored by the Bush
administration.3

The American Academy of Pediatrics has proposed that the
federal government initiate controls on advertising
directed at children and has recommended that parents
educate their children about how advertising can
manipulate them. Corporations, using their First
Amendment rights to freedom of expression, have instead
increased their spending on ads to children.4

The California Public Utilities Commission ordered a
public utility to include a statement-stuffer in its
bills, informing consumers of a key point. In a move
that was startlingly reminiscent of the Santa Clara
case, the utility (a corporate monopoly) sued the state
and took the case all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court-
and won. The utility asserted that it didn't have to
comply because it had a First Amendment right "not to
speak" and so could avoid informing its customers about
issues as it chose. The Supreme Court, extending the
logic of the Santa Clara case, agreed.5

Lawyers at a 1988 judicial conference recommended that
corporations "use the First Amendment to invalidate a
range of Federal regulations, including Securities and
Exchange Commission disclosure requirements that govern
corporate takeovers, and rules affecting stock
offerings."6 Since that time, this has become a routine
claim made by corporations.

Fourth Amendment

The Fourth Amendment, instituted to prevent government
agents from bursting into homes and unreasonably
searching and seizing property, has been used by
corporations to avoid government regulators as if they
were British dragoons.

Supreme Court cases in 1967 and 1978 affirmed that
corporations do not have to submit to random inspections
because, as persons, they are entitled to privacy and
freedom from unreasonable searches.7 Corporations have
pursued this logic for many years. Referencing the 1886
Santa Clara decision, the Supreme Court granted Fourth
Amendment privacy rights to a corporation in 1906, just
sixteen years after the Sherman Act had been passed.8 As
William Meyers notes in The Santa Clara Blues: Corporate
Personhood versus Democracy, "This ruling made it
difficult to enforce the Sherman anti-monopoly act,
which naturally required the papers of corporations in
order to determine if there existed grounds for an
indictment."9

An electrical and plumbing corporation in Idaho cited
the Fourth Amendment and deterred a health and safety
investigation.10

In a 1986 Supreme Court case, a corporation sued the
Environmental Protection Agency because the EPA hired a
professional photographer to fly over the plant with a
camera after the corporation had turned down a request
by the EPA for an on-site inspection. The Court
acknowledged the corporation's right to privacy from
inspections by the EPA within its buildings.11 Meyers
says that, "Without random inspections it is virtually
impossible to enforce meaningful anti-pollution, health,
and safety laws."12

Fifth Amendment

Like the Fourth Amendment, the Fifth Amendment was
written to prevent a recurrence of government abuses
from colonial days. Among other things, it says that a
person cannot be compelled to testify against himself
(as often happened under English royal rule) or be tried
twice for the same crime. This was in a time when the
balance of power was definitely in favor of the
government, which could and routinely did execute
people.

Today the shoe is on the other foot: business, the more
powerful party, is claiming protection, again to avoid
government investigation of alleged misdoings. Convicted
once of criminal misdoing in an anti-trust case, a
textile supply company used Fifth Amendment protections
and barred retrial.

In a Democracy...

The constitutional rights of free speech, privacy, and
protection from overzealous prosecution all were the
results of the Founders' of the United States having
lost these rights to a multinational corporation and the
government that supported its right to so-called free
trade. They and the Fourteenth Amendment that was part
of the post-Civil War legislation necessary to free
slaves in the United States were all put in place
specifically to benefit and protect humans.

The core concept of American democracy, as established
in the writings of the Founders, is that all
institutions, from churches that claim to be created by
gods to businesses created by the wealthy or ambitious
to the very government itself-all institutions-are
authorized by the people to exist and are answerable to
the people for their existence. And, as the Declaration
of Independence notes, when an institution's behavior
"becomes destructive of these ends, it is the Right of
the People to alter or to abolish it...as to them shall
seem most likely to effect their Safety and Happiness."

Notes:

1. Jeffrey H. Birnbaum, "The Road to Riches Is Called K
Street: Lobbying Firms Hire More, Pay More, Charge More
to Influence Government," Washington Post, June 22,
2005,
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-
dyn/content/article/2005/06/21/AR2005 062101632.html.

2.  Ibid.

3.  The foregoing examples cited are from Anne C.
Mulkern, "When Advocates Become Regulators: President
Bush Has Installed More Than 100 Top Officials Who Were
Once Lobbyists, Attorneys, or Spokespeople for the
Industries They Oversee," Denver Post, May 23, 2004,
http://www.commondreams.org/headlines04/0523-02.htm.

4.  Committee on Communications, American Academy of
Pediatrics, "Children, Ado- lescents, and Advertising,"
Pediatrics 95, no. 5 (1995): 295-97.

This material is not covered under Creative Commons
license and cannot be published without the permission
of the author and Berrett-Koehler Publishers.

Copyright Thom Hartmann and Mythical Research, Inc.

Want a copy of the book? Receive "Unequal Protection:
How Corporations Became 'People' - And How You Can Fight
Back" as a thank-you gift with a donation of $35 or more
to Truthout.

___________________________________________

Portside aims to provide material of interest to people
on the left that will help them to interpret the world
and to change it.

Submit via email: [log in to unmask]

Submit via the Web: http://portside.org/submittous3

Frequently asked questions: http://portside.org/faq

Sub/Unsub: http://portside.org/subscribe-and-unsubscribe

Search Portside archives: http://portside.org/archive

Contribute to Portside: https://portside.org/donate