Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Litmus Test: The People, or the Insurance Companies?

A bill introduced by freshmen representatives seeks to strip the insurance industry's exemption under anti-trust law. So will Congress stand on the side of the people, or on big business?


by Darcy Burner. Posted February 22 on The Nation
It's a simple idea: make health insurance companies compete for the business of Americans.

It's also a simple question: would your Congressperson defend your interests over those of a group of large corporations that can spend lots of money helping or hurting his or her re-election chances? In light of the recent Supreme Court decision in Citizens United, which allows corporations to spend an unlimited amount of money in elections, the stakes are substantially higher than they used to be: now those corporations can spend millions from their treasuries to retaliate against or reward members of Congress. That spending can be sufficiently large to make or break an election.

Next week we are likely to get an unambiguous answer to that question for every member of the US House of Representatives, thanks to a bill introduced by Virginia Representative Tom Perriello (blog editor's note: Colorado Rep. Betsy Markey is also sponsoring this legislation). Perriello, a favorite target of the Tea Party protesters, seems to have gotten a clear message from both sides of the political spectrum: Congress needs to stop catering to big corporations and start fighting for ordinary people. So he's going straight for the insurance companies' jugular in an opening salvo for larger reform, introducing a bill to "restore the application of the Federal anti-trust laws to the business of health insurance to protect competition and consumers." His bill is wonderfully short and spare: it's two pages long, a mere twenty-nine lines of substantive text. It contains no loopholes and no compromises. It does one thing only: it applies federal anti-trust laws to health insurance companies.

It is a clean litmus test for determining whose side a representative is on.

Since 1945, health insurance companies have been allowed to collude to fix prices. The McCarran-Ferguson Act exempted them from the anti-trust regulations that normally prohibit such behavior. And in a country in which more than 80 percent of markets have only one or two insurers, insurance companies just haven't bothered to compete. Insurance is the only major industry in the United States, besides Major League Baseball, where such collusion and price-fixing is allowed.

Even the most basic understanding of economics makes it clear that without competition, markets won't efficiently solve economic problems. As a result, for sixty-five years the American people have overpaid for insurance; the Consumer Federation of America estimates the anti-trust exemption for insurance companies is costing Americans an extra $50 billion in premiums per year.

Perriello's bill is so clearly both pro-populist and pro-free market that previous versions have received accolades from Republicans--including current Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal, a conservative Republican, who said in 2007, "The insurance industry, as the result of an antiquated law, is currently one of the only consumer industries in the nation that is exempt from anti-trust laws. This leaves every American at risk to collusion and price fixing by the insurance industry, a practice that is unfair at best, and despicable at worst."

What's this bill makes all too clear is that whether you're a free-market-loving Republican or a progressive populist Democrat, the only principled way to vote is in favor. With no loopholes, no complications and at two pages, the only reason to vote against it is to protect insurance company profits against fair competition. It's a clear us versus them for populism--on either side of the political spectrum.

At the press conference announcing the bill a few weeks ago, insurance industry representatives tried to scare people by claiming that making companies compete would raise prices. Their justification? These reps claim that insurance companies need to be able to calculate how big the risks of certain conditions are in order to accurately set rates. Conveniently, there is a time-tested way of doing that which doesn't involve violating federal anti-trust laws: hiring actuaries. Any state that felt the need to allow cross-company data sharing could set up an organization to do so without being in violation of federal law under the state action doctrine. The arguments the insurers are making are a smokescreen.

So here we are: the first clear litmus test for members of the House. Whose side are they on? It looks like we'll find out shortly.

Read more...

Justice Rising out soon!

The upcoming issue of Justice Rising focuses on "Courts & Corporations v. Our Common Good," and will be out in early March. Following the Citizens United decision, it couldn't be more timely.

Articles examine different aspects of the judiciary's relationship with the corporate elite, including the Supreme Court's role in cementing the false legal doctrine of corporate personhood. How did the hard-won rights of persons get handed over to corporations? Find out here!

The issues also explores how the Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission decision has been the tipping point for building a broad national grassroots movement, community by community, to restore democracy to the people and strip corporations of their rights. 

If you're part of this movement, Justice Rising is information you can use!

If you are planning local actions, starting up a study group on corporate personhood, or planning on talking to legislators about how they can limit the harm of the Citizens United decision, you'll want to order multiple copies of this issue. Call the office at 781-894-1179 or email afd@thealliancefordemocracy.org. 

Remember, issues of Justice Rising are also available online  either as complete issues or as single articles--download them to bring with you when you table, demonstrate, or visit elected officials!

For a preview, here's Ruth Caplan's article on the rights of nature--Ruth is a new vice Co-Chair and coordinator of AfD's Defending Water for Life campaign.

Read more...

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Best wishes, Katie and Philip!

Congratulations to Healthcare-Now! organizer Katie Robbins on tying the knot with beau Philip Swift in New York. The couple wed after a long and contented engagement--so what finally led them to get that piece of paper from the city? Ironically, health insurance! Katie had coverage and Philip didn't. An estimated 7% of couples marry so that one or the other gets health insurance--no stats on how many people stay married for the same reason, though we certainly hope that Katie and Philip have many, many reasons to stay together besides access to health care!

The perfect gift for the happy couple? A donation to Healthcare-Now!

Read more...

Two quick clicks and a call...

Follow the links and support single payer and the global rights and welfare of women (and the people who depend on them!)

First, in advance of Thursday's health care summit, please sign an online fax/petition in support of single payer health care here, and put a note on the calendar to call Congress on the 25th.

Petition organizers are hoping to get 100,000 signatures from the public, standing up for an "everybody in, nobody out" health care system, rather than the White House's repackaging of the weak Senate reform bill.

By now, we know the arguments for single payer, and the statistics attesting to the terrible insufficiencies of both our present health care system and of the proposed fixes. There's not much more to say, so the petition says it as simply as possible:

Why Are You Still Refusing To Even Consider Single Payer Health Care?!
Any health care "reform" bill that does not provide a Single Payer option is NO real reform at all.

That's it. Short and sweet.

There's no better time to weigh in than now. Sign the petition online here. You'll have the opportunity to personalize your message, submit it to the comments page at whitehouse.gov, and send it to a local newspaper as a letter to the editor as well.

Then, on Thursday, February 25, join in a national call in day to Congress on behalf of single payer health care, organized by the Leadership Conference for Guaranteed Health Care in association with Healthcare-Now!'s "sidewalk summit" in Washington, DC. As Progressive Democrats of America points out, reports of the continuing malfeasance on Wall Street should make Congress rethink putting our nation's health care system in the hands of publicly-traded health care corporations.

Next...
Support a United Nations 5th World Conference on Women

Join with author and activist Dr. Jean Shinoda Bolen in her drive to get 10,000 signatures to take to the UN in March in support of a 5th World Conference on the Status of Women. This global gathering of women may prove to be what Jean calls the "tipping point" of humanity in the direction of creating greater well-being for all peoples everywhere.

Join with more than 6,500 in signing the petition here.

Thank you!

Read more...

Letter to the Editor: Corporations are not people

North Bridge chapter member Michael Bleiweiss wrote this letter to his local paper, the Lawrence Eagle-Tribune.

To the editor:

Your Jan. 22 editorial praising the recent Supreme Court decision in Americans United v FEC shows just how far astray this newspaper has gone in its near fanatic support of anything that might favor Republicans.

This decision grants near total First Amendment rights to corporations as if they were people. However, they most emphatically are NOT. They are legal constructs created by charter for the sole purpose of making money for their investors.

Bit-by-bit, corporations have used their money to corrupt "our" political system and grab more and more power for themselves. It started in the 1850s with the removal of the requirement to have their charters periodically renewed by proving that they served a public good. Then came the 1886 Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad decision that a court clerk (who also just happened to be a railroad lawyer) interpreted as giving corporations constitutional rights under the 14th Amendment. Strangely, this became generally accepted. Then came the 1976 Buckley v. Valeo decision that money is speech (meaning that those with more money get more speech).

Finally, the travesty of the current Supreme Court decision outdoes them all. It will open the floodgates of corporate spending to sway elections in their favor and frighten legislators into supporting corporate-friendly policies for fear of being campaigned against.

However, there is still hope for our civil society. A movement has begun to pass a constitutional amendment that takes away the fiction of corporate personhood and allows only natural-born people to have constitutional rights.

Read more...

Monday, February 22, 2010

20 senators and counting...

Now 20 senators have signed on to the Bennet letter to Harry Reid asking that a public option be passed in the Senate through reconciliation. On Thursday, Sen. Bernie Sanders talked to Rachel Maddow about the process.

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Read more...

Single payer advocate weighs in on today's White House health care outline

From Ben Day, executive director of Mass-Care, a state coalition working to bring single payer health care to Massachusetts. AfD's North Bridge chapter is a member of the coalition.

At 10AM today, the White House released the outlines of Presiden't Obama's health reform proposal "incorporating and improving on ideas from the House and the Senate, along with some new ones," in anticipation of a summit this Thursday with Congressional Republicans.

Many supporters of comprehensive health reform had hoped that the President and the Democratic leadership would turn to the "reconciliation process" - a way of passing certain types of provisions through the budget that does not allow filibusters on the Senate - to pass a more robust health reform bill than the sad beast that had emerged in the Senate even prior to the election of Senator Scott Brown in January. The Senate bill offered virtually no cost relief for households, taxpayers, and businesses facing spiraling health costs, and attempted to pay for subsidized care for low-income people through a tax on workers' benefits. Polls following the January 25 election show clearly that Massachusetts voters strongly oppose this approach to health reform, particularly in a state facing the highest premiums in the nation, but that - perhaps not intuitively - they felt that Congress was not going far enough on health reform, not that they were going too far.

The President's proposal, which you can read more about at whitehouse.gov, unfortunately does not address these concerns, and by and large adopts the Senate bill's approach to health reform. Here are the details as far as we can tell at this early date:

1. The President's proposal drops the public option, making no mention it.

2. The proposal adopts the Senate's approach to financing, relying on an 'excise tax' on workers benefits instead of taxing high-income taxpayers, as the House bill did. It delays implementation of the excise tax until 2018 and lifts the premium threshold slightly, but like the Senate bill it links the tax to general inflation - not medical inflation - virtually guaranteeing that a larger and larger percentage of workers' benefits will face steep taxes, and will likely have their co-pays and deductibles hiked to avoid the tax threshold.

3. The proposal follows the Senate in not imposing an employer pay-or-play tax, which would require businesses to cover their employees or face a fine.

4. The proposal is closer to the Senate in imposing a fine on individuals who do not purchase health insurance of $695 per year OR a percentage of their income, whichever is higher.

5. The proposal does follow the House in closing the Medicare 'donut hole' for seniors, but not fully until 2020, when the hole would be covered at 25% coinsurance.

6. The proposal sticks with both House and Senate proposals to outlaw 'recissions' (insurance companies retroactively canceling coverage of sick patients), extending dependent coverage, and starting in 2014 disallowing exclusion based on pre-existing conditions, as well as lifetime or annual caps on benefits.

7. The proposal includes a concept new to national health reform of establishing a 'Health Insurance Rate Authority,' which would provide oversight of insurance plans' proposed premium increases, and potentially have the power to block premium hikes if they were considered unfair. This is clearly an attempt to replace the public option with something else that promises to control costs. There are states that currently and in the past have implemented what's called 'prior approval' for premium increases in the individual and small group markets (people or small businesses buying insurance on their own) - there is very little evidence about whether this is effective. It has the potential to prevent price gouging by insurers if it's implemented aggressively, which would be a good thing, but not much promise of controlling the underlying drivers of health care costs, which is that we waste too much money on overhead, overuse certain goods and procedures, and that the cost of individual procedures is much higher than it should be.

8. There is no mention in the initial documentation put out by the White House of where the President's plan stands on some key "wedge issues" such as women's access to reproductive health services, or how immigrants - both documented and undocumented - would be affected.

All in all, we are disappointed that the fundamental problems with the Senate reform bill - that there is little promise of effective cost control, and it pays for reform on the backs of working people - are being replicated in the President's proposal. This seems likely to lead to further voter backlash and alienation from workers and workers' organizations.

Mass-Care will continue fighting for fundamental reform that addresses the root causes of the health care crisis we all face, and we are looking forward in particular to advancing the Campaign for Health Care Justice in the coming year. We will keep you informed as we learn more about national health reform efforts.

Read more...

Alaska state reps introduce anti-corporate personhood bill

Four Alaska State Representatives have introduced HB 359, "An Act providing that for-profit corporations and limited liability companies organized in this state are not persons for purposes of influencing the outcomes of public office elections, initiatives, referendums, or recalls." The House effort was led by Rep. Les Gara and Rep. Scott Kawasaki, with two other reps co-sponsoring.

The Senate bill is SB 285, and was introduced by Hollis French.

The legislators have also filed bills calling for strict disclosure standards for political advertisements, including reporting expenditures to the state and including the name of a corporate "person's" chief officer, address, and top five contributors on campaign ads.

Read more...

Quick video explainer on why we need a government-run health care system

Thanks to Jerry Call for forwarding!

Read more...

Left and right agree: Citizens United decision is bad for democracy

Last week's ABC News/Washington Post poll revealed bi-partisan disapproval of the Citizens United decision.

According to the Post, 65% of respondents said they were "strongly opposed" to the ruling, with 72% saying they supported congressional action to reinstate the campaign fundraising limits the Supreme Court's decision removed. Eighty-five percent of Democrats, 76% of Republicans, and 81% of unenrolled voters were opposed to the ruling. Disapproval cut across other demographics as well, including race, age, education, and even income level, with majorities of earners at both ends of the spectrum giving the court a thumbs-down.

Read more...

Thursday, February 18, 2010

Video of Tuesday's demo in Madison, Wisconsin, and a song to organize by

Great comments ...



At the end of Lisa Graves's remarks, she reads off some of the signs carried by people in the crowd--good inspiration if you're in need of a slogan for a local demonstration against corporate personhood.

Great song...



Dave Edwards, the artist, will sing at the Riki Ott/David Cobb "Call to Action: Organizing Community to Overrule the Court" event in Portland on March 1, at the First Unitarian Church, SW 12th and Salmon. The talk is co-sponsored by the Portland AfD chapter and begins at 7 p.m., $5-20 donation welcomed.

Read more...

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Welcome to new National Council members!

First, thanks to everyone who voted in our 2010 National Council election--a large percentage of members returned their ballots, making for an excellent overall "turnout."

Several members threw their hats in as "at-large" members, and we thank them for volunteering! Note that we have some open regional representatives seats still--for New England, New York, the Southeast, South Central and the Southwest regions--if you're curious about responsibilities and the election process, please contact the Alliance office at afd@thealliancefordemocracy.org.

Here's the results, with bios of those who are new to the council:

Co-chairs: David e. Delk, Portland OR, and Nancy Price, Davis CA
Vice co-chairs: Ruth Caplan, Washington DC, and Bonnie Preston, Blue Hill ME
Treasurer: Vikki Savee, Sacramento CA
Secretary: Peter Mott, Pittsfield NY

Regional Representatives:
Mid-Atlantic: Patricia Hammann, Gettysburg PA
Northern California: Steve Scalmanini, Ukiah CA
North West: Rebecca Wolfe, Edmonds WA

At-Large Representatives
Tom Abbott, Sacramento CA
Larry Britt, Pittsfield NY
Helen (Gilly) Burlingham, Portland OR
Lou Hammann, Gettysburg PA
Rick Staggenborg, Coos Bay OR

Look for bios at the "Read more" link!
Tom Abbott
Tom is a relatively new member of the Alliance for Democracy, who became acquainted with the program through our treasurer, Vikki Savee. Following a long career in international agricultural development and 15 years with the University of Arizona College of Agriculture, he became the founder and President of The Youth Now Foundation, a non-profit foundation organized to assist the college in raising funds for youth development activities. In this venue, Tom succeeded in acquiring a 4.4 million dollar gift for the College of Agriculture. He hopes to build up Alliance membership and resources.

Larry Britt
Larry is an active member of the Rochester (NY) Chapter, as well as national. He is an MBA, worked for 33 years in international business, 22 years with Xerox, specializing in finance and product development. He has written on political and economic affairs in newspapers and books (eg, the chapter on Fascism in "Political Power and the Global Economy", 2008), and has appeared on 25 radio talk shows. He is a board member of ACLU, Citizens for Public Education and Religious Freedom, and Amnesty International. Most recently, he gave a presentation on corporate personhood at the Rochester chapter regional convention.

Helen (Gilly) Burlingham
Helen studied journalism and anthropology, and lived in East Pakistan, Thailand and Argentina before retiring with her foreign service husband to his family farm in New York, and then to Portland, Oregon. After working with local schools, the arts council and on domestic violence issues, she turned her attention to peace, social justice and environmental activism. However, she felt that her efforts would not be effective as long as corporate money dominated politics and democracy. The need to focus on the corporate actor instead of individual campaigns led to her involvement with the Portland AfD chapter.

Rick Staggenborg
Rick is a board-certified psychiatrist with thirteen years of post-residency experience. He has been very active nationally, statewide in Oregon and locally on the southern Oregon coast for the single payer movement, playing the self-assigned role of networking with various and building coalitions with groups working on this and other projects. He is also founder of Take Back America For The People, the American arm of Soldiers For Peace International, a group of current and former service members of military organizations throughout the world whose goal is to establish worldwide, permanent peace through the peaceful promotion of democracy, beginning in America.

Rebecca Wolfe
After a career teaching English, French, and ESL, Rebecca earned her Ph.D. in Leadership Studies at Gonzaga University, and established The Language School of Spokane for studies in languages and cultures. Currently, she is University Intern Coordinator in the Woodring School of Education at W. Washington University, working in teacher education with pre-service K-12 teachers.

In addition to her academic life, Rebecca serves as Chair of the Snohomish Group of the Sierra Club (Cascade Chapter) in WA State. At the chapter level she works on issues related to conservation, water & salmon, forests, watersheds, and wildlife. As a Board member of the United Nations Association of Seattle, Rebecca focuses on "Ensuring Environmental Sustainability" (Goal #7 of the Millennium Development Goals). In the City of Edmonds Rebecca was recently appointed as a Commissioner on the Economic Development Commission, hoping to use her office to promote sustainable growth as her city faces redevelopment along the shoreline in a time of global warming and a failing economy. Helping preserve the pillars of democracy and a healthy planet are important to Rebecca, who says Alliance for Democracy is the spine that supports all of her other causes and activities.

Read more...

Four senators defend public option health care, but Medicare for All is still on the people's table

Four Democratic senators have asked Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid to push for a public option through reconciliation, which would require a simple majority of 51 votes. An additional five senators had signed on by today, and a letter from 119 House Democrats has also gone to Reid supporting this proposal.

The senators, Michael Bennet of Colorado, Kirsten Gillibrand of New York, Sherrod Brown of Ohio and Jeff Merkley of Oregon, cited lower costs, public support, the need for competition from an entity outside the insurance industry--which is exempt from anti-trust regulation--and precedents for using reconciliation to pass legislation as reasons for proceeding with the process to put a public option in the health care reform bill. The Children’s Health Insurance Program (CHIP), Medicare Advantage, and the Consolidated Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1985 (COBRA) were all enacted under reconciliation.

Interestingly, both Bennet and Gillibrand are newcomers to the Senate and facing competitive re-election campaigns. Rather than move toward a 'non-partisan' center, they're taking a leadership stand on the health care issue, banking that the chagrin that sent Republican Scott Brown to the Senate in January is directed at the weaker Senate bill, and not the idea of a public option.

While some groups are encouraging constituent calls to senators to get more support for a public option through reconciliation, single payer proponents are still pushing for a more comprehensive fix to the nation's health care crisis.

On February 25th, the Leadership Conference for Guaranteed Health Care will be holding a "Sidewalk Summit for Improved Medicare for All" outside the Blair House in Washington, DC before the Democrats and Republicans have their session. If you are able to be in Washington, DC meet them at 9 AM at the White House. Specific meet up details will be announced as the event gets closer, and we'll post them here.

You can also organize an event in your area, or distribute these talking points from Healthcare Now! Your own "sidewalk summit" can feature presenters speaking briefly on the political, or personal, struggle to get decent and affordable care. Healthcare-Now suggests videotaping your event, and holding it at an appropriate federal building or other landmark. They can also help with talking points, press lists, and publicity. For more info, email info@healthcare-now.org.

Read more...

AfD co-chair publish anti-corporate personhood op ed on The Oregonian

The Oregonian, Portland's daily newspaper, published the following op-ed by Afd co-chairs Nancy Price and David Delk in their online edition yesterday:

If you ask someone on the street whether "a corporation is a person," most laugh and say, "no, of course not!" But the Jan. 21 5-4 majority decision of the U.S. Supreme Court found for Citizens United against the Federal Election Commission, and not only expanded the free speech rights of corporations under the First Amendment to spend unlimited money for or against candidates in elections, but in so doing, further entrenched the controversial legal doctrine of "corporate personhood" as the law of the land.

Why is a corporation a person with a voice?

The article continues on the Oregonian site, here.

Read more...

300 take to the streets of Madison to call for constitutional amendment against corporate personhood

Yesterday's demonstration in Madison, Wisconsin brought more than 300 people out to the State Capitol to voice their objections to the Citizens United v. FEC decision, and to yet another blow by the courts to the separation of corporation and state.

Speakers included Mike McCabe of the Wisconsin Democracy Center, Lisa Graves of the Center for Media and Democracy, activist and FightingBobFest organizer Ed Garvey, and former Attorney General Peg Lautenschlager.

Kicking off the march to the nearby Federal Courthous, Ben Manski of Liberty Tree Foundation, noted that the crowd was taking action on Susan B. Anthony's birthday. "Were she alive now, she would be here, on her birthday, celebrating with us, marching to overrule the court."

The suffragettes and abolitionists who fought for the 13th, 14th, 15th and 19th amendments, he added, "spent their entire lives in those struggles. And would anyone here venture to say that those years, those decades, those lives, were not worth what was gained? On a future day, a multitude will gather on these same steps and look back at what we here dare to do, and they will thank you."

Read more...

Monday, February 15, 2010

AfD co-sponsors Riki Ott and David Cobb in Ashland, OR, on the need to "Overrule the Court"

Environmentalist and writer Riki Ott, of Ultimate Civics, and Green Party presidential candidate David Cobb, of Democracy Unlimited of Humboldt County, will be speaking in Ashland, Oregon next week as part of a west-coast tour to facilitate community dialogue on how the challenges of the Citizens United decision can be met at the grassroots level.

The Ashland talk is co-sponsored by Alliance for Democracy, along with Jobs with Justice, the Pacific Green Party and Peace Village Festival 2010. It takes place Thursday, February 25, from 7 to 9 p.m. at the Bellview Grange, 1050 Tolman Creek Road, near Siskiyou Boulevard.

You can download the flier below to print and post, or email to friends if you know folks in the area who would be interested in hearing what the speakers--and the community--has to say.

This is only one stop on a tour of several cities. Other tour dates and venues include:

  • Friday, February 26: Portland OR
  • Monday, March 1: Portland OR
  • Tuesday, March 2: Olympia WA
  • Thursday, March 4, Seattle WA
  • Friday, March 5, Lakewood, WA
  • Monday, March 15, Monteray CA (Riki Ott only)
  • Tuesday, March 16, Santa Cruz CA (Riki Ott only)
For more info on times and locations, see the calendar on the Campaign to Legalize Democracy site.

Both speakers represent groups on the steering committee of the Campaign to Legalize Democracy.

Questions or more info? Email afd@thealliancefordemocracy.

Ashland flier for Ott/Cobb talk

Read more...

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

New Mexico moves to move their money--why not you?

The New Mexico House of Representatives has passed a bill enabling the possible switch of $2-5 billion in state deposits to accounts in community banks and credit unions. Thus far, large national banks, like Bank of America and Wells Fargo, have held the funds.

The New Mexico effort got a mention on the Huffington Post, and a credit union executive said that the media spotlight helped get the bill through the House.

You can read more about the New Mexico vote here, and learn more about the Move Your Money initiative here.

Move your money notes that states and local governments have a total of $230 billion in the nation's largest banks. But it's community banks that do the lion's share of lending to small and new businesses, a key source of credit for a rejuvenated economy.

Read more...

Good Read: Two-thirds of Americans unhappy about Citizens United ruling

A new poll shows overwhelming dissatisfaction with the Court's ruling in Citizens United v. FEC, especially among independent voters.



by Evan McMorris-Santoro. Posted February 8 on Talking Points Memo

Supreme Court Justice Sam Alito may not have wanted to hear it during the State Of The Union address, but a new poll shows the majority of Americans agree with President Obama's take on the Citizens United ruling. More than 60 percent of respondents say it was a bad idea.

The opposition was found across party lines, and according to the pollsters was especially common among independents -- the group both parties have desperately fought over for a decade now. The pollsters said that result suggests that the parties would be well-served to take on the ruling and reinstate campaign finance regulations canceled out by the ruling with new law.

The poll was conducted by a bipartisan pairing of Democratic pollster Stan Greenberg and Republican strategist Mark McKinnon. The sponsors were several groups opposed to the Citizens United Supreme Court ruling, which they say will open the door to unheard of corporate influence in American politics. The results of the survey show that the general public overwhelmingly agrees. Sixty-four percent of respondents were opposed to ruling, while just 27% said they favored it.

"The results are pretty striking," Greeberg said on a conference call with reporters this morning. He said that the current anti-establishment fervor in the electorate suggests that incumbents should get as far away from the Citizens United ruling as they can. "The last thing people want to see in this environment is corporations having more influence on politicians."

That's especially true among independents, as data from the poll shows.

More than 80% of independents said new limits should be placed on campaign spending. Seventy-four percent of independents agreed with the statement that "special interests have too much influence in Washington."
Though the results are good news for campaign finance reform fans, they're not so good for the party in power at the moment. Independents did not give positive reviews on how Democrats have dealt with the problem of special interest influence in Washington. Just 30% said President Obama has reduced the power of lobbyists in Washington, while 50% said special interests have gained more power in the city since he took office.

Read more...

Hey Wisconsin!

If you're close to Madison next week, join the March to Overrule the Court, which starts at 12 noon on Tuesday, February 16, at the State Capitol, State Street steps, in Madison.

The rally is followed by a march to the nearby federal courthouse at 120 North Henry Street. Bring a bell to ring and friends to help speak out against corporate rule. It's being organized by Liberty Tree Foundation for Democratic Renewal.

You're also invited to a pre-march planning meeting on Thursday February 11th, 5:30pm at the Madison Public Library Central Branch, 201 W. Mifflin, second floor. Help make signs, pick up fliers for distribution, and discuss plans for further actions against the Supreme Court's decision in Citizens United v. FEC.

Read more...

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Maine dems to consider resolution against corporate personhood

Maine Democrats may have the opportunity to support a resolution calling for a constitutional amendment barring personhood rights for corporations. AfD vice co-chair and Hancock County Democratic Committee member Bonnie Preston is submitting the resolution, which is based on the model on the Campaign to Legalize Democracy/MovetoAmend.org site. It will first go before the county democratic organization, which Bonnie describes as a progressive and active group. She says that passage of of the resolution at the state convention level may be an uphill fight, but that she'll be a delegate to the convention in May and will work the floor in its support.

If you're looking for positive actions to take against corporate personhood at the local or state level, consider drafting a similar resolution and submitting it to your city council, town meeting, union, or party committee--sample resolution text is here.

Read more...

Op-eds from the Campaign to Legalize Democracy

Two op-eds written by Campaign to Legalize Democracy steering committee members have now been published in several papers--here's the start of the articles, with "read more" links to their most recent appearances on mainstream media websites. It's great that the word is getting out about the need for a constitutional amendment to retain personhood rights for human persons--if you write an op-ed or letter to the editor and would like us to feature it here, please email it to afd@thealliancefordemocracy.org.

Amend Constitution, restore our citizenship

By Ben Manski & Lisa Graves

You just lost the heart of your citizenship, thanks to the U.S. Supreme Court.

In Citizens United v. the Federal Election Commission, five justices asserted:

"By taking the right to speak from some and giving it to others, the government deprives the disadvantaged person or class of the right to use speech to strive to establish worth, standing and respect for the speaker's voice."

The "disadvantaged person" they reference is, unbelievably, the corporation. In law-speak, this means that as "persons," corporations now wield constitutional protections against government regulation of elections.

Read more

Unhinged. Absurd. Outrageous.

by Ben Manski

That's how you could describe the Supreme Court’s recent decision in Citizens United vs. Federal Election Commission. Unfortunately, the decision was much, much worse than that.

How much worse?

You might have some idea if you've ever found yourself facing foreclosure on your home; or worked at a company that was downsizing and laying people off; or enrolled in a college where the tuition keeps doubling; or faced salary freezes year after year, even while the cost of living rises. Most of us know how those things feel. It's the feeling of losing control over your destiny.

Get used to that feeling. It has just become what it feels like to be a citizen of the United States of America.

Read more

Read more...

Bottled water syndrome and the drinking water profiteers

A new book give the history of the commodification of water, focusing in particular on Nestle's operations in Maine.


by Joseph Nevins. Posted on Counterpunch February 5

In mid-January, I received a mass email asking me to donate $10 for bottled water and other supplies for participants in an important immigrant rights march in Phoenix. Given the ever-repressive and cruel political climate in Arizona for immigrants (especially unauthorized ones), I was unequivocally in support of the mobilization. Nonetheless I was taken aback by a request to contribute even nominally to an effort to buy bottles of water for what turned out to be, according to some estimates, more than 20,000 people.

Certainly there are other ways—ecologically sustainable and less expensive ones—to provide water for such a multitude. How, why, and to what effects bottled water became the preferred way to do so for myriad people and places far beyond a single event in Phoenix is the focus of Elizabeth Royte’s powerful and compelling book, Bottlemania: Big Business, Local Springs and the Battle Over America's Drinking Water.

I’ve never been a fan of bottled water, considering it ecologically damaging—in the United States alone 30-40 million single-serve bottles per day end up as litter or in landfills—and economically foolhardy, another capitalistic trick to con us into purchasing something from profiteers that we don’t shouldn’t have to. But as Royte powerfully illustrates, the increasing commodification of drinking water is far more complex, and dangerous, than at least I appreciated.

Until recently, the sale of single-serve bottles of water was rare. While the United States had regional bottled water companies as early as the nineteenth century, such entities mainly supplied homes and offices with large containers of the life-sustaining liquid (for water coolers, for instance). This situation began to change in the 1980s with the entry of Perrier into the U.S. market and its successful television advertising which stressed that a little luxury—a bottle of the French water—was available to everyone.

Other companies, like Evian and Vittel, followed, employing the likes of Madonna and fashion models, to help equate bottled water with personal health, fitness, and glamour. That, combined with the invention of polyethylene terephthalate (PET) plastic—which made water easily portable—helped the U.S. bottled-water industry boom: between 1990 and 1997 its annual sales increased from $115 million to $4 billion. (By 2006, the figure was $10.8 billion; globally bottled water’s income was $60 billion.)

This dramatic increase is the outgrowth of “one of the greatest marketing coups of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries,” asserts Royte. What makes it all the more extraordinary is that in the vast majority of cases “tap water meets or exceeds federal health and safety standards, regularly wins in blind taste tests against name-brand waters, and costs 240 to 10,000 times less than bottled water.” Part of the reason it has succeeded, contends Royte, is “that bottled water plays into our ever-growing laziness and impatience.”

This corporate-driven success contributes to the demise of water as a public good. Take the increasingly rare public drinking fountain, for instance: Royte tells of visiting a Midwestern college where there is no drinking-water fountain in its gym.

Bottled water’s rise has changed behaviors even among those whom you might expect would have an alternative consciousness. While I was reading Royte’s book, I accompanied a group of students from my institution on a visit to a geography department at a university elsewhere in New York State, a department with a strong focus on issues of environmental sustainability. At the luncheon, the department offered bottled water as one of the beverage options.

The profound change in how so many of us consume water has consequences far beyond what we imbibe. Among other things, it increases our consumption of oil—and all its attendant detrimental impacts: Royte reports that it takes 17 million barrels of oil each year to make water bottles for the U.S. market alone—enough to fuel 1.3 million cars for a year. Meanwhile, according to one estimate, a quarter of a water bottle’s worth of oil is required to produce each bottle, transport and depose of it.

Royte focuses much of her energy on Poland Springs—the Nestlé-owned company that is the largest U.S. producer of bottled spring water—and the struggles and controversies surrounding its activities in and around Fryeburg, Maine, where it is based. However, her important and compelling book is much more than an examination of the bottled water industry. It is first and foremost about the health and viability of drinking water and thus human society as a whole. As Royte points out, “We can live without oil, but we can’t live without water.”

Already for all-too-many across the planet, access to safe drinking water is far from assured. As Royte informs the reader, “only 3 percent [of the earth’s water supply] is fresh, and of that fraction only a third is available for human use,” with the rest stored in glaciers and the like.

Not surprisingly that fraction is not equitably distributed based on needs. As such, more than a billion people do not have sufficient access to potable water. And according to U.N. projections, increased demand and water pollution, combined with climate-change-induced drought and reduced recharge of groundwater supplies will lead to two of every three of the planet’s denizens lacking sufficient access by 2025. “Those two out of three won’t just be thirsty;” writes Royte. “[A]lready some 5.1 million people a year die from waterborne diseases, many of which stem from lack of sanitation and its resulting water pollution. That number is going to spike.”

Among the major culprits of water pollution is industrial agriculture with its heavy reliance on synthetic fertilizers, herbicides, pesticides, and insecticides, the runoff from which ends up in the water supply. Atrazine, for example, an herbicide that has been shown to cause birth defects, reproductive disorders, and cancer in lab animals, has contaminated, according to Royte, drinking water sources “in nearly every major Midwestern city, and well water and groundwater in states where the compound isn’t even used.”

The pernicious irony of the degradation of the water commons is that it helps to undermine trust in public water supplies and facilitate their neglect, thus driving more people—especially the relatively wheel-heeled who can afford it—to embrace the bottled water option. In 2001, La’o Hamutuk, a non-governmental organization in East Timor, for example, calculated that the United Nations mission in charge of governing the territory was spending more than $10,000 per day (almost $4 million annually) on bottled water. (And this was the figure just for the international peacekeeping troops present in the country—to say nothing of the water purchased for the non-military U.N. personnel.) According to various estimates, it would have cost $2-10 million at the time to rehabilitate the entire water purification and delivery system of Dili, the now-independent country’s capital, and provide potable water to nearly all of the city’s more than 100,000 residents.

Royte would see such behavior as part of an “insidious trend,” one in which it has become “normal to pay high prices for things that used to cost little, or nothing”—or to go the route of the private rather than the public. But ultimately, preserving or improving public water supplies is the option we must collectively pursue as “too many people can afford to drink nothing but.” Otherwise, Royte warns, we run the risk of a world in which there is “a two-tiered system—bottled for the rich, bilge for the poor.”

Given the ubiquity of bottled water, it might seem like it doesn’t matter if the organizers of one mass demonstration, a single geography department, or a particular U.N. mission choose bottled water, rather than embracing public water options that were the unquestioned norm in the very recent past. But these individual decisions add up and, as such, have a profound impact on people’s livelihoods and the environment. Given the necessity of water for life, do we really have a choice as to what we should do?

Joseph Nevins teaches geography at Vassar College. His most recent book is Dying to Live: A Story of U.S. Immigration in an Age of Global Apartheid (City Lights Books, 2008). He can be reached at jonevins@vassar.edu

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Friday, February 5, 2010

AfD's Defending Water Campaign: Rights of nature as basis for international law

This article, from the upcoming issue of Justice Rising, focuses on AfD's work as part of a growing global "rights of nature" movement, challenging exploitation of the environment and the usual legal conception of nature as simply property.

This quarter's Justice Rising will feature articles on the judiciary, corporate personhood, and the relationship between legal and corporate elites--especially timely following the Citizens United decision and the start of a movement to address corporate personhood issues through constitutional amendment.

If you would like to be added to the mailing list for the next issue, please email
afd@thealliancefordemocracy.org, or join the Alliance--a subscription to Justice Rising is free with your membership.


by Ruth Caplan
Thanks to the leadership of President Evo Morales of Bolivia and Pablo Salon, his ambassador to the United Nations, who previously was active in the Our World Is Not For Sale network, the UN has declared April 22 to be International Mother Earth Day. The day will be celebrated in Cochabamba, Bolivia, by rallying activists from around the world to proclaim the fundamental rights of nature.

In the words of President Morales, there must be a charter to “enshrine the right to life for all living things; right to regeneration of the planet’s biocapacity; right to a clean life -- for Mother Earth to live free of contamination and pollution; and the right to harmony and balance among and between all things.”

The framing in the U.S. Constitution, which treats nature as property, is in direct contradiction to the rights of nature. Further, the series of court decisions granting corporations fundamental Constitutional rights has allowed corporations to use these conferred rights to exploit nature for corporate profit. In its organizing with local communities, the Alliance’s Defending Water for Life campaign has been challenging these fundamentals of U.S. Constitutional and court-conferred law. It is time for us to join the budding international movement.

From the small town of Barnstead NH to three other towns in NH and two in Maine, the Alliance has worked with communities that have passed ordinances to protect their water by denying corporate rights and asserting the rights of nature. These towns have challenged “settled law” based on court rulings interpreting the U.S. Constitution. Best known is the 1886 Santa Clara decision by the U.S. Supreme Court in which the court declared that everyone understands that corporations are to be included as persons under the 14th Amendment so the Court did not need to rule on this.

Last fall, the campaign’s Maine organizer, Emily Posner, brought an international focus to the Defending Water for Life campaign. First she brought “Hurricane Season” www.hurricaneseasontour.com to Maine for several college campus performances. The two-woman show addresses pertinent social themes from the devastation of Katrina to global water justice through their dance, poetry and multi-media performance. Emily followed this by organizing a speaking tour with Marcela Olivera from Cochabamba, Bolivia who, with her brother Oscar Olivera, played a central role in the people’s uprising against Bechtel’s privatization of their water. Before organizing with the Alliance, Emily spent a year in Cochabamba working with the Oliveras.

The international focus continued with the campaign’s Water Justice art show, which opened in Portland ME in November and included art related to Cochabamba. Now plans are afoot for Emily to take the Water Justice art show to Cochabamba in April for the 10th anniversary of the Cochabamba uprising and stay on for the Peoples’ World Conference on Climate Change and Mother Earth’s Rights. The conference goals include preparing a Declaration on the Rights of Mother Earth.

Just as we must learn from nature, we also stand to learn from Bolivia and Ecuador, which have made the rights of nature part of their Constitutions.

As the Alliance joins the Right to Amend coalition against corporate personhood, we must also continue our local organizing to build a movement for the rights of nature as a fundamental constitutional right. Settled law created by the courts allowing corporate exploitation of nature must become unsettled by a people’s movement to honor the fundamental rights of Mother Earth.

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Monday, February 1, 2010

Make your own corporate person!

Planning a demonstration, action, or tabling on corporate personhood and the need for a constitutional amendment to take back personhood rights from corporations? Dress up as a "corporate person"--just see the costume instructions below. The costume was designed by Jan Edwards and Leon Schneiderman and appeared in the Summer 2003 issue of AfD's Alliance Alerts. It prints on ledger-sized paper.

PersonhoodCostume

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AfD Co-chair Nancy Price on "Citizens United" and the need for an anti-corporate personhood amendment

AfD Co-chair Nancy Price wrote this op-ed for the Davis (CA) Enterprise:

If you ask someone on the street whether “a corporation is a person,” most laugh and say, “no, of course not!” But on January 21, a 5-4 majority of unelected Supreme Court justices, finding for Citizens United against the Federal Election Commission, not only expanded the free speech rights of corporations under the First Amendment to spend unlimited money for or against candidates in elections, but in so doing, further entrenched the controversial legal doctrine of “corporate personhood” as the law of the land.

The Case
The Supreme Court first heard the case in March 2009. Citizens United, a nonprofit Virginia corporation, produced a film attacking Hillary Clinton, “Hillary: The Movie,” during the 2008 primary elections and the Federal Elections Commission (FEC) had barred release of the film after concluding it was a corporate-funded electioneering advertisement, not a documentary as Citizens United claimed. Thus, under the Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 (McCain-Feingold Act), the film could not be shown within 60 days of the election. This is the ruling that Citizen’s United went to court to challenge.

In a very unusual move at the end of June, the Court went out of its way to ask for new briefs and re-argument. In this way, the Court signaled it wanted to broaden the scope of Citizens United beyond what was argued in the lower court to examine the issue of corporate political speech more broadly in regard to the First Amendment and two important earlier campaign finance cases relating to state and federal elections. Fast-tracking the case, the Court wanted briefs by July 31st, with oral argument set for September 9. More “friend of the court” briefs were submitted for this case than in the entire history of the Court.

Over the summer, newspaper editorials and op-eds warned that a broad ruling would allow corporations to spend unlimited amounts of money from their treasuries in elections for or against candidates, and would be a threat to democracy by allowing corporations to dominate the political process. In fact, the Supreme Court’s recent decision overturned a century of campaign finance laws going back to the 1907 Tillman Act, the first legislation prohibiting corporate money in national political campaigns. Now, corporations, including U.S. subsidiaries of foreign multinational corporations, can spend unlimited amounts of money to buy the election results they want and manipulate politics and policy in their self interest. A crucial basis for this decision is that corporations, as “persons,” enjoy free-speech rights.

Why is a corporation a person with a voice?
Corporations are artificial entities created by people through charters for specific economic purposes granted by states and subject to state and federal laws. Throughout the 19th century, corporations unsuccessfully attempted through Supreme Court to get out from under government regulation and accountability to the people. Then, finally, in 1886, in a case about taxes, the Court asserted without explanation that the 14th Amendment, ratified in 1868, to guarantee equal protection and citizenship rights to all persons born or naturalized in the United States, applied to corporations. Now, corporations had rights and protection under the Constitution. This at a time when all women, all Native Americans and most African-American men had no right to vote!

Finally, in 1976, almost a century later, the “corporate person” found its voice, when the Supreme Court ruled that corporate money equaled speech under the First Amendment. Money began to flow into political campaigns. In response, state legislatures and Congress moved to enact laws to regulate corporate money in politics. But, now, this recent Supreme Court opinion has provoked a national cry of outrage that corporations can claim political and civil rights to overturn democratically-enacted laws.

Why it Matters
Many would argue that the problem is not that corporations are people, but that it is just regulating money in politics. But as Jeffrey Clements, a lawyer points out in “Beyond Citizens United v. FEC: Re-Examining Corporate Rights,” since the 1970s, corporations have aggressively used the First Amendment to strike down state and federal laws from “those concerning clean air and fair elections; to environmental protection and energy; to tobacco, alcohol, pharmaceuticals, and health care; to consumer protection, lottery, and gambling; to race relations, and much more.”

What’s even more important and less known is that once corporations became “people,” their lawyers began to get more “rights” for them. In 1893, corporations were granted “due process” under the 5th Amendment; in 1906, they got 4th Amendment search and seizure protections; in 1922 they got the “takings” clause of the 5th Amendment in which a regulatory law is deemed a “takings.” A fundamental doctrine of all free trade agreements allows multinational corporations to sue a national government for federal or state regulations that impacts or “takes” their profit-making.

What Can “We, the People” Do?
In anticipation of this ruling, a broad and deep coalition of groups came together to form the Campaign to Legalize Democracy with a call to amend the Constitution. One hour after the Supreme Court opinion was released, the Campaign launched the “Move to Amend” website calling for people to support an amendment to firmly establish that money is not speech, and that human beings, not corporations, are persons entitled to constitutional rights. Other campaigns are focused solely on denying or limiting corporations First Amendment rights and limiting money in politics. These are only half measures.

A Constitutional amendment is need to deny corporations personhood and thereby stripping corporations of all constitutional rights conferred on them piecemeal by the Supreme Court over the decades. As of this writing, one week later, more than 50,000 people have signed the “Motion to Amend.” Please join this movement to take back our Democracy.

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The Dispatch is out!

February's Boston/Cambridge Alliance newsletter, the BCA Dispatch, is heading to mailboxes across the country, with articles on Haiti, healthcare, soldier suicides and thoughts on the Massachusetts special election. If you'd like a copy, email the office at afd@thealliancefordemocracy.org.

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