Occupy Movement - Perspective
The Larger Purpose of the
Occupy Wall Street Movement
A Personal View
by Fred Krueger
Last weekend I participated in the local Occupy Santa Rosa event. The turnout was impressive. In a city of 150,000 people, at least 3,000 local citizens filled the grassy area in front of City Hall and them marched to City Center before returning to City Hall. Protester signs addressed upwards of a hundred issues, including unjust home foreclosures; corporate greed over human need; the growing numbers of hungry people; the rising levels of poverty; the export of manufacturing jobs to Asia; skyrocketing college tuition; threats to the post office; government misinformation about Iraq; the malfeasance of big banks; growing inequalities in wealth; duplicity in the global financial system; corporate disinformation about global climate change; the XL Keystone pipeline from Canada; unregulated campaign contributions; the polarization of government, etc., etc.
On the surface, it might seem true that there is no
single unifying message. However it is my belief that with examination of these
issues, there is an over-arching, connecting and unifying issue. As a people,
we are losing an ability to fulfill the assumptions upon which the United
States was founded. The Constitution, in its preamble, declares, “We the
People... in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure
domestic Tranquility, provide for the common Defense, promote the general
Welfare, and secure the Blessings of Liberty to ourselves and our Posterity, do
ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.”
That’s the verbatim quote.
What
is happening is that the world in which the Constitution was written is
changing. In particular the rise of the multinational corporation is changing
the dynamics of democratic government. By law, ever since the Southern Pacific
Railroad v County of Santa Clara court decision in 1888, corporations are
considered legal persons under the Fourteenth Amendment's Equal Protection
clause. Of course they are not real people. They have no heart, no soul, no
death, and no capability of genuine feelings or spiritual perception. Because
they don't die, they just keep growing, and growing, and sometimes devouring
other corporations. Their values are merely marketplace values, devoid of any
higher virtue. Their only sense of responsibility is a fiduciary duty to
turn a profit for shareholders. Good people may work for corporations, but
their values become subsumed into the purpose and values of the corporation.
The issue for the Occupy
Movement is therefore two-fold.
First, we have to preserve the intent of a
Constitution for real people, or we will lose our republican form of democratic
government. This is the first issue. We are losing our country and its ability
to function as it was intended. And we will not stand for it. The Occupy Wall
Street movement is therefore a thoughtful response by citizens concerned about
our form of government.
Second, we have to rein in the
corporations because they have no innate capacity to respond to the real
problems of our nation. This is an act of patriotism. Under all of the issues
listed on protesters' signs, or at least ninety percent of them, we are dealing
with the consequences of soulless corporations inserting their agenda into the
life of the real people of America. Even in Washington there is a sarcastic
saying that we have “the best Congress that money can buy.” The problem is that
this is true. Corporate money and its lack of moral discernment is corrupting
our country, our Congress, national and regional decision making, and most
significantly the ability of the voice of the people to find popular expression
as the Founding Fathers originally intended. The only real solution, the
patriotic solution, if you will, is to rein in the ability of corporations to
corrupt and distort our country and its electoral processes.
What is at issue then is that
the real people have to reassert their authority and promote common sense
legislation to restrict the ability of these paper entities to enter into
political advocacy. Corporations are not real people, and they should not be
accorded the rights of real people. The evidence of their malfeasance is in
their actions. Look at all of the protest signs. Look too at the problems of
our country. Those issues in aggregate represent the pernicious influence of
corporations upon American public life. No other action will do as much good to
preserve stability in our nation and the ability of citizens to live a healthy
and prosperous life as the reining in of corporate power. This is the only way
that we can preserve our Constitution. This is the larger unifying purpose of
the Occupy Movement.
Labels: News and Politics: NATIONAL, PERSPECTIVES