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NEWS March 11th 2004
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The Corporation as Psychopath A new film and book, currently only available in Canada, are taking the country by storm. The book is titled: The Corporation: The Pathological Pursuit of Profit and Power. It is by Joel Bakan (Free Press, 2004). The movie is called: The Corporation. It is by Mark Achbar, Jennifer Abbott, and Joel Bakan. Experienced US corporate reporters Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman have this to say about them: “We've seen an advance copy of the movie. We're
read an advance copy of the book. And here's our review: Scrap the civics
curricula in your schools, if they exist. Cancel your cable TV subscriptions.
Call your friends, your enemies and your family. Get your hands on a
copy of this movie and a copy of this book. The filmmakers juxtapose well-shot interviews of defenders and critics with the reality on the ground -- Charles Kernaghan in Central America showing how, for example, big apparel manufacturers pay workers pennies for products that sell for hundreds of dollars in the United States - with defenders of the regime - Milton Friedman looking frumpy as he says with as straight a face as he can -- the only moral imperative for a corporate executive is to make as much money for the corporate owners as he or she can. Others agree with Friedman. Management guru Peter
Drucker tells Bakan: Of course, state corporation laws actually impose
a legal duty on corporate executives to make money for shareholders.
Engage in social responsibility -- pay more money to workers, stop legal
pollution, lower the price to customers -- and you'll likely be sued
by your shareholders. Robert Monks, the investment manager, puts it
this way: Business insiders like Monks and Ray Anderson, CEO of Interface Corporation, the world's largest commercial carpet manufacturer, lend needed balance to a movie that otherwise would have been dominated by outside critics like Chomsky, Moore, Grossman and Rifkin. Anderson calls the corporation a "present day instrument of destruction" because of its compulsion to "externalize any cost that an unwary or uncaring public will allow it externalize." "The notion that we can take and take and take
and take, waste and waste, without consequences, is driving the biosphere
to destruction," Like Republican Kevin Phillips is doing as he criss-crosses the nation, pummeling Bush from the right, Anderson and Monks are opening a new front against corporate power from inside the belly of the beast. They are stars of this movie and book. The movie and the book drive home one fundamental point -- the corporation is a psychopath. Psychologist Dr. Robert Hare runs down a checklist of psychopathic traits and there is a close match. The corporation is irresponsible because in an attempt to satisfy the corporate goal, everybody else is put at risk. Corporations try to manipulate everything, including public opinion. Corporations are grandiose, always insisting that "we're number one, we're the best." Corporations refuse to accept responsibility for their own actions and are unable to feel remorse. And the key to reversing the control of this psychopathic institution is to understand the nature of the beast. No better place to start than right here. Read the book. Watch the movie (www.thecorporation.tv). Organize for resistance.” Corporate Watch can only agree... |