The Tyranny Of Free-Roaming, Transnational Corporations

By Mark Taliano 

All governments use words freely to sell their deeds and misdeeds, but repressive governments do it with such regularity, that the words have basically become meaningless.

Historical perspective sheds light on the otherwise obscure origins on some of today’s pervasive nomenclature.

The “free market” theory originates from an economic theory of Milton Freidman and the Chicago school, and it was first implemented in Chile. 

Essentially, the CIA orchestrated a coup that overthrew the democratically elected government of Salvador Allende in Chile, and replaced it with the infamous dictator Pinochet.  

Then, for the first time, Freidman and his free-marketeers had a blank slate upon which to test their economic theory.  Interestingly, the testing field required repressive governance, otherwise the people would not have tolerated it.  Free markets and repressive governments make good marriages.

The story then unfolded much as it later did in other Latin American countries, with the populations controlled by fear: disappearances, torture, and a litany of horrendous crimes against the people.

The theory works best for the wealthy, but not for the majority, and it reinforces and enables repressive governments.  It also works well for transnational corporations that are now “free” to relocate where people can be exploited.  Free roaming corporations do not like regulation, unions, labour or environmental laws. 

Basically, transnational corporations don’t like human rights either.  If corporations were actually human, many of them would be diagnosed as sociopaths, such is their distaste for human rights.

So, “free markets” thrive in an environment of “unfree” governments.  That’s the first contradiction. 

This economic theory, which delights in totalitarianism, is sometimes called neoliberalism, sometimes neoconservativism, but it’s far removed from what liberalism used to mean, or from what conservatism used to mean.  Nor is it always aligned with the word “capitalism” It’s really about unfettered parasitism in many ways.

Capitalism, notes JR Saul, in Voltaire’s Bastards, should be aligned with production. People own shares or parts of companies as a way of financing companies and enabling manufacturing.  Now, thanks to the free-marketeers, it has become associated with speculation (i.e money markets, commodities, hedge funds), the same shadow banking

that led to the most recent financial crisis and the economic downturn.  Not only did the speculation create the crash that robbed untold people of their savings etc., but then the financial industry (including Canadian banks) were bailed out.  They were basically rewarded for being non-productive and parasitical.  This is the so-called free market where “private” corporations reign.  But, another contradiction, none of these corporations is private, because they are all subsidized, some more than others. So free, unregulated markets don’t free the people in any way, unless the term means the “liberation”of money from them.

What has happened to “private” ownership of small businesses?  Try competing with Walmart or Monsanto.  The “free” market has created huge transnational monopolies which basically strangle small businesses that are owned by people, rather than corporations.  And again, they survive where the social/people sphere is weak. That’s why so much manufacturing has moved to China.  Weak labour laws, weak environmental protections, and slave-like working conditions are a magnet for the “free” market (another contradiction).

It’s also why Harper Inc. is destroying our environmental laws, and attacking labour standards etc.  He wants to make Canada more “free”.  Manufacturing is an afterthought, because he knows it can be outsourced, and besides, the economic theory to which he is wedded doesn’t see that as a problem. It’s all about resource extraction and financial “services”.  Sound precarious?  Of course it is.  Resource industries are subject to boom/bust cycles, as are financial services.  His one trump card is a “precarious”: workforce of temp jobs, with no security.  But even that plan may be thwarted by the 99 and their unions who still prefer, for the most part, not to be exploited for the benefit of their corporate masters.

Bail outs and tax havens etc. don’t suffice though, so the “free” market, has a time-tested strategy.  The free market, after all, can not stop expanding. 

First they divide and demonize: opponents are reds or lefties, statists or communists (never mind that China Inc is largely responsible for the evisceration of our environmental and labour laws).

Next, they starve the public sphere (hospital closings, laying off workers etc.) Then, they insinuate the private sphere into the public sphere (i.e P3 hospitals), and presto, they make their money.

 

 

David Climenhaga explains it this way:

   * Starve the public system

   * Pump public money into for-profit health care

   *Watch a two tier system flower as the public sector withers.

Does it sound venal and repressive?  Of course it does, but that’s what market “freedom” is all about.

The global system of competition where the country with the cheapest of everything wins, and the system is crashing.  Austerity is the word of the day, but then “austerity” actually means “corporate bailout”.  Clamp down on the people more to pay off debt created by a “free” system.

Other economic models say that austerity only exacerbates the problem, but that’s not part of the global, free market economic business model espoused by governments such as Harper Inc.

Finally, we have the environment. Hurricane Sandy, which would have more aptly been named Hurricane Fossil Fuels, was systemically created by man-made global warming, as are countless other “natural” catastrophes.  Such “externalities” of the fossil fuel industry, the costs of which are increasing markedly, are being off-loaded onto the public sphere.  This is where the failures of unfettered free-markets are particularly egregious, especially since the fossil fuel industry is leading the war against science and the truth.

What to do?  First, we have to continue to identify, over and over, the cause of global warming. Next, as internationally best-selling Canadian author Naomi Klein explains, we need to create a People’s Shock to collectively pressure governments to responsibly address what is arguably the most important issue of our time. 

Harper Inc., with its blind devotion to the fossil fuel industry, to the detriment of other areas of the economy, is not up to the task.  Neither are “unfettered” free markets which are dictating reckless policies and inhibiting our real freedoms as a people.

Let’s change the vocabulary, and see what happens.

Mark Taliano is a regular contributor of news and commentary to Niagara At Large.

(Niagara At Large invites you to share your views on the information in this post below. PLEASE NOTE that NAL only posts comments by individuals who also share their first and last names.)

 

8 responses to “The Tyranny Of Free-Roaming, Transnational Corporations

  1. G ood article. It is beyond belief that neo-cons like Harper can not see the big picture. In this late stage in our industrial development, growth, both economic and human,is a business model that is unsustainable in a finite world.

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  2. Gerry Chamberland's avatar Gerry Chamberland

    Absolutely correct on all counts. We have lost our way in understanding what a nation really is. Business is the lubrication that allows the transfer of goods and services and not the machine.

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  3. The corporate media’s mission deals with the suppression of truth and is the exploiter of human weakness, such as “The term Brain Washing which came into vogue during the Korean War has been adopted by corporations and their partners in crime the Corporate media.
    Lies and, as my one time Polish Father-in-law use to rant and sneer as he mouthed the words “Propaganda” dictates that repeated often enough lies soon becomes “Truth” in the eyes especially of the unsophisticated and the weary. The realization that in the NOW scheme of things Corporations through lies, half truths, shady lawyers and “OWNED” politicians have acquired from or through the U.S. Supreme Court more power and rights than the very peoples these elitist judges are suppose to protect. DEMOCRACY has NO meaning except to the 1% who have stolen and use it to exploit the masses and Flag waving has become their main source of initiation.

    God Bless this DEMOCRACY? reverberates and is preached through the Corporate Media as if they care where as the only concern they truly have is the Bottom Line on their profit and loss statement .

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  4. Mark, your link on P3s leads to an article criticizing private hospitals. There’s no discussion of public-private partnerships (P3s). The literature on those projects is extensive — and this model has been enthusiastically embraced by the McGuinty government (with the blessing of the federal Tories).

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  5. Great read!
    I wonder what would happen if people do what I now do (atleast as much as I can).
    I, 1) support local businesses including agricultural producers, 2) do not purchase products made in China or anywhere where human rights violations occur that result in a competitive advantage over our own manufacturers. The stuff coming out of these parts of the world is crap anyways so while I pay more up front, I usually save in the long run. Plus less waste going into our landfills.

    China and those like it, for now, are dependant on North American consumption of their products to fuel their global aspirations. We cut that off, we stop their progress. Their economic engine is entirely dependant on exports. Makes me wonder whether that is why their growth numbers are the weakest since 2008. Whether the US is waking up and saying “let’s stop shipping our jobs to China”.

    I guess this is why we are seeing Mexico re-emerging as a cheap source of labour despite its problems. Drug war versus imperialistic goals being the trade-off. Mexico is closer to them ethnically as well as geographically.

    So to everyone…. if you find the message in this article disturbing, stop buying cheap third-world products. Flood your MP’s office with letters condemning deals like the one between the Chinese government and Nexen. Perhaps if enough people take this kind of initiative, Harper et company will take note. They sort of have to, how many years do they have left in government.
    Just sayin…..

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  6. I agree. Using our pocket books to challenge multi-nationals and to reward local suppliers is a good idea. When one supports local business,the effects are multiplied and impact larger on the local economy.

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  7. Thanks Fiona,

    Here’s a good article on P3 schemes:

    http://www.canada.com/hospital+says+Jarvis/7599383/story.html

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