After retiring as an
organizational psychologist and being very knowledgeable about corporate
wrongdoing on the one hand and government wrongdoing on the other but much less
about the connection between these two hands I spent 10 years researching for
and then writing The Devil's Marriage: Break up the Corpocracy or Leave
Democracy in the Lurch.
I learned from my research that
America's
corpocracy is the collusion of all three branches of our government with
corporate interests, and the latter decidedly have the upper hand. America's
corpocracy is powerful, organized, and affects every sphere of our lives
individually and collectively as a nation (especially the economic and
international spheres) and typically in harmful ways. The toll from
"Economic Katrina" that washed out Main
Street but left Wall Street high and dry is but one
example. Overall, the corpocracy is directly responsible for America's
worst socioeconomic conditions among advanced nations; for being the most
warring nation for self-serving purposes; and for beginning to resemble a
police state because of the perceived threat of terrorist blowback.
The corpocracy's opposition, on
the other hand, is weak and disunited. I found that of roughly 150
nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) presumably opposed to the corpocracy some
had been compromised (e.g. funded by corporate foundations), most were
operating independently of any of the others, and all were pursuing initiatives
that only confronted small pieces of the corpocracy, not its entirety. I also
found no unity among numerous grassroots protest groups or within the public at
large. Although the vast majority of Americans when polled believe government
is too big and that corporations have too much influence over government that
opinion has yet to galvanize public pressure for reforms.
Such discouraging findings led me to suggest the idea of
unleashing "two-fisted democracy power" (figuratively speaking). One
fist would be a virtual network of united NGOs to plan for and carry out a
comprehensive reform strategy. I suggested a name for this network, the U.S.
Chamber of Democracy; and I made it clear no NGO in the network should have to
sacrifice its identity or important projects. Moreover, by being a virtual
network rather than a formalized and bureaucratic supra NGO I reasoned that the
USCD could allow a more collegial and informal collaboration among the various
NGOs in creating and carrying out a strategic plan of the many political,
legislative, judicial, and economic reforms that would be required to end the
corpocracy and rebuild America for the sake of the general welfare.
The other fist would be a
coalition of 25 some segments of the populace that comprise either active grass
root movements (e.g., the Occupy movement); could be energized into an active
movement or protest group (e.g., the jobless); or might be counted on as
allies. The purpose of this coalition, which I have dubbed The Democracy
Coalition, would be to provide political clout for the USCD's initiatives.
Beyond the Book and Onto the
Treadmill
Two-fisted democracy power
looks promising at least to me on paper. What does it look like beyond the book
to other people? A book by an author unknown to most Americans is unlikely to
get much public attention. That is why I have for over a year been giving a few
talk show interviews, writing many commentaries to major newspapers around the
country, writing articles like this one, and launching in August 2011 the
website, www.uschamberofdemocracy.com
. This site has become my primary vehicle for a) describing and explaining
two-fisted democracy power and the need for it, b) soliciting signatures on a
petition to NGOs to unite into a network (this campaign actually started in
April 2011 via my first and now companion website, www.democracypowernow.com ), c)
soliciting support for The Democracy Coalition, and d) soliciting signatures on
a newly created petition to our nation's leaders to stop catering to corporate
interests and start honoring the Constitution.
Late in 2011 I began sending a
proposal to the growing number of NGOs on my list. So far I have contacted
about one-fourth of them. I decided to do this rather than wait for a buildup
of signatures on the petition to them, thereby allowing I figured more
signatures to accumulate while simultaneously showing contacted NGOs how many
signatures have already been collected. I gave the NGOs contacted plenty of
latitude in replying to me by providing them with eight options. They included
giving unconditional support; giving conditional support to the proposal if
others agreed first or if funding were available; giving partial support such
as to The Democracy Coalition only; requesting time to decide; and rejecting
the entire proposal. No option was given for a discourteous non-reply.
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Retired organizational psychologist.
Author of "911!", The Devil's Marriage: Break Up the Corpocracy or Leave Democracy in the Lur ch; America's Oldest Professions: Warring and Spying; and Corporate Reckoning Ahead.
I may be (
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