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Barry C. Lynn's "Cornered: The New Monopoly Capitalism and the Economics of Destruction"

Barry C. Lynn's "Cornered: The New Monopoly Capitalism and the Economics of Destruction"
By Stephen Lendman | Blogspot
Lynn is director of the Markets, Enterprise, and Resiliency Initiative, a senior fellow at the New America Foundation, and author of "Too Big to Fail" about the dangers of monopoly capitalism. He will be Stephen's radio guest on Saturday, March 6th, on the Progressive Radio Network.
He expands on the threat in his newest book titled, "Cornered: The New Monopoly Capitalism and the Economics of Destruction," explaining today's peril given the power of predatory giants.
They control governments, the courts, war and peace, dominant information sources, and essential services, including health care, air and water, what we eat and drink, where we live, what we wear, and school curricula to the highest levels. They own genetic code patents, basic human life elements to be commodified the same as toothpaste, tomatoes or toilet paper.
Omnipotent, they plunder recklessly, ruthlessly at our expense. They're private tyrannies, endangering humanity, basic freedoms, environmental sustainability, and planetary survival. Without exaggeration, they're unaccountable, unchecked "weapons of mass destruction."
In "Cornered," Lynn explains the danger and urgency to address it. Our lives and futures depend on it.
It might have been different had Thomas Jefferson and James Madison prevailed over John Adams and Alexander Hamilton in crafting America's Bill of Rights. They wanted 12, not 10, including "freedom from a permanent military (and) monopolies in commerce."
Imagine the possibilities had they prevailed, or if early leaders agreed with Jefferson in 1816, seven years after his presidency, saying in a letter to a friend:
"I hope we shall crush in its birth the aristocracy of our monied corporations which dare already to challenge our government to a trial of strength, and bid defiance to the laws of our country."
Earlier, he opposed chartering the first Bank of the United States, a 19th century version of today's central bank, what Andrew Jackson called a "hydra-headed monster," and Lincoln described as predatory money powers "more despotic than a monarch, more insolent than autocracy and more selfish than a bureaucracy." He feared they'd accumulate enough wealth and power to destroy the Republic, similar to former Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandeis' view saying, "We can have democracy in this country, or we can have great wealth concentrated in the hands of the few, but we can't have both."
Others call it fascism or a reasonable facsimile with elements including:
- the despotic union of corporate and state power - aka corporatism;
- rampant corruption;
- the disdain for human rights, civil liberties, and ordinary workers;
- the dominance of militarism, belligerency, and permanent wars;
- fraudulent elections;
- an obsession with national security;
- the control of public information; and
- the omnipotence of corporate giants, taking full advantage to pillage and profiteer.
Lynn's book tells why, beginning in his preface titled, "Of Rule and Ruin," saying he warned about monopolization dangers because:
"our political economy is run by a compact elite that is able to fuse the power of our public government with the power of private corporate governments in ways that enable members of the elite (to freely decide) who wins, who loses, and who pays."
His book is "a chronicle of a death foretold, and the corpse on the street (is) the American Republic." Consolidated corporate power and the political complicity behind it means monopolists run the country and the world, justifying it as free-market fundamentalism - a corrupted deception masking predatory dominance that destroys democratic freedoms.
Ronald Reagan accelerated it when government stopped enforcing antitrust laws, and encouraged consolidation, production outsourcing, destruction of America's manufacturing base, the offshoring of high-paying jobs, financialization's ascendency and power of Wall Street, and the ability of corporate predators to break the law and get away with it, today more than ever under Obama.
Lynn calls his book "a sort of tour of monopoly in all its many guises, in the United States today....how monopolists rip us off as consumers, raising the prices we must pay" for everything including essentials becoming more unaffordable. He covers new monopoly forms and others thought long ago vanished. Understanding them is key to knowing the dangers, from phenomena including:
- problems launching and successfully running a small business;
- good jobs disappearing, replaced by low-paying service ones with few benefits;
- the destruction of organized labor, aided by corrupted union bosses;
- skyrocketing medical costs;
- blocking efficient, low cost technologies that hurt profits;
- low quality food, drugs and other products;
- the burgeoning national debt and current account deficit; and
- corporatization's corrupting dominance heading American toward despotism with governments as willing partners.
The auto industry is instructive, Lynn saying it "resembles the Hydra, the many-headed monster from Greek mythology." Like their heads relying on one body, the automakers "increasingly rely on a single common body of companies that supply the same components to all of them."
In today's hard times, they stand or fall together, governments facilitating consolidation and bailing out the majors, or in other words, socializing risks, privatizing profits, and doing it for other endangered sectors, Wall Street getting the most by far from a privatized central bank they own and US Treasury they control.
Lynn structures his book in three parts:
- examples of monopolies and the fallout from unrestrained corporate dominance;
- the effects on ordinary people; and
- how it affects other systems - ones in place "to protect peaceful international relations, our knowledge of how to make the products and grow the foods we need, and our political institutions."
Combined, he reveals a neofeudalist system of vast size and power, dominating all major American and global industries, consolidating for greater strength, partnered with governments, operating ruthlessly, crushing competition, exploiting workers, and colluding for greater control, the public welfare be damned.
Without antitrust enforcement, monopoly options include:
- home-based ones to build a power base to capture global markets;
- pincer ones - "One of the oldest techniques for capturing and protecting monopoly positions" by controlling related activities, then using them to consolidate and crush competition;
- trading ones that rely on offshore suppliers, investing instead in marketing and strategic alliances for greater market share;
- middleman ones to build power positions between producers and end users;
- privatized public monopolies - the simplest, fastest way to create private ones;
- leapfrog ones by repackaging old businesses in new technologies to escape government oversight;
- futures ones so financiers can dominate trading markets for commodities, financial instruments and currencies, etc.;
- respecting other monopolies so they'll respect yours; and
- perfecting your monopoly with new positions, raising prices to exploit them.
These practices made the land of "free-market capitalism" the land of monopoly, Lynn calling it nothing mysterious, saying:
Monopoly is just "a form of government that one group of human beings imposes on another group, (its purpose being to let) the first group....transfer wealth and power to (itself. They) organize and disorganize, to grab and smash, to rule and ruin, in ways that serve their interests only. At bottom, monopoly is merely a political tool," not because of a better product or service, but through better capitalization and political connections.
The rich "reappropriated the institution of the corporation after (early 20th century antitrust laws restrained them), regarding (them) as the 'owners' of these institutions lies at the heart of our present crisis."
Our system's single biggest problem is having ceded "almost complete power over these institutions (to) a class of people whose interests (aren't) served....by building things but by breaking" them. Capitalism lets some people "use the power in concentrated capital to harness free citizens" and crush democratic freedoms.
As a result, monopolies run America. Antitrust enforcement is null and void, and according to Lynn: "It will take more than a lawsuit or two to overthrow America's corporatist oligarchy and restore a model of capitalism that protects our rights as property holders and citizens."
Getting money out of politics is key - the reality that big money dictates policy, pre-selects candidates, predetermines outcomes, gets the best democracy it can buy, assures a de facto one-party state, and a dominant media trumpeting the best of all possible worlds that's, in fact, corrupted, broken, despotic, and ruinous by benefiting the rich against the rest.
Short of sweeping fundamental change, nothing will deter corporate giants from securing total global control in a world intolerable for most, the direction we're now heading unless mass people power stops them. There's no other way! So what are we waiting for?
###
Stephen Lendman is a Research Associate of the Centre for Research on Globalization. He lives in Chicago and can be reached at lendmanstephen@sbcglobal.net.
Also visit his blog site at sjlendman.blogspot.com and listen to cutting-edge discussions with distinguished guests on the Progressive Radio News Hour on the Progressive Radio Network Thursdays at 10AM US Central time and Saturdays and Sundays at noon. All programs are archived for easy listening.
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Stay warm this winter in a black hooded sweatshirt. Order one. Order them by the dozen and donate them to occupations!





getting a few hours of sleep.
It's not an easy article to digest. Plenty of hard-hitting or heartbreaking truth is said in it, and that's not fun, at all. But fun in exchange of or for truth is also and very displeasing; imo, anyway. Nevertheless, I weary of being reminded of the causes of the troubles in our world, having read and learned enough to "fill my stomach" ... "beyond repair". But putting this "sudden indigestion" aside, for a moment anyway, I have to admit that his article is right and very good; just a little difficult on digestability. Alka-seltza or -selza or ... -whatever (whatever the "correct" spelling is)? (A joint? You have Alpoco Gold, do ya? Now we're talking.)
Anyway, when will people who've preferred, say, to live in denial of the real causes of the extreme troubles in our world wake up? Despair is not good, but waking up can be very beneficial. And being patient is a virtue, but conditions are very nauseating, and noxious.
Voters need to become like consumers who actively become informed and constructively activist. Consumers who do this apply consumer power; like, f.e., with healthy boycotts. Apply voter power, too!
Don't despair. Instead, apply voter power! The elites want to take this away from voters. How should voters respond? Voter power! How else? Voter power!
Woter power is citizen power. And when we consider the situation in this way, or this combined way, then even non-citizens who are nevertheless residents can join; and if we consider an extension of this, one that's morally fitting, then all persons of good conscience can join, that is, everyone in the country can. The difference will only be whether each of these persons can vote in electoral campaigns, or what legal elibilities each of these persons have. There's a universal eligibility though; defence of the UN Charter! Or, if the UN Charter didn't exist or wasn't right, then [good] individual conscience would still suffice.
Voter power would not be a guaranteed remedy, but it's nevertheless a necessary step. It's not guaranteed, for the corrupt, usurous, ... capitalists would still do all they can to retain dominance, and they have a lot of influential power, or power of influence (whatever). But voters are [individuals] and must apply [individual conscience] in solidarity with other voters who do the same for the benefit of society and humanity; as well as for ourselves, individually. If we hurt others, then we hurt ourselves, in the short or long term, but surely; one term or the other. And if we choose otherwise, then we may as well have the usurous, etcetera, elite line us up along walls and shoot us; but that's of course not what they'd do. After all, they love having sheeple. It's the rest of us who'd be lined up along walls and shot. And that would not be to the benefit of naive supporters, either. They'd end up paying, short or long term; them, their children, grandchildren, ....
Neither of those two scenarios sounds good to me, and who needs Nazism when we have the U.S. elite? The latter financed and profited from Nazism, too; and some people claim Hitler was inspired from U.S. history, which wouldn't be surprising, if it's true. It's likely enough to be true, but I'm not historian and didn't live inside his head.
Anyway, VIVE LA RESISTANCE!
Vive, viva, whatever, the expression only means "may resistance LIVE". Don't despair. Resist!
All we need is popular [solidarity]. David Swanson perhaps hasn't used this word, but it's what he basically talks about; active, constructive, ... solidarity. And that's very healthy. If we despair, we "cop out" or "cop-out", whatever the spelling for the expression is. If we wish to resist, then we'll be open to being solidaire in resistance, and this is what's needed. As for how to do this, well, he strikes me as providing very good counsel.
No solidarity, no union. Union makes strength. Division leads to conquest, that is, being conquered, or conquering others. And the divisions that can credibly occur today aren't among the ruling capitalist, ... elite, but the divisions these people can cause among the general population, which should, instead, be in solidarity with each other for conscientious cause(s). It's the or one of the main reasons why the corporate, ... elite control the msm news, ... media; to try to brainwash, dumb down, and cause division, weakness among the general population.
I'll still continue communicating information that's related to specific crimes or misconduct of the government and its corporate controllers, now and then anyway; but David Swanson strikes me as providing a good guideline to follow and support for correcting these problems without naming all of them. We don't need to name or specify every evil or misdeed we need to oppose, for if we make government, political, economic, ... corrections like he explains needs to be done or achieved, then the various specific evils or misdeeds will become correctable. If we don't achieve what he is trying to inspire people to join in doing, then we're not going to stop any of the evils, etcetera; I believe, anyway.
And we can't realistically expect more than gradual constructive, beneificial, corrective, ... progress. If we want miracles, then we shouldn't look to ourselves for providing this type of solution. We need human, social, political, economic, ... solidarity.
I and many others posted, en masse, about Barack Obama and Hilary Clinton being wholly unfit for the Presidency; we explained more than enough. And we got what? We got [empty] and weak bla bla bla in return. And what do we have? Empty, hypocritical, ... for President; and it would [not] have been any better if Hilary Clinton or John McCain had "won", so-called won, that is. The ruling elites make sure that whoever becomes President is a person of their liking, say.
Many of us were ready to support [real] solidarity for real and founded cause or reason(s), but the majority of voters refused. Well, NOW is time to wake up and learn that real solidarity and responsibility are [essential].
Union provides strength. Divisions cause weakness. Most or all of us have read these expressions of reality, and they arguably are truisms. And union and solidarity are synonymous! So there's no need to fear the word "solidarity". It's not a communist word! It's a Resistance word! And resistance is required in our predatory, ... country. People unite. They are solidaire.
Solidarity can and does happen, and it surely has happened among illiterate people, also. So, if they could and did do it, then what are we waiting for? The next Disney or Hollywood feature film?
Like consumer power, voter power, citizen power! [People power]! All people. Everyone contributes in whatever ways we individually can!
[People] power! After all, all of [humanity] is at stake; instead of only USA'ns, (not Americans, but) Americans of the USA.
Mike Corbeil