THE
BIGGEST THREAT TO THE RESISTANCE YOU NEVER HEARD OF
By
Robert Reich
To watch this video on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PlhVHiWM4yk
Have you heard of SLAPP lawsuits? You soon will.
SLAPP
stands for “Strategic Lawsuit Against Public Participation.”
It
is a lawsuit brought by big corporations intended to censor, intimidate, and
silence critics by burdening them with the overwhelming costs of a legal
defense until they’re forced to abandon their criticism or opposition.
And
it may be the biggest threat to the resistance you’ve never heard of.
Here’s
an example: Resolute Forest Products, one of Canada’s largest logging and paper
companies, has sued, in a U.S. court, environmental groups that have been
campaigning to save Canada’s boreal forest.
Resolute
based its lawsuit on a U.S. conspiracy and racketeering law (RICO) intended to
ensnare mobsters. Resolute alleged that the environmental groups have been
illegally conspiring to extort the company’s customers and to defraud their own
donors.
The
suit wasn’t designed to win in court. It was designed to distract and silence
critics. This is punishment for speaking out. Thankfully, a federal court
agrees and a judge just dismissed Resolute’s claims. But other corporate
bullies are still trying to use this playbook.
EDITOR’S
NOTE: SLAPPs first started cropping up in the 1980s. I had to deal with SLAPPs a lot as
national organizing director for the organization now known as the Center for
Health and Environmental Justice. For the most part, we helped local citizens’
groups turn the tactic back on the SLAPP attackers. Click
here to read about a 1989 case I worked on.
Citizens
took the anti-SLAPP fight further, getting most states, including Rhode Island,
to enact legislation protecting free speech and imposing harsh penalties on
those who would try to SLAPP their opponents into silence. CLICK
HERE for a 2011 article I wrote here in Progressive Charlestown on how to “SLAPP-back.”
– Will Collette
Here’s
another example: Remember the indigenous led movement at Standing Rock, when
hundreds of nations and their allies came together and stood up against the
destructive Dakota Access Pipeline?
In
August, Energy Transfer Partners, the company behind that pipeline, filed a
similar RICO case against Greenpeace entities and two other defendants over
Standing Rock.
The
suit accuses them of participating in a sprawling criminal conspiracy to
disrupt business and defraud donors.
The lawsuit even alleges they support eco-terrorism and engage in drug trafficking.
The lawsuit even alleges they support eco-terrorism and engage in drug trafficking.
The
lawsuit claims Greenpeace cost the company $300 million. Since RICO claims
entitle plaintiffs to recover triple damages, the case potentially could cost
Greenpeace $900 million. That would be the end of Greenpeace.
But,
again, winning isn’t necessarily the goal of SLAPP suits.
Just by filing the suits, Energy Transfer Partners and Resolute are trying to drain environmental groups of time, energy, and resources they need, so they can’t continue to fight to protect the environment.
Just by filing the suits, Energy Transfer Partners and Resolute are trying to drain environmental groups of time, energy, and resources they need, so they can’t continue to fight to protect the environment.
Connect
the dots, and consider the chilling effect SLAPP suits are having on any group
seeking to protect public health, worker’s rights, and even our
democracy.
Who’s
behind all of this? Both the lawsuits I just mentioned were filed by Michael
Bowe. He is also a member of Donald Trump’s personal legal team.
Bowe has publicly stated that he’s in conversations with other corporations considering filing their own SLAPP lawsuits.
Bowe has publicly stated that he’s in conversations with other corporations considering filing their own SLAPP lawsuits.
If
the goal is to silence public-interest groups, the rest of us must speak out.
Wealthy corporations must know they can’t SLAPP the public into silence.
ROBERT
B. REICH is Chancellor's Professor of Public Policy at the University of
California at Berkeley and Senior Fellow at the Blum Center for Developing
Economies. He served as Secretary of Labor in the Clinton administration, for
which Time Magazine named him one of the ten most effective cabinet secretaries
of the twentieth century. He has written fourteen books, including the best
sellers "Aftershock", "The Work of Nations," and "Beyond
Outrage," and, his most recent, "Saving Capitalism." He is also
a founding editor of the American Prospect magazine, chairman of Common Cause,
a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and co-creator of the
award-winning documentary, INEQUALITY FOR ALL.