No.
Ralph
Waldo Emerson once wrote of being leery of a fast-talking huckster who visited
his home: “The louder he talked of his honor, the faster we counted our
spoons,” Emerson exclaimed.
Likewise,
today’s workaday families should do a mass inventory of their silverware,
for the fast-talking CEOs of 181 union-busting,
tax-cheating, environment-contaminating, consumer-gouging corporations are
asking us to believe that they stand with us in the fight against… well,
against them.
From
Wall Street banksters to Big Oil polluters, these profiteers are suddenly
trumpeting their future intentions to serve not just their own greed, but every
“stakeholder” (which is what they call employees, customers, suppliers, et al).
But
vague proclamations are cheap, and it’s worth noting that these new champions
of the common good propose no specifics — no actual sacrifices by them or
benefits for us.
A
few media observers have mildly objected, saying it’s “an open question”
whether any of the corporate proclaimers will change how they do business.
But it’s not an open question at all. They won’t.
But it’s not an open question at all. They won’t.
They won’t support full collective bargaining power for workers, won’t join the public’s push to get Medicare for All, won’t stop using monopoly power to squeeze out small competitors and gouge consumers, won’t support measures to stop climate change, and won’t back reforms to get their corrupt corporate money out of our politics.
All
told, they won’t embrace any of the big structural changes necessary to reverse
the raw economic and political inequality that has enthroned their plutocratic
rule.
In
fact, their empty proclamation is what West Texas cowboys might call “bovine
excrement,” meant to fend off the actual changes that real reformers are
advancing.
Corporate
elites won’t fix inequality for us — they’re
the ones doing it to us.
OtherWords
columnist Jim Hightower is a radio commentator, writer, and public speaker.
Distributed by OtherWords.org.