The Real History of 'Corporate Personhood': Meet the Man to Blame for Corporations Having More Rights Than You
By Jeffrey Clements, Berrett-Koehler Publishers
Posted on December 6, 2011, Printed on December 10, 2011
The following is an excerpt of Jeffrey Clement's Corporations Are Not People: Why They Have More Rights Than You Do and What You Can Do About It.) Click here to order a copy.
In 1971, Lewis Powell, a mild-mannered, courtly, and shrewd corporate
lawyer in Richmond, Virginia, soon to be appointed to the United States
Supreme Court, wrote a memorandum to his client, the United States
Chamber of Commerce. He outlined a critique and a plan that changed
America.
Lewis Powell, like the Citizens United dissenter Justice John
Paul Stevens, was a decorated World War II veteran who returned to his
hometown to build a most respected corporate law practice. By all
accounts, Powell was a gentleman — reserved, polite, and gracious — and a
distinguished lawyer and public servant. Commentators and law
professors cite Powell’s “qualities of temperament and character” and
his “modest” and “restrained” approach to judging. At his funeral in
1998, Sandra Day O’Connor, who had joined the Supreme Court in 1987,
said, “For those who seek a model of human kindness, decency, exemplary
behavior, and integrity, there will never be a better man.” Even the
rare critic will cite Lewis Powell’s decency and kindness.
Saturday, December 10, 2011
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