Psychopathic Corporations and a Splinter in My Mind

Written by Dirtgrain
Published February 01, 2004

There is a new documentary, The Corporation, that addresses the issue of corporate personhood, a topic covered well in the book, "Unequal Protection: The Rise of Corporate Dominance and the Theft of Human Rights," by Thom Hartmann. Corporations Need Treatment, Documentary Argues is an article about the movie. Here is a blurb from the movie's website:

    THE CORPORATION engages us in a darkly amusing account of the institution's birth as a legal "person" whose prime directive is to produce ever-increasing profit for it's shareholders regardless of the cost to anyone, or anything else. This pathological nature wasn't always written in stone. 150 years ago a corporation was merely an organized way of doing business. Today it is is a global power.
    Considering the odd legal fiction that deems a corporation a "person" in the eyes of the law, the feature documentary employees a checklist, based on actual diagnostic criteria of the World Health Organization and DSM IV, the standard tool of psychiatrists and psychologists. What emerges is a disturbing diagnosis.
    Self-interested, amoral, callous and deceitful, a corporation's operational principles make it anti-social. It breaches social and legal standards to get its way even while it mimics the human qualities of empathy, caring and altruism. It suffers no guilt. Diagnosis: the institutional embodiment of laissez-faire capitalism fully meets the diagnostic criteria of a psychopath.
    In this feature documentary we see the people who inhabit the corporate "person" explore, and expose, the implications of being part of an institution that is required by it's own laws to place the pursuit of profit over people. Over concern for the environment. Over even the planet itself.
    In production from the time of the loudest protests against globalization to the high-profile bankruptcies of companies like Enron, the filmmakers make this huge and complex topic easy to follow and riveting to watch. Behind-the-scenes tensions and influences are revealed in corporate and anti-corporate dramas through jaw-dropping case studies and true confessions.
    Featuring a multitude of interviews with CEO's and top-level executives from some of the worlds largest corporations, representing a wide range of industries, including: oil (Shell), pharmaceuticals (Pfizer),computers (IBM), tires (Goodyear), carpets (Interface), public relations (Burson Marsteller), branding (Landor), and advertising (Initiative); as well as critical thinkers: Noam Chomsky, Peter Drucker, Milton Friedman, Naomi Klein, Mark Kingwell, Vandana Shiva, and muckraking filmmaker Michael Moore. Add to the mix a corporate spy, an undercover marketer, academics, pundits, historians and activists; deftly blend with newsreel footage, early TV advertisements, B movies, and corporate propaganda films and you have the fascinating, original portrait of an institution that is THE CORPORATION.
I want to be a corporate spy--that is, I want to spy on corporations. Of course, I have already cracked the Jams and Jellies Conspiracy, the More Raisins Conspiracy, the Chicken Bubbles Nanotechnology Conspiracy, the Space Balls and Ice Pirates Prophecy Conspiracy, the Jalepeno Pepper/Apple Sauce Lid Conspiracy, and the Fake Trees Conspiracy. If I put this on my resume, surely somebody from Corpwatch or Corporate Governance or When Corporations Rule the World will take notice. I'm thinking Pulitzer.

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Psychopathic Corporations and a Splinter in My Mind
Published: February 01, 2004
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Section: Politics
Filed Under: Books: Business, Books: Politics and Affairs, Video: Documentary
Writer: Dirtgrain
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#1 — February 1, 2004 @ 00:17AM — Hal Pawluk [URL]

A side glance that might point out why we absolutely need movies like this, from the Hollywood reporter 1/25/04:

The world docu winner was "The Corporation," by co-helmers Mark Achbar and Jennifer Abbott. Based on the book by Joel Bakan, the Canadian film traces the origin of corporations from publicly regulated institution to their present day social predominance.


The film's award stirred some controversy when Achbar cracked from the stage, "I am obligated to thank the corporate sponsors of the festival ... and I thank them particularly for their subtlety," referring to the ubiquitous branding that has claimed Sundance.


One of the evening's subsequent presenters, John Cameron Mitchell, did however, offer a rebuttal during his speech, saying, "We're a country that does not have government sponsored art any more, so we all turned to the corporations."


Stirred some controversy? A rebuttal?

Perhaps another glimpse of The Matrix ...

#2 — February 1, 2004 @ 11:57AM — Dirtgrain [URL]

We can be damn sure The Corporation won't be advertised on CBS.

#3 — February 1, 2004 @ 12:01PM — Rev. Bob [URL]

Hey, I've got one. The ping must not have taken: http://blog.crispen.org/archives/000314.html

#4 — February 1, 2004 @ 12:03PM — Rev. Bob [URL]

Oh crap. I hate it when that happens.

#5 — February 1, 2004 @ 13:08PM — Eric Olsen

Pings don't show up until the page is rebuilt.

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