
8-Day
Week
A weekly e-newsletter from the publisher of Chronogram containing:
Up-to-date Mid-Hudson events, listings, selections of insight
for conscious living, and social & political commentary.
|
|
|
|
Feature
Literary 2003: ESSAY
Raking the Muck: Revealing Corporate America
by Pauline Uchmanowicz
   
Rife with gumshoes tracing greenback and paper trails
from the nations heartland to McDonalds, cyberspace to Florida
voting booths,
Wall Street to Pennsylvania Avenue, and flag stops in between, 2002 proved
a vintage year for muckrakers. Fast Food Nation, award-winning journalist
Eric Schlossers exhaustively researched indictment of agribusiness,
appeared in paperback (with a new afterward), and 54-straight weeks later
remains on the New York Times bestseller list. Parked on that papers
hardcover bestseller roster for more than 40 weeks and still holding,
provocateur Michael Moores smearing political satire Stupid White
Men, slated for an October 2001 release but delayed until the following
March, is now in its 40th printing. A wider reading public likewise encountered
investigative reporter Greg Palast, whose book debut The Best Democracy
Money Can Buy presents an unfettered look at recent political and corporate
fraud in the us and uk. Rounding out these exposés, in late November,
business-writer wunderkind James Surowiecki offered up Best Business Crime
Writing of the Year, an edited collection of stories culled from among
our nations most respected newspapers and magazines. Each book paves
inroads into current environmental, economic, and governmental crises,
fingering those who drove us to the brink and explaining how to apply
the breaks before we all fall over the edge together. Summed up another
way, as Schlosser writes in the epilogue of Fast Food Nation, The
history of the twentieth century was dominated by the struggle against
totalitarian systems. The twenty-first will no doubt be marked by a struggle
to curtail excessive corporate power.
Perhaps the most recognizable personality in the pile, documentary filmmaker
and television host Michael Moore narrates Stupid White Men as if he were
one. Irreverent and frequently scatologicalliterally discoursing
on bathroom habitsin a print version of the folksy, big-screen bumbler,
he shakes down big shots to find the right leads, whether riffing on global
warming, Dixiecrats, the prison system, Pharmacia, Bill Clinton, or international
politics. Aiming controversy directly at Thief-in-Chief George
W. Bush (a tactic which post-9/11 stalled and nearly nixed the authors
deal with publisher HarperCollins), Moore claims Dubya and clan fixed
the presidential election via Florida.
Elsewhere stirring up political incorrectness, Moore tackles white-skin
privilege in the chapter Kill Whitey, paralleling the theme
of white violence contained in his latest documentary Bowling for Columbine.
Serving up smarmy survival tips to both whites and blacks
(in that order), he at times borders on racism. This misstep aside, Stupid
White Men likely will ignite todays younger generation the way Abbie
Hoffmans Steal This Book did baby boomers. While Hoffmans
anarchist anthem offered strategies for circumventing government and consumerism,
Moore explains how to fight the forces head-onthe only option we
have in these troubling times. To that end, Moores practical handbook
provides e-mail addresses for contacting representatives in Washington,
along with clipncarry boxes suitable for
laminating and carrying in your wallet, such as an excerpt from
the Federal Voting Rights Act of 1965.
In subject matter, tone, and format, The Best Democracy Money Can Buy
comes closest to Stupid White Men. In fact, the deep throat for most of
Moores dirt on the stolen Florida election is Greg Palast,
who broke the story in a series of revelations that appeared in the Nation,
the Washington Post, Salon.com, and elsewhere. Spliced together in his
books most shocking section, Jim Crow in Cyberspace,
the reportage leaves little doubt that Governor Jeb Bush and Florida Secretary
of State Katherine Harris engaged in electronic ethnic cleansing,
purging 57,000 people, mostly African Americans, off the voter rolls.
To lend a helping hand, the duo terminated a $5,700 bid-contract with
a small database-industry operator and hired the Atlanta firm dbt Online
(since merged into ChoicePoint) for a fee of $2,317,800no
bidding. Their chore was to generate a list of felons, ineligible
to vote in Florida. But due to egregious errors, at least 90.2 percent
of the names were wrongly tagged for removal.
The story went unreported in our fast-forward, profit-driven media, Palast
charges, because investigative journalism, which often requires fine-combing
mountains of evidence, is risky, time consuming, and expensive. In contrast
to what he says is laughably called Americas journalistic
culture, The Best Democracy Money Can Buy exemplifies the
challenges of recording hard news. A bricolage of Palasts award-winning
coverage, including the Exxon Valdez cover-up, illicit dealings of Pat
Robertsons Christian Coalition, unsavory policies of both Bushes
and Clinton, Tony Blairs scandalous Lobbygate, strong-arm
tactics of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank, and the
Monsanto caper that tainted Americas milk supply with BST growth
hormone, the book flushes out the excesses of corporate power and accompanying
threats to democracy. Quoting former Texas agriculture commissioner and
muckraker-in-his-own-right Jim Hightower, who used to complain about Monsanto
lobbying the secretary of agriculture, Palast writes, The corporations
dont have to lobby the government anymore. They are the government.
Echoing Moore and Schlosser, he adds the caveat, Today, Monsanto
executive Ann Venamin is the secretary of agriculture, who along
with Bush pushed to stop testing the National School Lunch Programs
ground beef for salmonella, a decision later overturned by outraged consumer
groups.
Born in Los Angeles but largely shut out from reporting for big us media
firms due to his leftist political leanings, Palast works primarily for
the English press. An investigator by training, who has worked with labor
unions and consumer groups throughout the us, South Africa, and Europe,
he turned to journalism five years ago because of the dearth of reporters
willing to risk their livelihoods on red-hot topics. Consequently, despite
accolades applauding his ambition and purpose, Palast has not as yet fine-tuned
his writing skills. One could argue that translating the minutia of policy
reports or top-secret memorandums that mysteriously fall into his possession
(sources undisclosed) into readable prose precludes attention to style.
But in Fast Food Nation, an avalanche of facts and observations
according to the New York Times, Eric Schlossers eloquence suggests
otherwise.
Upton Sinclairs The Jungle revisited for our times, Schlossers
four-year study began as a two-part article for Rolling Stone. Arranged
as a series of interrelated narratives, the meticulously documented yet
beautifully written Fast Food Nation is a veritable page-turner, as hard
to put down as a hardboiled mystery novel. Schlosser backs up his polemic
with mounds of information, ranging from scientific studies and industry
reports to firsthand interviews and eyewitness accounts. Though chiefly
excoriating the fast food industry for its exploitative labor practices,
polluting of the environment, decimation of the natural landscape, and
contributions to dietary epidemics in America, Schlosser likewise implicates
consumers, writing in the books introduction, Hundreds of
millions of people buy fast food every day without giving it much thought,
unaware of the subtle and not so subtle ramifications of their purchases.
Also recognizing the power of human interest in posting memorable images
and ideas to the political imagination, Schlosser lauds teenage and immigrant
workers, small farmers and independent ranchers.
In the course of exposing corporate monoliths such as the Iowa Beef Packers
(ibp) and ConAgra for engaging in bribery, fraud, price fixing, and other
illegalities, Schlossers most compelling chapters address why meatpacking
is now the most dangerous job in the United States and whats
in the meat. (Bluntly stated: shit.) Taking readers
on a tour of a slaughterhouse, staffed by mostly ill-paid, uneducated,
itinerant employees who dont speak English, he describes donning
knee-high rubber boots and wading through blood thats ankle
deep to where a worker called a sticker slits the neck
of a stunned steer every ten seconds, up to 400 an hour. (As a vegan friend
of mine observed, refraining from eating meat is one way of easing this
butchers karmic burden.) With the potential for accident and injury
running high, the meatpacking industry connives to skirt Occupational
Health and Safety Administration (osha) requirements and workers
compensation litigation. For example, as Schlosser reports, under
Colorado law, the payment for losing an arm is $36,000, with an
amputated finger fetching between $2,200 and $4,500.
Schlossers new afterward proposes policy, imploring the fda and
other regulatory branches of the us government to revise agribusiness
industry standards, rules, and regulations. Despite his apocalyptic scenarios,
including the looming threat of mad cow disease and lethal food-borne
pathogens, such as E. coli, transmitted in contaminated meat, he writes,
Things dont have to be the way they are. Echoing the
final sentence of The Diary of Anne Frank, Schlosser closes with the line:
Despite all evidence to the contrary, I remain optimistic.
Likewise written with style and grace, Best Business Crime Writing of
the Year reads like a primer on biggest corporate scandals of last year.
Taken as a whole, the 27 articles provide a top-down analysis of how politicians,
lobbyists, ceos, and finance-industry regulators colluded to bilk investors
of some $2 trillion. Brief updates follow original stories
when deemed necessary by editor James Surowiecki, who in addition to writing
a quirky one-page business column in The New Yorker also contributes to
Fortune, the New York Times Magazine, the Wall Street Journal and other
publications.
Surowiecki provides vocabulary lessons for novices in his general and
section introductions. Explaining self-dealing (when those
running companies put their own gain ahead of owners and shareholders),
independent regulators (supposedly trustworthy investment
houses such as Goldman Sachs and Merrill Lynch), and the like, he makes
the complexities of high finance accessible to working stiffs who cash
paychecks rather than exercise stock options (when corporate executives,
without investing their own money, borrow against company earnings to
buy company stock, which they may cash in at any time). In what follows,
readers glimpse arcane mechanisms of corporate systems chiefly through
the lens of Big Telecom, which promised cheaper, faster, and more efficient
telephone and internet communications through the likes of Enron, Global
Crossing, Qwest, WorldCom, and other now notorious companies.
Among the most engaging selections are personality profiles of the rich
and famous coming home to roost, though a small group of bigwig financiers
managed to walk away with billions. David Staples A Telecom
Prophets Fall from Grace, from the Edmonton Journal, presents
an entertaining portrait of Bernie Ebbers, the milkman-turned-captain
of industry who founded WorldCom, at the center of the largest bankruptcy
and biggest corporate fraud in history. And who could resist the comeuppance
of Martha Stewart, roasted by a group of Newsweek writers in an exposé
called The Insiders? Tracking down how biotech giant ImClone,
brainchild of Stewarts pal Sam Waksal, sprouted a very big
weed in the domestic divas well-manicured life,
it compels through wit as much as cold-hard facts.
Readers also learn how regulators such as accounting firm Arthur Anderson,
who collected from Enron more in consulting than auditing fees, jumped
the Chinese walls, which reporters from BusinessWeek translate
as industry jargon for the separation of different lines of business
conducted under the same roof. But others, such as Arthur Levitt,
Jr., chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission (sec) under Bill
Clinton, as well as current New York State Attorney General Eliot Spitzer,
have kept to their sides of the boundaries, presented as having pushed
for Wall Street reforms. Additionally, the books final section aims
to diagnose what went wrong with the system and how to fix it. Not surprisingly,
several journalists recommend a reassessment of stock-option employment
packages.
Historically, investigative journalism has instigated cultural reforms.
Food legislation was enacted in 1906 due to The Jungle, and the release
and publication of the Pentagon Papers led to the downfall of Richard
Nixon. But the key to social change begins with an informed citizenry.
The books by Moore, Palast, Schlosser, and Surowiecki can aid in this
pedagogical process.
|
 |



|