• Hello, this board in now turned off and no new posting.
    Please REGISTER at Anabolic Steroid Forums, and become a member of our NEW community!
  • Check Out IronMag Labs® KSM-66 Max - Recovery and Anabolic Growth Complex

How Big Corporations Are Unpatriotic - By Ralph Nader

LAM

Is Doin It 4 Da Shorteez
Registered
Joined
May 18, 2002
Messages
16,294
Reaction score
1,432
Points
0
Location
Las Vegas & St. Croix
Posted on Mar 28, 2013

By Ralph Nader

This piece first appeared on Ralph Nader?s website, Nader.org.

Many giant profitable U.S. corporations are increasingly abandoning America while draining it at the same time.

General Electric, for example, has paid no federal income taxes for a decade while becoming a net job exporter and fighting its hard-pressed workers who want collective bargaining through unions like the United Electrical Workers Union (UE). GE?s boss, Jeffrey Immelt, makes about $12,400 an hour on an 8-hour day, plus benefits and perks, presiding over this global corporate empire.

Telling by their behavior, these big companies think patriotism toward the country where they were created and prospered is for chumps. Their antennae point to places where taxes are very low, labor is wage slavery, independent unions are non-existent, governments have their hands out, and equal justice under the rule of law does not exist. China, for example, has fit that description for over 25 years.

Other than profiteering from selling Washington very expensive weapons of mass destruction, many multinational firms have little sense of true national security.

Advertisement
Did you know that about 80 percent of the ingredients in medicines Americans take now come from China and India where visits by FDA inspectors are infrequent and inadequate?

The lucrative U.S. drug industry ? coddled with tax credits, free transfer of almost-ready-to-market drugs developed with U.S. taxpayer dollars via the National Institutes of Health ? charges Americans the highest prices for drugs in the world and still wants more profits. Drug companies no longer produce many necessary medicines like penicillin in the U.S., preferring to pay slave wages abroad to import drugs back into the U.S.

Absence of patriotism has exposed our country to dependency on foreign suppliers for crucial medicines, and these foreign suppliers may not be so friendly in the future.

Giant U.S. companies are strip-mining America in numerous ways, starting with the corporate tax base. By shifting more of their profits abroad to ?tax-haven? countries (like the Cayman Islands) through transfer pricing and other gimmicks, and by lobbying many other tax escapes through Congress, they can report record profits in the U.S. with diminishing tax payments. Yet they are benefitting from the public services, special privileges, and protection by our armed forces because they are U.S. corporations.

On March 27, 2013, the Washington Post reported that compared to forty years ago, big companies that ?routinely cited U.S. federal tax expenses that were 25 to 50 percent of their worldwide profits,? are now reporting less than half that share. For instance, Proctor and Gamble was paying 40 percent of its total profits in taxes in 1969; today it pays 15 percent in federal taxes. Other corporations pay less or no federal income taxes.

Welcome to globalization. It induces dependency on instabilities in tiny Greece and Cyprus that shock stock investments by large domestic pension and mutual funds here in the U.S. Plus huge annual U.S. trade deficits, which signals the exporting of millions of jobs.

The corporate law firms for these big corporations were the architects of global trade agreements that make it easy and profitable to ship jobs and industries to fascist and communist regimes abroad while hollowing out U.S. communities and throwing their loyal American workers overboard. It?s not enough that large corporations are paying millions of American workers less than workers were paid in 1968, adjusted for inflation.

Corporate bosses can?t say they?re just keeping up with the competition; they muscled through the trade system that pulls down on our country?s relatively higher labor, consumer and environmental standards.

Corporate executives, when confronted with charges that show little respect for the country, its workers and its taxpayers who made possible their profits and subsidized their mismanagement, claim they must maximize their profits for their shareholders and their worker pension obligations.

Their shareholders? Is that why they?re stashing $1.7 trillion overseas in tax havens instead of paying dividends to their rightful shareholder-owners, which would stimulate our economy? Shareholders? Are those the people who have been stripped of their rights as owners and prohibited from even keeping a lid on staggeringly sky-high executive salaries ranging from $5,000 to $20,000 an hour or more, plus perks?

Why these corporate bosses can?t even abide one democratically-run shareholders? meeting a year without gaveling down their owners and cutting time short. To get away from as many of their shareholder-owners as possible, AT&T is holding its annual meeting on April 26 in remote Cheyenne, Wyoming!

Pension obligations for their workers? The award-winning reporter for the Wall Street Journal Ellen E. Shultz demonstrates otherwise. In her gripping book Retirement Heist: How Companies Plunder and Profit from the Nest Eggs of American Workers, she shows how by ?exploiting loopholes, ambiguous regulations and new accounting rules,? companies deceptively tricked employees and turned their pension plans into piggy banks, tax shelters and profit centers.

Recently, I wrote to the CEOs of the 20 largest U.S. corporations, asking if they would stand up at their annual shareholders? meetings and on behalf of their U.S. chartered corporation (not on behalf of their boards of directors), and pledge allegiance to the flag ending with those glorious words ?with liberty and justice for all.? Nineteen of the CEOs have not yet replied. One, Chevron, declined the pledge request but said their patriotism was demonstrated creating jobs and sparking economic activity in the U.S.

But when corporate lobbyists try to destroy our right of trial by jury for wrongful injuries ? misnamed tort reform ? when they destroy our freedom of contract ? through all that brazenly one-sided fine print ? when they corrupt our constitutional elections with money and unaccountable power, when they commercialize our education and patent our genes, and outsource jobs to other countries, the question of arrogantly rejected patriotism better be front-and-center for discussion by the American people.


How Big Corporations Are Unpatriotic - Truthdig
 
wages in the US are far too high to compete with the global economy.
 
wages in the US are far too high to compete with the global economy.

Tell your boss you want a pay cut so the company can be more competitive.
 
wages in the US are far too high to compete with the global economy.

yea..the wage of CEO's and those on wallstreet but not the wages of those that labor. their wages haven't moved in 30 years once being adjusted for inflation.

and competing with foreign labor markets is an "option". that apparently only the US has exercised. which is why the US has off-shored 6x the amount of jobs as the EU 15 combined.

do know what other major country's have economy's on the verge of collapse besides the US? none...sure they are in recession but the US is the only major economy that is being forecast by global think-tanks as having to an inevitable collapse in coming decades. all due to high inequality and un-sustainable growth.
 
Last edited:
Tell your boss you want a pay cut so the company can be more competitive.

don't hold your breath on that one. it's the old Reagan attitude. "I got mine, so fuck everyone else".
 
wages in the US are far too high to compete with the global economy.

OECD (2011), Divided We Stand: Why Inequality Keeps Rising

Social and welfare issues - Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development
(Under embargo: Monday 5th December 2011, 11am Paris time)
COUNTRY NOTE: UNITED STATES
The United States has the fourth-highest inequality level in the OECD, after Chile, Mexico and Turkey. Inequality among working-age people has risen steadily since 1980, in total by 25%. In 2008, the average income of the top 10% of Americans was 114 000 USD, nearly 15 times higher than that of the bottom 10%, who had an average income of 7 800 USD. This is up from 12 to 1 in the mid 1990s, and 10 to 1 in the mid 1980s.

Income taxes and cash benefits play a small role in redistributing income in the United States, reducing inequality by less than a fifth ? in a typical OECD country, it is a quarter. Only in Korea, Chile and Switzerland is the effect still smaller.

Key findings:

* The wealthiest Americans have collected the bulk of the past three decades?? income gains. The share of national income of the richest 1% more than doubled between 1980 and 2008: from 8% to 18% [Table9.1]. The richest 1% now makes an average US$1.3 million of after-tax income (compared to US$17,700 for the poorest 20% of US citizens). During the same time, the top marginal income tax rate dropped from 70% in 1981 to 35% in 2010.

* The rising incomes of executives and finance professionals account for much of the rising share of top income recipients. Moreover, people who achieve such a high income status tend to stay there: only 25% drop out of the richest 1% in the US, compared to some 40% in Australia and Norway, for instance.

* The main reason for widening inequality in the US is the widening wage gap. The gap between the richest and poorest 10% of full-time workers has increased by almost one third, more than in most other OECD countries.

* Contrary to the OECD trend, annual hours among lower-wage workers in the US increased by more than 20% over the past decades [Table4.A1.2] ?V probably linked to incentive policies such as the Earned Income Tax Credit (EITC) but also the relatively low level of the minimum wage. This trend partially offset the rising wage gap and led to a more moderate increase in overall annual earnings inequality.

http://www.oecd.org/unitedstates/49170253.pdf

and from the FED Labors Share of the National Income

Nonfarm Business Sector: Labor Share (PRS85006173) - FRED - St. Louis Fed

* so try again about who's wages are too high cause it sure as hell isn't labors.
 
Absophuquinlutely!

I've learned in my adult life, the hard way, that patriotism is a word these phuqers in the top tier positions thought up to sucker the youth in order to get them to do their dirty work so they can prosper. The whole time the majority of those fuckers in charge never displayed any 'patriotism'.

That worked like a charm so now these corps want to take advantage! and that has also worked like a charm.

Meanwhile, people still want to bitch about this false left and right paradigm, which is a total bs and just shielding these crooks.
 
Meanwhile, people still want to bitch about this false left and right paradigm, which is a total bs and just shielding these crooks.

That's what 90% of the population fails to grasp every day.
 
Absophuquinlutely!

I've learned in my adult life, the hard way, that patriotism is a word these phuqers in the top tier positions thought up to sucker the youth in order to get them to do their dirty work so they can prosper. The whole time the majority of those fuckers in charge never displayed any 'patriotism'.

That worked like a charm so now these corps want to take advantage! and that has also worked like a charm.

Meanwhile, people still want to bitch about this false left and right paradigm, which is a total bs and just shielding these crooks.

If being a "patriot" means taking it in the ass and not even getting a reach-around then I'd rather not be one.

there is a common theme or denial and extreme ignorance in the US when it comes to these kinds of topics. it would almost be funny if it's wasn't so sad. the end result of so many being "educated" by tv and political pundits.
 
Back
Top