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cruise4
17-01-2008, 07:16 AM
Rethinking Resistance to Corporate Rule

Introduction
Bold Responses to Corporations Which Chronically Break the Law
Challenging Public/Corporate Partnerships
Communities Organizing to Defend Themselves Against Corporate Power
Prohibiting (or Defining) Corporate Involvement in Particular Industries
Revoking Corporate Charters
Rewriting State Corporate Codes
Challenging Corporate Claims to Constitutional Rights
From Corporate Ownership to Public Ownership
Educating Citizens About Our History and Beginning to Reclaim Our Culture and Our Language

Historically penalties imposed on corporations that broke the law were more severe than simple fines (that are usually taken as tax write-offs these days). Revoking a corporation's charter was the most severe action and was common during the first hundred years of this country's founding. Charter revocation - essentially a corporate death penalty - means that the corporation's assets are divided amongst its chief creditors (in some cases this was the workers of the company) and stockholders, and the corporation was no longer permitted to exist. Each state has its own charter revocation process. In California the state Attorney General files the revocation on behalf of the citizens (this keeps citizens from bearing the potentially enormous costs of confronting a huge corporation). Charter revocations are still a legal mechanism that 'We the People' could begin to utilize again in order to protect ourselves from corporate harm.

Read more:
http://www.duhc.org/rethinking_revoking.html

mindsplinter
17-01-2008, 07:38 AM
That's a great post. Has it been done? Can we do something about politicians who consistantly break the law? Revoke their title, lock their office, here's a good one how about throw them into jail? Ya Hoo imagine that.

According to John Perkins the people of Equador sued Texaco for a few billion dollars for polluting their lands. It can be done.