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Saturday, August 25, 2007
Christianity and the Rise of the Investor Left
By Carl Horowitz
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For most of this decade the Left has been riding a wave of popular discontent over highly-publicized corporate corruption, rarely wasting an opportunity to point out scandals at Enron, Tyco, WorldCom and other major companies.  That more than once their officials have been carted away to federal prison confirms the progressives' conviction that capitalism desperately needs moral therapy.    

Much of this opposition is informed by a set of anti-business teachings that are explicitly religious, and from a Christian perspective.  A website, Sunshine for Women (www.pinn.net), features a homily, "What Would Jesus Do?"  The sermon reads in part:  "Jesus Would NOT be on the Board of Directors of a Fortune 500 corporation....Jesus Would NOT lobby politicians on behalf of wealthy corporations.  Jesus Would NOT be a Wall Street trader, a banker for a large national or international banking conglomerate, or participate in the World Bank or the International Monetary Fund (IMF)."     

Such sentiments are hardly new.  In Europe, Catholic anti-capitalism has a centuries-long pedigree.  Long after the passing of Medievalism, many have subscribed to the view that business dulls our noble religious impulses.  The Christian Socialist Movement emerged in the early-19th century as a response to what its adherents viewed as the destructive consequences of the Industrial Revolution.  From the early-20th century onward, the British Labour Party, more than commonly imagined, has been Christian in character; Tony Blair, far from negating this legacy, shrewdly adapted it to contemporary reality.

Here in America, Christianity and socialism (or at least suspicion of commercial culture), also long allied with one another, became a potent mass movement during the latter half of the 1960s.  Perhaps its most famous alumnus is Hillary Clinton, whose sharp turn to the left during her Wellesley undergraduate years in a real sense affirmed the Methodist Social Gospel of her girlhood.  The appeal of the Religious Left remains high today.  The Catholic Church and many mainline Protestant denominations regularly denounce corporate greed, callousness and dishonesty, backing up their words through participation in boycotts, demonstrations and media campaigns.  Jesse Jackson is in good company. 

It isn't as if this tendency hasn't had critics.  Eighties-era books such as Michael Novak's The Spirit of Democratic Capitalism and Doug Bandow's Beyond Good Intentions defended capitalism from a Christian perspective, challenging the case for socialism put forth by their co-religionists.  During this decade, Mark D. Tooley, director of the Institute on Religion and Democracy's United Methodist Committee, has written a series of highly effective exposes for Front Page Magazine (www.frontpagemag.com) of Leftist church activism run amok. 

But there is an angle to contemporary Christian progressivism which thus far has gotten too little attention:  shareholder activism.  Religious institutional investors, bent on guiding corporate America down a more righteous path, over the years have been buying large blocks of stock.  More than any single entity, the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility (ICCR) serves as the movement's clearinghouse. 

The ICCR, based in New York City, was founded by a coalition of clergy and laymen in 1971 as an offshoot of the National Council of Churches.  The ICCR by decade's end had embarked on aggressive, media-conscious campaigns to oppose nuclear power, block Nestle's marketing of allegedly tainted infant bottle formula, and urge corporate divestment from South Africa.  By 1980, Fortune magazine would describe the center as a "confluence of radical Christian and Marxist thinking."  The center today might disavow the word "Marxist," but its grievances against corporations remain real, far-reaching and grounded in religious conviction.  Given its current network of 275 investor organizations with a combined portfolio exceeding $110 billion, the ICCR, though with a relatively tiny budget, has a lot of weight to throw around. 

Each year, ICCR investors file scores of proxy resolutions at corporate shareholder meetings on issues ranging from global warming to AIDS research to subsidized health care.  They don't necessarily pass, but they do put issues on the table and CEOs on the defensive.  The real effectiveness of this new breed of radical shareholder can be gauged by the action behind closed doors in the form of dozens of ongoing negotiations, or "dialogues," with corporate officials.  By exacting concessions from management to drop certain practices and/or adopt others, shareholder groups are confident they are evolving a morally just society.  

These activists know how to locate, negotiate, win and flatter.  This past winter, for example, ICCR members, owners of a combined two million shares of Wal-Mart stock, submitted a resolution calling upon the company to join a campaign to create a universal, government-managed health care system.  While reluctant at first, Wal-Mart in the end agreed not to challenge the resolution.  Margaret Weber, corporate responsibility director of the Basilian Fathers of Toronto, congratulated the company as "constructively engaged."  And ICCR investors scored a coup in late 2004 when it coaxed the Ford Motor Co. into releasing details of how AIDS affects its operations.  Mary Ann Gaido, vice president of St. Joseph Health System and an ICCR board member, praised the company.  "Ford is doing the right thing for its employees and shareholders," she said.    

Such campaigns rest on the idea of society as a coalition of "stakeholders."  "A stakeholder," writes environmental activist Harry Van Buren in a recent ICCR report, "can be defined as any group or individual who can affect or is affected by a firm's activities.  There are lots of stakeholders to consider, including employees, communities, stockholders, suppliers, governments, and activist groups."  That would seem to cover just about everyone.  Common sense ought to dictate that it is well-organized spokesmen who presume to speak for "stakeholders."  ICCR-affiliated shareholders think they fit the bill.  As latter-day Trojan horses, they can rattle corporate cages from the inside.    

The "stakeholder vs. shareholder" dichotomy builds on latter-day hardcore anti-corporate criticism.  In his 2004 book, The Corporation:  The Pathological Pursuit of Profit and Power, University of British Columbia law professor Joel Bakan sees the world as hostage to moral squalor created by unaccountable corporate oligarchs.  For him and similar critics -- Thom Hartmann, Marjorie Kelly, Ted Nace and the ubiquitous Ralph Nader come to mind -- corporations, unless exposed and opposed, will ravage the environment, exploit workers, cheat consumers, ignore the poor, threaten public health, and wage covert war against indigenous peoples.      

 Religion has become indispensable in this battle.  Sojourners magazine editor-in-chief Jim Wallis recently wrote that Jesus Christ would have opposed "capital gains tax cuts for the wealthy and food stamp cuts for the poor."  PBS talk show host and former President Johnson press secretary Bill Moyers, an ordained Baptist minister, made his ire at "corporate activism" known in June in a speech before members of the United Church of Christ General Synod at the Hartford Civic Center:    Continued...

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About The Author

Carl F. Horowitz is director of the Organized Labor Accountability Project of the National Legal and Policy Center, a Townhall.com Gold Partner organization dedicated to promoting ethics in American public life.
 
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Subject: Gestell, read the Bible
Start with Romans 9:14-21, which provides:

What then shall we say? Is God unjust? Not at all! For he says to Moses, "I will have mercy on whom I have mercy, and I will have compassion on whom I have compassion." It does not, therefore, depend on man's desire or effort, but on God's mercy. For the Scripture says to Pharaoh: "I raised you up for this very purpose, that I might display my power in you and that my name might be proclaimed in all the earth." Therefore God has mercy on whom he wants to have mercy, and he hardens whom he wants to harden.

One of you will say to me: "Then why does God still blame us? For who resists his will?" But who are you, O man, to talk back to God? "Shall what is formed say to him who formed it, 'Why did you make me like this?' " Does not the potter have the right to make out of the same lump of clay some pottery for noble purposes and some for common use?

See? The argument I made was not Calvin's, but the Apostle Paul and Moses'. Ever hear of them? Besides, this life is its own reward, which is why everyone who gets a life owes a death. What's more, everyone's light of understanding includes the own evil he does unless he does not know good from evil.

Give things another think-through, Gestell, and while you're at it, make a convincing case for me that someone who has never heard of God can believe in God enough to accept the terms of salvation, of which he's also never heard.

Capitalism in Disguise
If Adam Smith were alive today, he would not be able to recognize, what we call Capitalism.Mr. Adams always saw Capitalism as a reflection of ones self-interest,not "GREED" or "THEFT".Today we see individuals placed in Jail,for various financial infractions,and we think that the system is "WORKING".How SAD!The Accounting regulations are almost 1400 pages,and no one reads them.But yet we all feel that the game is not rigged.Until the rules are enforced,and the public understands those rules,men will continue to go to jail.Let's weigh the incentives;$200,000,000 for 7 years in a Country Club,with "HOOKERS".That's better than 70 virgins!The parade,or charade,will continue.IT'S YOUR MONEY!!!
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