Posted on 06/14/2008 4:08:28 AM PDT by CWWren
Last weeks Senate debate over Lieberman-Warner the Americas Climate Security Act brought to national attention an under-recognized yet rising threat to liberty and limited government: corporate America.
Several of the largest corporations worked with environmental special interest groups and left-wing politicians to pass so-called cap-and-trade legislation to address global warming concerns.
By pushing for the legislation, these companies hoped to get revenue in the form of government subsidies plus accolades from the media for taking measures to save the planet. Never mind the impact on the everyday citizen, who pays for it all with higher taxes and increased energy prices, a loss of liberty, a reduced standard of living and fewer consumer choices.
Companies seeking government subsidies and tax breaks to enhance profits is not a new phenomenon. What is different is the formation of the United States Climate Action Partnership (USCAP) coalition, which combines the muscle of corporate money from disparate industries with the influence of environmental special interest groups.
This coalition is an order of magnitude more powerful than individual companies looking for corporate pork. This is especially important since the bill would have created, according to the Wall Street Journal, "the most extensive government reorganization of the American economy since the 1930s."
The alliance between companies and the Left is an outgrowth of the Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) movement, in which left-wing shareholders and special interest groups target companies to win the hearts and minds of CEOs.
The Corporate Social Responsibility movement is using climate change as a barometer to measure the corporate responsibility of a company. Companies who adopt the notion that mans activity causes global warming are deemed responsible and given a reprieve from protests, shareholder proposals and negative publicity.
Moreover, companies that join activists in pursuing global warming-related regulations are promised a seat at the table to help shape legislation, while companies that resist climate change alarmism are punished.
As the social and political momentum has grown for legislative action to combat climate change, companies have developed business strategies based on government regulation of greenhouse gas emissions.
Companies with weak leaders and poor stock performance seem especially vulnerable to the temptations of the Left.
GE provides a case in point. GEs share price has fallen during CEO Jeff Immelts seven-year reign. Now Immelt seeks the visible hand of government to guarantee revenue and, perhaps, protect his job.
Immelt became a leader in seeking cap-and-trade legislation to promote sales of renewable energy equipment, like wind turbines, that tap energy sources that are not cost-competitive without subsidies. GE also wants to profit by trading in the carbon dioxide market.
Immelt has used the vast resources of GE to drive his green agenda. NBC Universal a GE-owned company promoted an environmental theme in two weeks of programming advertised as Green Week and Earth Week during the past year. In each case, green themes were included in the program content.
Immelt also appears to be a good lobbyist among his peers. Two GE board members, James Mulva, CEO of ConocoPhillips, and Robert Lane, CEO of Deere & Co., also have had their companies join USCAP. Mulva is particularly active in supporting cap-and-trade, although cap-and-trade has the potential to increase the cost of ConocoPhillips U.S.-based refineries and harm the firms investments in Canadian oil sands.
GE also uses its lobbying budget, which is the biggest in corporate America. Over the past few years GE has spent more than $20 million to influence elected officials. This is more than the pharmaceutical trade association spent in 2007.
Ironically, despite its social engineering aims, GEs cap-and-trade strategy could backfire on its business. Gambling future revenue on lobbyists is a risky strategy, as the whims of elected officials and bureaucrats change like the weather.
Its also hard to imagine how a company the size of GE would prosper given the negative impact of cap-and-trade on the overall economy. Larry Kudlow of CNBC - a GE-owned network - polled a panel of economic and financial experts on whether the cap-and-trade bill would help or harm the U.S. economy. Ten of the 12 experts said the bill would be harmful.
Over 31,000 scientists have signed a petition refuting the claim that a relationship between human activity and catastrophic change in the Earths climate has been proven. GE certainly has the technical capability to understand the present scientific limitations of climate science, despite the science the settled nonsense promoted by the U.N. and Al Gore.
In advancing Immelts climate change business strategy, GE is ignoring contrary scientific and economic data. While GEs actions may make the activists in the lefts Corporate Social Responsibility movement happy, GEs actions are irresponsible.
Perhaps the most important lesson from the debate of Lieberman-Warner is the recognition that CEOs can be as much of a risk to liberty and limited government as any left-wing politician - a development too important to ignore.
Stockholders in GE, and other 'American' corporations, must fight management. It clearly appears that simpleminded socialists such as Immelt wish for a return to the dictatorial actions by FDR and his ilk to hammer the nation into something that resembles the old USSR.
Lieberman and Warner are two names to be remembered in infamy! It amazed me over the past year to see how many gushed over the leftist Lieberman as though he were a convert to conservatism. Warner has been a RINO for his entire political life and both are beyond contempt like so many congressional traitors.
It's the small business owners, and the consumers, who are going to be shafted by this.
Which is kind of funny, really, since that's who both parties claim to care about.
GE is George (Soros) Enterprises—proletariat shareholders and a politburo of directors—watermelon opportunists steeped in the usual socialist avarice and selfish lust for the personal power to exterminate individual freedom.
Their NBC,of course,pre-Reagan Pravda.
China has managed to combine the economic advantages of Capitalism with the political and social monopoly of totalitarianism...
Why not GE?
GE has come a long way since the early 60s when Ronald Reagan was their spokesman and advocate of less government interference in corporate America.
That was then, this is now. Much of corporate America has decided to jump on the socialist bandwagon. Read Frontpagemag about how many corporate donations go to the far left.
Some of Hitler’s most fervent supporters were German heavy industry.
Many of those donations are for protection from liberal interference.
The way things look now,with a sorry GOP and an even sorrier GOP presidential candidate,I would,if I were a CEO,be telling my board to wet kiss with loving eyes every Dem butt they see.
Government-Corporate partnership = Fascism
Of course you’re right. If no one fights for freedom in America, then you have to pay protection money to the Democratic Mafia.
Nah. The Big Corporations love us, doncha know.
I love that phrase: “Democratic Mafia.” and it SO fits the situation.One would normally consider it an oxymoron,like the Gambino family actually ELECTED John Gotti as Don.
Yet,in fact,the Democrats are indeed quite the party of dictatorship by committee,each picked by the ignorant masses indoctrinated by public schools and then lobotimized by the MSM.
Especially in antitrust matters! ;) (Several GE execs went to jail in the '60s after govt interference in their business.)
If you can’t beat ‘em,join ‘em,then own ‘em,in other words?
“It’s business,not personal.”—Michael Corleone
the ignorant masses indoctrinated by public schools and then lobotimized by the MSMGreat description of what America more and more consists of these days.
Jeffrey Immelt was quoted recently making some decidedly un-business sounding remarks. I might have known he was adding his little whiney voice to some campaign of this sort.
They're business is so good they're canvassing for a buyer for the appliance business. I sold my stock in this maze some years ago.
GE went over to the dark side many years ago.
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