This document summarizes the anti-chain store movement of the 1920s and 1930s in the United States. Citizens organized against chain stores that were seen as removing local control and money from communities. Hundreds of communities passed laws against chain stores through the 1920s. However, corporations used the courts to overturn these laws. While opposition remained strong, the movement did not directly challenge the Supreme Court's interpretation that protected corporations over local control. Eventually, the movement ended with a weak federal law that diverted from the original goals of asserting local rights. The history shows how corporate influence can redirect a grassroots movement.
The document discusses the challenges faced by street vendors in New York City. It notes that there are approximately 20,000 street vendors from various boroughs who have been operating for over 200 years. However, street vendors, many of whom are immigrants and people of color, face harassment from police and difficulties obtaining licenses. The Street Vendor Project works to address these injustices by educating vendors on their rights and advocating for policies to support street vending.
The document discusses street vending in New York City. It notes that there are approximately 20,000 street vendors in NYC, many of whom are immigrants or people of color. Street vendors sell a variety of goods but face numerous injustices, as the city has made it difficult to obtain vendor licenses and police often harass and seize vendor property. The Street Vendor Project works to address these social injustices through legal advocacy, education programs, and policy campaigns to improve conditions for NYC street vendors.
The use of the words “citizen” and “consumer” to many would appear to be synonymous when in actual fact, there are often conflicts between their desires and aspirations that could lead one to believe that these are two different groups of individuals.
Mobile commerce is now driving payments and retail trends, disrupting traditional models. The document discusses how mobile connectivity enables revolutionary changes like helping African farmers monitor weather and sell crops, allowing small businesses to operate more efficiently, and empowering customers to make more informed purchasing decisions. Mobile connectivity can start new businesses, strengthen retailer-consumer connections, and personalize offers while also preserving the future of physical retail stores.
During the late 19th century, several influential industrialists dominated major industries in the United States and accumulated vast wealth, including Andrew Carnegie in steel, Cornelius Vanderbilt in railroads, and John D. Rockefeller in oil. These entrepreneurs helped drive technological innovations and economic growth through tactics like vertical and horizontal integration. Their successes also spurred debates around monopolies, wealth inequality, and corporate power.
The economics of immigration tells a multifaceted story that combines business, social, and political aspects. It is most effectively told through both statistical data and humanizing examples. The makeup of the workforce provides insights into broader demographic and social changes, as well as predictors of economic, political, and social trends. Securing the US-Mexico border is important, but must be done in a way that does not unnecessarily stifle the $216 billion in annual trade between the two countries, which supports millions of jobs on both sides and is crucial to both economies. Border communities aspire to be more than just points of transit and want to capture more local economic value from the large volume of trade passing through the region.
This document summarizes the first issue of the Pacoima Today publication. It was created by community activists Edwin Ramirez and Morris Pichon to inform residents of their rights and how to improve the community. The publication highlights issues in Pacoima like trash, safety concerns, and violations of city codes regarding vehicles on streets and sidewalk clutter. It encourages residents to contact their city council representative and code enforcement to address these problems.
Economics week 7 (types of economies & price controls)Matt Sager
This document discusses different types of economies including anarcho-capitalism, communism, and mixed economies. It provides definitions and examples. Anarcho-capitalism advocates for a stateless society based on voluntary associations with no government involvement. Communism involves central government ownership and control of property and resources with the government making all economic decisions. Most modern economies are mixed economies with varying degrees of government and private sector involvement.
The document discusses the challenges faced by street vendors in New York City. It notes that there are approximately 20,000 street vendors from various boroughs who have been operating for over 200 years. However, street vendors, many of whom are immigrants and people of color, face harassment from police and difficulties obtaining licenses. The Street Vendor Project works to address these injustices by educating vendors on their rights and advocating for policies to support street vending.
The document discusses street vending in New York City. It notes that there are approximately 20,000 street vendors in NYC, many of whom are immigrants or people of color. Street vendors sell a variety of goods but face numerous injustices, as the city has made it difficult to obtain vendor licenses and police often harass and seize vendor property. The Street Vendor Project works to address these social injustices through legal advocacy, education programs, and policy campaigns to improve conditions for NYC street vendors.
The use of the words “citizen” and “consumer” to many would appear to be synonymous when in actual fact, there are often conflicts between their desires and aspirations that could lead one to believe that these are two different groups of individuals.
Mobile commerce is now driving payments and retail trends, disrupting traditional models. The document discusses how mobile connectivity enables revolutionary changes like helping African farmers monitor weather and sell crops, allowing small businesses to operate more efficiently, and empowering customers to make more informed purchasing decisions. Mobile connectivity can start new businesses, strengthen retailer-consumer connections, and personalize offers while also preserving the future of physical retail stores.
During the late 19th century, several influential industrialists dominated major industries in the United States and accumulated vast wealth, including Andrew Carnegie in steel, Cornelius Vanderbilt in railroads, and John D. Rockefeller in oil. These entrepreneurs helped drive technological innovations and economic growth through tactics like vertical and horizontal integration. Their successes also spurred debates around monopolies, wealth inequality, and corporate power.
The economics of immigration tells a multifaceted story that combines business, social, and political aspects. It is most effectively told through both statistical data and humanizing examples. The makeup of the workforce provides insights into broader demographic and social changes, as well as predictors of economic, political, and social trends. Securing the US-Mexico border is important, but must be done in a way that does not unnecessarily stifle the $216 billion in annual trade between the two countries, which supports millions of jobs on both sides and is crucial to both economies. Border communities aspire to be more than just points of transit and want to capture more local economic value from the large volume of trade passing through the region.
This document summarizes the first issue of the Pacoima Today publication. It was created by community activists Edwin Ramirez and Morris Pichon to inform residents of their rights and how to improve the community. The publication highlights issues in Pacoima like trash, safety concerns, and violations of city codes regarding vehicles on streets and sidewalk clutter. It encourages residents to contact their city council representative and code enforcement to address these problems.
Economics week 7 (types of economies & price controls)Matt Sager
This document discusses different types of economies including anarcho-capitalism, communism, and mixed economies. It provides definitions and examples. Anarcho-capitalism advocates for a stateless society based on voluntary associations with no government involvement. Communism involves central government ownership and control of property and resources with the government making all economic decisions. Most modern economies are mixed economies with varying degrees of government and private sector involvement.
This call sheet outlines the shooting plan for Day 1 of filming. It lists 5 scenes to be shot at the studio involving various food props like cupcakes, fruit, juice, and candy. Equipment needed includes a tripod, table, paper, and tape. Shooting will take place from 11am to 4pm on May 1st.
Each of us must assess the paths ahead and behind us, and if an uncertain future or undesirable past appears, we should gather our courage to leave that road and try another direction. If the new path also proves unsatisfactory, we must be willing to change paths again without hesitation.
This document provides a vocabulary review activity with multiple parts:
1) Students complete sentences by choosing from words in a box including "friendly", "opinion", "differently", "honest", and "popular".
2) Students write two sentences using the words "unusual" and "ordinary".
3) Students choose the best word to complete sentences such as "pronounce", "similar", and "famous".
4) Students describe personalities based on pictures using words from the activity such as "dishonest", "unfriendly", and "unpopular".
Esta herramienta web sería útil en el mundo laboral ya que permite almacenar y acceder a archivos desde cualquier lugar con conexión a Internet, compartir información fácilmente con otros, y contar con espacio de almacenamiento en la nube sin necesidad de llevar memorias USB. El mayor impacto es poder editar y crear documentos de manera remota desde cualquier lugar.
[DOCUMENT]:
This document provides vocabulary exercises to practice workplace-related terms. It contains two vocabulary sets with definitions and examples to choose the correct word. Set 1 has students circle underlined words to complete sentences. Set 2 has students match definitions to words and choose the accurate word for pairs based on dictionary definitions. The key is provided to check answers. [The document aims to build vocabulary for workplace contexts through multiple choice and matching exercises around terms like career, application, requirement, boss, and corporation.]
Primera encuesta de intención de voto a las gobernaciones de todo el paísATB Digital
La Unión Europea ha acordado un paquete de sanciones contra Rusia por su invasión de Ucrania. Las sanciones incluyen restricciones a las transacciones con bancos rusos clave y la prohibición de la venta de aviones y equipos a Rusia. Los líderes de la UE esperan que las sanciones aumenten la presión económica sobre Rusia y la disuadan de continuar su agresión contra Ucrania.
TMS Everything you've heard about the NWP is wrong, almostDermot Loughnane
Dermot Loughnane is the CEO of Tactical Marine Solutions Ltd, a marine management company. He has over 15 years of experience working in the Arctic. The document seeks to dispel myths about increased shipping traffic through the Northwest Passage (NWP) by providing facts about ice cover, economics, and the future of Arctic shipping. While the NWP route is shorter for trans-Arctic voyages, many technical and economic factors must still be addressed before it can regularly support large container ships or become a major shipping route. Melting sea ice is opening new opportunities for resource development and project cargo shipping through Arctic routes like the NWP and Northern Sea Route, but the full impact on international trade remains uncertain.
Resultados al conteo rápido al 100% por departamentoATB Digital
La Unión Europea ha propuesto un nuevo paquete de sanciones contra Rusia que incluye un embargo al petróleo. El embargo prohibiría las importaciones de petróleo ruso por mar y por oleoducto, aunque se concederían exenciones temporales a Hungría y Eslovaquia. El objetivo es aumentar la presión económica sobre Rusia para que ponga fin a su invasión de Ucrania.
The document discusses how the author's music video product uses and develops conventions of real music videos. It examines narrative-based videos, how they tell a story through the song's lyrics. While most include the artist, the author uses actors instead. It also explores using themes like relationship breakdowns that many can relate to. The author studies Taylor Swift and other artists' videos to inform their own narrative-based video about a couple's relationship ending.
Enjoy your every occasion by sending delicious and yummy cake to your friends, relative and loved one from giftblooms.com. We provides you an international delivery at a very affordable cost so send it to worldwide.
La división celular consta de varias fases (profase, metafase, anafase, telofase y citocinesis) en las que el material genético de la célula se divide en partes iguales entre las dos células hijas, asignando a cada una un juego completo de cromosomas. Cada fase involucra cambios en la estructura de los cromosomas y la célula para garantizar una división precisa y equitativa del material genético.
Este documento presenta una lista de vocabulario en español relacionado con una leyenda mexicana. Incluye palabras como dios, ejército, emperador, enemigo, guerrero y héroe que probablemente sean personajes o elementos de la historia. También incluye frases como "Había una vez" y "Hace muchos siglos" que sugieren que la leyenda se contará como una historia del pasado.
This document describes some of the strangest hotels in the world. The Icehotel in Sweden is made entirely of snow and ice each year and guests sleep on beds made of snow at below freezing temperatures. The Marmara Antalya hotel in Turkey features a spinning 24-room loft that provides constantly changing views. The Dog Bark Park Inn in the US is a dog-themed bed and breakfast where guests enter through a balcony into the body of a giant wooden dog statue. The Jules Underwater Lodge in Florida is the world's first underwater hotel where guests scuba dive 21 feet below the surface to enter their rooms. The Godiva Chocolate Suite in New York is designed entirely out of chocolate for eating, not sleeping
The document provides a history of Los Angeles city government and society. It discusses how Los Angeles was originally dominated by a conservative white Protestant business elite but became more diverse post-WWII. It also describes the evolution of Los Angeles city government, from an independent borough system to neighborhood councils, and highlights issues around housing, transportation, and development.
Social class and education essay. The Impact Of Social Class On .... Are issues of Social Class still relevant in modern society? - GCSE .... Social essay. Role of Social Class in Literature Essay Example GraduateWay. Social class and education essay. FREE Social class effects on .... In Class Session 3; Society, Social Structure, Essay Review. In class essay topics. 194 Classroom Topic Ideas to Write about amp; Essay .... Essay discussing the sociological explanations of social class .... Sociological Perspectives on Social class Essay. How Social Class Affects Life Chances Essay Example GraduateWay. Social stratification in united states essay. Position paper economics. The Theme of Social Class in Persuasion: Essay Example, 1034 words .... The influence of social class on health and healthcare. - GCSE .... Analysis of Social Class Essay Example Topics and Well Written Essays .... Social Class and Ethnicity in Education Essay Example Topics and Well .... Essay 1 Social Structure Sociology. social class - A-Level English - Marked by Teachers.com. Social classes in european feudalism essay. Social Class Portrayal Essay - Pride and Prejudice/ Letters to Alice .... Social class amp; life chances essay - Ellie Smith Outline and assess the .... Social Class Determines Childs Success Essay Example Topics and Well .... Impact of social class on education. Social class makes a difference .... Social class essay introduction. 1120 words short essay on social .... Social Class. - GCSE Sociology - Marked by Teachers.com. Social Class and Educational Achievement Essay Plan ReviseSociology. Social Class Essay Assignment. Social Class Essay Topics - 2021 TopicsMill. How does social class affect educational achievement. Social Class ... Social Class Essay Social Class Essay
This call sheet outlines the shooting plan for Day 1 of filming. It lists 5 scenes to be shot at the studio involving various food props like cupcakes, fruit, juice, and candy. Equipment needed includes a tripod, table, paper, and tape. Shooting will take place from 11am to 4pm on May 1st.
Each of us must assess the paths ahead and behind us, and if an uncertain future or undesirable past appears, we should gather our courage to leave that road and try another direction. If the new path also proves unsatisfactory, we must be willing to change paths again without hesitation.
This document provides a vocabulary review activity with multiple parts:
1) Students complete sentences by choosing from words in a box including "friendly", "opinion", "differently", "honest", and "popular".
2) Students write two sentences using the words "unusual" and "ordinary".
3) Students choose the best word to complete sentences such as "pronounce", "similar", and "famous".
4) Students describe personalities based on pictures using words from the activity such as "dishonest", "unfriendly", and "unpopular".
Esta herramienta web sería útil en el mundo laboral ya que permite almacenar y acceder a archivos desde cualquier lugar con conexión a Internet, compartir información fácilmente con otros, y contar con espacio de almacenamiento en la nube sin necesidad de llevar memorias USB. El mayor impacto es poder editar y crear documentos de manera remota desde cualquier lugar.
[DOCUMENT]:
This document provides vocabulary exercises to practice workplace-related terms. It contains two vocabulary sets with definitions and examples to choose the correct word. Set 1 has students circle underlined words to complete sentences. Set 2 has students match definitions to words and choose the accurate word for pairs based on dictionary definitions. The key is provided to check answers. [The document aims to build vocabulary for workplace contexts through multiple choice and matching exercises around terms like career, application, requirement, boss, and corporation.]
Primera encuesta de intención de voto a las gobernaciones de todo el paísATB Digital
La Unión Europea ha acordado un paquete de sanciones contra Rusia por su invasión de Ucrania. Las sanciones incluyen restricciones a las transacciones con bancos rusos clave y la prohibición de la venta de aviones y equipos a Rusia. Los líderes de la UE esperan que las sanciones aumenten la presión económica sobre Rusia y la disuadan de continuar su agresión contra Ucrania.
TMS Everything you've heard about the NWP is wrong, almostDermot Loughnane
Dermot Loughnane is the CEO of Tactical Marine Solutions Ltd, a marine management company. He has over 15 years of experience working in the Arctic. The document seeks to dispel myths about increased shipping traffic through the Northwest Passage (NWP) by providing facts about ice cover, economics, and the future of Arctic shipping. While the NWP route is shorter for trans-Arctic voyages, many technical and economic factors must still be addressed before it can regularly support large container ships or become a major shipping route. Melting sea ice is opening new opportunities for resource development and project cargo shipping through Arctic routes like the NWP and Northern Sea Route, but the full impact on international trade remains uncertain.
Resultados al conteo rápido al 100% por departamentoATB Digital
La Unión Europea ha propuesto un nuevo paquete de sanciones contra Rusia que incluye un embargo al petróleo. El embargo prohibiría las importaciones de petróleo ruso por mar y por oleoducto, aunque se concederían exenciones temporales a Hungría y Eslovaquia. El objetivo es aumentar la presión económica sobre Rusia para que ponga fin a su invasión de Ucrania.
The document discusses how the author's music video product uses and develops conventions of real music videos. It examines narrative-based videos, how they tell a story through the song's lyrics. While most include the artist, the author uses actors instead. It also explores using themes like relationship breakdowns that many can relate to. The author studies Taylor Swift and other artists' videos to inform their own narrative-based video about a couple's relationship ending.
Enjoy your every occasion by sending delicious and yummy cake to your friends, relative and loved one from giftblooms.com. We provides you an international delivery at a very affordable cost so send it to worldwide.
La división celular consta de varias fases (profase, metafase, anafase, telofase y citocinesis) en las que el material genético de la célula se divide en partes iguales entre las dos células hijas, asignando a cada una un juego completo de cromosomas. Cada fase involucra cambios en la estructura de los cromosomas y la célula para garantizar una división precisa y equitativa del material genético.
Este documento presenta una lista de vocabulario en español relacionado con una leyenda mexicana. Incluye palabras como dios, ejército, emperador, enemigo, guerrero y héroe que probablemente sean personajes o elementos de la historia. También incluye frases como "Había una vez" y "Hace muchos siglos" que sugieren que la leyenda se contará como una historia del pasado.
This document describes some of the strangest hotels in the world. The Icehotel in Sweden is made entirely of snow and ice each year and guests sleep on beds made of snow at below freezing temperatures. The Marmara Antalya hotel in Turkey features a spinning 24-room loft that provides constantly changing views. The Dog Bark Park Inn in the US is a dog-themed bed and breakfast where guests enter through a balcony into the body of a giant wooden dog statue. The Jules Underwater Lodge in Florida is the world's first underwater hotel where guests scuba dive 21 feet below the surface to enter their rooms. The Godiva Chocolate Suite in New York is designed entirely out of chocolate for eating, not sleeping
The document provides a history of Los Angeles city government and society. It discusses how Los Angeles was originally dominated by a conservative white Protestant business elite but became more diverse post-WWII. It also describes the evolution of Los Angeles city government, from an independent borough system to neighborhood councils, and highlights issues around housing, transportation, and development.
Social class and education essay. The Impact Of Social Class On .... Are issues of Social Class still relevant in modern society? - GCSE .... Social essay. Role of Social Class in Literature Essay Example GraduateWay. Social class and education essay. FREE Social class effects on .... In Class Session 3; Society, Social Structure, Essay Review. In class essay topics. 194 Classroom Topic Ideas to Write about amp; Essay .... Essay discussing the sociological explanations of social class .... Sociological Perspectives on Social class Essay. How Social Class Affects Life Chances Essay Example GraduateWay. Social stratification in united states essay. Position paper economics. The Theme of Social Class in Persuasion: Essay Example, 1034 words .... The influence of social class on health and healthcare. - GCSE .... Analysis of Social Class Essay Example Topics and Well Written Essays .... Social Class and Ethnicity in Education Essay Example Topics and Well .... Essay 1 Social Structure Sociology. social class - A-Level English - Marked by Teachers.com. Social classes in european feudalism essay. Social Class Portrayal Essay - Pride and Prejudice/ Letters to Alice .... Social class amp; life chances essay - Ellie Smith Outline and assess the .... Social Class Determines Childs Success Essay Example Topics and Well .... Impact of social class on education. Social class makes a difference .... Social class essay introduction. 1120 words short essay on social .... Social Class. - GCSE Sociology - Marked by Teachers.com. Social Class and Educational Achievement Essay Plan ReviseSociology. Social Class Essay Assignment. Social Class Essay Topics - 2021 TopicsMill. How does social class affect educational achievement. Social Class ... Social Class Essay Social Class Essay
H t D , H p t r , nd X n ph b r nt tr tF d V nd r n N r.docxwhittemorelucilla
This document summarizes the history of street food vending in New York City and discusses the current state of the industry. It notes that street food vending has long been linked to immigration in NYC, with vendors providing inexpensive, familiar foods to new immigrant communities. However, vendors have also long faced anti-immigrant bias, with regulations often aimed at limiting their activities. Today, over 98% of NYC street food vendors are immigrants, hailing from countries around the world. While some see the newer branded food trucks as separate from traditional cart vendors, the author argues they have similar immigrant roots and the divide benefits anti-immigrant voices seeking to restrict street vending.
The document provides instructions for requesting writing assistance from HelpWriting.net in 5 steps: 1) Create an account with a password and email. 2) Complete a 10-minute order form providing instructions, sources, and deadline. 3) Review bids from writers and choose one based on qualifications. 4) Review the completed paper and authorize payment if satisfied. 5) Request revisions to ensure satisfaction, and the company promises original, high-quality work with a full refund for plagiarism.
The document discusses street vending in New York City. It notes that there are approximately 20,000 street vendors from various boroughs who have been vending for over 200 years. However, street vendors, many of whom are immigrants and people of color, face harassment from police and difficulties obtaining licenses. The Street Vendor Project works to address these injustices by educating vendors on their rights and advocating on their behalf with the government.
The document discusses street vending in New York City. It notes that there are approximately 20,000 street vendors from various boroughs who have been vending for over 200 years. However, street vendors, many of whom are immigrants and people of color, face harassment from police and difficulties obtaining licenses. The Street Vendor Project works to address these injustices by educating vendors on their rights and advocating on their behalf with the government.
Essay Rules In School. Online assignment writing service.Nicole Barnes
Here are the key points about wearing personal protective equipment (PPE) correctly in dental work:
- PPE must be worn according to the requirements of the dental organization. Following proper protocols helps ensure safety.
- PPE is important for protection before, during, and after all dental procedures. Proper PPE use helps prevent injury or disease transmission between patients, staff and their families.
- As a dental assistant, ensuring all staff follow correct PPE protocols is important. Careful attention to PPE procedures helps provide a safe work environment and protects everyone's health.
Correct and consistent use of required PPE is essential in dental settings to maintain infection control standards and prevent the spread of diseases. Staff must model proper
The document describes the neighborhood where the author currently lives in Brooklyn, New York. Some key details include:
- The neighborhood is located along Emmons Avenue near Sheepshead Bay, where there are many seafood markets and restaurants.
- In the summer, there are over 20 party boats that take people deep sea fishing from the piers daily. There are also various water activities.
- It is an area attractive to young professionals, with expected rentals and diverse food options.
- The name Sheepshead Bay comes from either the shape of the area resembling a sheep's head, or from the abundant Sheepshead fish that used to be found there, which have a face and teeth resembling
DO EXACTLY SAME FORMAT FOR BOTH CASE ANALYSIS JUST CHANGE THE WORD.docxelinoraudley582231
This document provides a summary of the short story "The Lottery" by Shirley Jackson. It describes the setting of a small town where the villagers have gathered in the town square on a summer day to participate in the annual lottery. The summary outlines the rituals and traditions surrounding the lottery, including the black box containing slips of paper with names on them. It explains that the lottery involves randomly selecting one person, implying some kind of consequence or punishment. The summary captures the key details while maintaining an air of mystery about the true nature and outcome of the lottery until the reader engages with the full story.
The Interdenominational Ministerial Alliance of Greater New Orleans speaks in...Keen Ley
The Interdenominational Ministerial Alliance of Greater New Orleans speaks in support of Metro Service Group, Inc. and its owners Jimmie and Glenn Woods. The Alliance denounces what they see as unwarranted attacks against the Woods, who have proven themselves to be good citizens. They believe the allegations stem from special interests and competing businesses seeking to harm Metro's reputation. The Alliance provides facts countering the allegations, asserting that Metro pays living wages, provides PPE, and that Jimmie and Glenn understand the important work of sanitation workers. They urge the community to think critically and support African American owned businesses that support the community.
The document provides tips for writing a persuasive essay arguing that a dog should not be put down after attacking a boy. It suggests discussing how the owner warned the boy about the dog's potential for anxiety and aggression, and how most dog bites occur from unleashed dogs. It also notes that dogs need consistent training and a dominant owner, as they do not think like humans and act based on instinct. Controlling a potentially aggressive dog through training is preferable to having it put down.
The document provides instructions for creating an account on a writing assistance website and submitting requests for papers to be written. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with an email and password. 2) Complete a form with paper details, sources, and deadline. 3) Review bids from writers and select one. 4) Review the completed paper and authorize payment. 5) Request revisions until satisfied with the paper. The purpose is to outline the simple process for obtaining writing help from the site.
The document provides instructions for creating an account on a writing assistance website and submitting a request to have a paper written. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with an email and password. 2) Complete a form with paper details, sources, and deadline. 3) Review bids from writers and select one. 4) Review the completed paper and authorize payment. 5) Request revisions until satisfied with the paper. The purpose is to outline the simple process for hiring a writer from the site to complete an assignment.
1) The document discusses the history of corporations from their origins in Europe in the 17th century to their rise as the dominant economic institution worldwide by the late 19th/early 20th century. It traces major developments like the South Sea Bubble, limited liability, and corporations gaining legal status as "persons."
2) As corporations grew in power and size, they developed techniques like corporate social responsibility and branding to craft positive public images and soften fears about their influence. Concepts like new capitalism and sustainable development emerged to redefine corporations' roles and responsibilities.
3) By the late 20th century, a small number of massive corporations came to influence many
American Economic Development During 19th and 20th CenturiesKelly Parks
Consumerism increased as goods became more readily available through mass production and distribution. This easy access to abundance transformed society into one that values ownership. The expansion of the Black middle class in the US transformed the educational and economic aspirations of African Americans by providing more opportunities. In the 19th century, slaves were viewed as commodities and assigned monetary value based on their labor, which critics noted dehumanized them by treating them akin to mules. Middle-class dominance, a larger labor force, and new types of consumers enhanced consumerism.
The document contains discussion questions about the history and evolution of corporations from the 17th century to present day. It begins by asking about early corporate entities like jobbers and the South Sea Company in England. It then transitions to discussing key developments in the United States, like the rise of railroads, industrialization, and court decisions establishing corporations as legal "persons" protected by the 14th Amendment. Finally, it addresses more modern topics like corporate social responsibility, branding, and rankings of admired companies.
The document provides instructions for requesting writing assistance from HelpWriting.net in 5 steps:
1. Create an account with a password and email.
2. Complete a 10-minute order form providing instructions, sources, deadline, and attaching a sample for style imitation.
3. Review bids from writers and choose one based on qualifications, history, and feedback, then pay a deposit.
4. Review the completed paper and authorize full payment or request revisions if needed.
5. Request revisions to ensure satisfaction, and HelpWriting.net guarantees original, high-quality work or a full refund.
8 Best Images Of Printable Dotted Li. Online assignment writing service.Todd Turner
1. The document discusses how popular culture films and music often include references and imagery related to drugs.
2. The context in which these images and sounds are presented and interpreted can impact how they are received by the public, especially during times of social or political change.
3. Conventions in entertainment industries have developed over time, but drugs and those involved in their use, dealing, consumption and production are usually portrayed negatively, showing the complex relationship between popular culture and societal views of drugs.
The passage discusses the Progressive Era in the United States from the late 19th to early 20th century. It covers several key aspects of the period including rapid industrialization, urbanization, and corruption which led citizens to demand reforms. Progressives pushed for initiatives, referendums, and recalls to give political power back to the people and reduce corruption. They focused on applying moral principles to improve industrial society and reform issues like child labor, work hours, and workplace regulations.
The document provides instructions for creating an account on HelpWriting.net to request writing assistance. It outlines a 5-step process: 1) Create an account with an email and password. 2) Complete an order form with instructions, sources, and deadline. 3) Review bids from writers and choose one. 4) Receive the paper and authorize payment if satisfied. 5) Request revisions until fully satisfied, with a refund option for plagiarism. The service utilizes a bidding system and promises original, high-quality content.
Similar to A Movement Diverted- Anti Chain Store Campaigns Diverted (20)
A Movement Diverted- Anti Chain Store Campaigns Diverted
1. A Movement Diverted:
How Corporations Neutralized Anti-Chain Store Campaigns
Of the 1920s and 1930s
by
Ben Price
Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund
Chambersburg, PA
“Today, new passions against corporate chain stores are rising.
But instead of beginning where the first anti-chain movement began,
asserting the rights of self-governing people, today’s organizers
start their fight where that earlier movement failed.”
Copyright Ben Price 2005
INTRODUCTION
Early in the 20th
Century, giant corporations like Woolworth‘s, Sears Roebuck, J.C. Penney,
Ligget, and A&P began forcing their chain stores into communities across the nation. The chains
were unwelcome. Throughout the 1920s and 1930s, people in towns from coast to coast banded
together to stop this corporate invasion, only to be beaten back by corporations and the federal
government. Here is a cautionary tale of how a people‘s movement to keep corporate empires
from invading communities was deflected, divided and defeated---and what today‘s giant cartel
retailing foes can learn from that earlier campaign.
Because chain stores replaced local proprietorships with absentee ownership, vacuumed money
out of communities, turned employees into underpaid clerks and servants and removed decision-
making from local governance, the chains were seen as direct assaults on community autonomy.
By 1929, associations in more than 400 cities and towns arose to say ‗no!‘ They pamphleteered in
their neighborhoods and collected donations to support local advertising campaigns. They put
their state legislators to work passing laws to stop the multiple-unit, rights-denying, money-
vacuuming retail stores from setting up shop.
Citizens wanted to keep chain stores out of their communities. They did not, at first, attempt to
isolate the chains in corners of their communities where they might seem less offensive. They did
not legislate types of architecture, or size limitations, lighting or traffic flow. They didn‘t invent
regulations to transform corporate chain stores into ―good corporate neighbors.‖ They pushed for
laws to keep the corporations out.
State legislatures responded to the organized pressure of their constituents by enacting steep
licensing fees and imposing heavy graduated taxes on the chains. They passed laws forbidding
the sale of food and dry goods in the same establishment. They put caps on the number of
stores the corporations could open in any town or county. Through their legislation, lawmakers
tried to make chain stores unlawful.
2. Corporate directors did not remain idle in the face of popular organizing to wield the law against
them. As they had been doing for decades, corporate directors called upon the courts to nullify
the efforts of citizens to define their communities‘ futures through law-making. Having been
blessed with constitutional powers by the courts in the post-Civil War decades, and finding
federal judges eager to halt the expansion of rights for people and municipalities, corporate
lawyers were able to shield wealthy investors and corporate officers from direct popular
governance.
Although opposition to chain stores remained strong, chain store foes did not prepare their
movement to challenge the Supreme Court‘s interpretations of the Constitution which placed the
authority of corporations over those of people. Judge-made law effectively limited chain store
foes to indirect strategies that the courts had not forbidden. Since the movement accepted the
Court‘s decrees, that the people could not govern corporations, the people endeavored to
regulate the corporate chain stores as best they could.
Instead of picking up the old struggle for human and community rights last waged in a major
way by the Populist movement in the late 1800‘s, the anti-chain store movement came to an end
with passage of a much vaunted but toothless and diversionary federal law, the Robinson-Patman
Act of 1936. This law marked the anti-climax of a once-vigorous grassroots movement crushed by
a federal government conscripted to the will of large corporations.
Here is a story with relevance for people opposing today‘s corporate imposition of cartel retailing
operations on communities. It is a history that we can be sure has been well studied by today's
corporate strategists.
THE PEOPLE and THE MOVEMENT
Public ferment against corporate chain stores in the 1920's and 30's was so intense that
opposition became the focus of community cultural, educational and social events. High school
and college debating teams in 1930 argued the proposition: ―Resolved: that chain stores are
detrimental to the best interests of the American public.‖ Debating manuals, with what we‘d now
call ―talking points,‖ were widely available and became topics of popular discussion at social
gatherings and in the every-day affairs of the community.[1]
With Sears Roebuck and Montgomery Ward corporations trying to squeeze local merchants with
their mail-order version of retailing, community reaction was visceral. People organized boycotts
and catalogue burnings. Their outhouses were stocked with a new brand of illustrated toilet
paper. The stigma of buying through the catalogues was so great that the Sears Roebuck
Corporation promised its customers that all transactions would remain confidential and products
would be shipped in unmarked packaging.[2] The inside cover of the Sears Roebuck sales
catalogue told buyers ―As some of our customers, especially townspeople and business houses,
request us to ship our goods in plain packages or boxes, leaving off our name and address, so
that no one will know what they have bought or where the goods come from, we have decided to
make every transaction strictly confidential.‖ [3]
When chain store corporations came to town with their absentee ownership, money vacuums,
uniformly inferior products, and low wages, democracy activists pressured newspapers not to sell
advertising space to them. Community based merchant associations tried to force chains to sign
minimum ―fair-trade‖ price contracts and pressure manufacturers not to sell directly to the
chains. Chain store opponents petitioned state legislators to use tax laws to block the chain
stores, and to impose levies high enough to put them out of business. Like the people they
represented, many state lawmakers joined the chain store opposition, believing it was their
3. obligation to reflect majority will to govern over the institutions of commerce in their
communities.
Independent radio stations and newspapers treated communities to diatribes against the chains,
warning that they threatened to destroy a cornerstone of American democracy, the independent
businessperson. William K. Henderson used his radio program, based in Shreveport, Louisiana, to
lambaste the chains. He told his listeners:
―We have attempted to bring to light the ruinous and devastating effect of sending the profits of
business out of our local communities to a common center, Wall Street. We have appealed to the
fathers and mothers—who entertain the fond hope of their children becoming prosperous
business leaders—to awaken to a realization of the dangers of the chain stores‘ closing this door
of opportunity. We have insisted that the payment of starvation wages such as the chain-store
system fosters, must be eradicated. We have importuned those who labor to join in striking down
the chain system in every form and character.‖[4]
There were ―trade-at-home‖ advertising campaigns, some sponsored by local chambers of
commerce. Local businesses bought and gave away tickets to see films that assailed the chain
stores, including the full-length feature America Forward.[5] Anti-chain associations like The Fox
River Valley Home Merchants‘ Association of Appleton, Wisconsin, financed their campaigns with
membership dues and donations from unions and independent merchants. In Springfield,
Missouri, the campaign was called ―Keep Ozark Dollars in the Ozarks,‖ and the Chamber of
Commerce sponsored advertisements in the local papers titled ―The Chain Store Menace.‖ These
ads told readers ―Your loyalty to the Home Owned Stores—your patronage and friendliness to
these stores—and your recognition of the Chain Store in its true light—that of a parasite upon
legitimate business and a menace to our city‘s prosperity, will result in a CONTINUATION of that
prosperity which has made Springfield so outstanding.‖[6]
In 1929, Harper‘s Monthly Magazine published The Chain Store Mind: Reflections of a
Shopkeeper by Jesse Rainsford Sprague. Mr. Sprague explained that ―Chain Stores represent a
sort of absentee landlordism. On our Main Street, and on thousands of other Main Streets, there
is a situation where policies are dictated and standards are set by men who have possibly never
seen our town. The modern idea seems to be to get the customer in, get his money, and get him
out again as quickly as possible so as to be ready for the next person. I would say the character
of our town has tended to become harder, more machinelike. The coming of the chain stores has
had a great deal to do with bringing about the machinelike atmosphere.‖ [7]
As part of a series of articles under the heading ―Chain Stores and the Community,‖ The Nation
printed Chains Versus Independents by Edward G. Ernst and Emil M. Hartl in November of 1930.
The authors studied the effects of the chains on community life in America, circulating surveys
and interviewing residents and local merchants. ―In Anderson, South Carolina,‖ they noted, ―a
city of 14,500 people, twenty three of the best business locations on Main Street have been
turned over to out-of-town merchants.‖ They reported it was the same in town after town.
Ernst and Hartl eulogized the loss of the local merchant who ―generally owns his own home. He
is considered one of the leading citizens, and is expected to lend his efforts toward
the…advancement of the community. As this loyal and energetic type of citizen is being driven
out of his prominent position, another type of merchant takes his place.‖
And who were these out-of-towners? Ernst and Hartl wrote: ―The new man is a transient. He is
merely a representative of a non-resident group of stockholders who pay him according to his
ability to line their pockets with silver. He is told exactly what to do and how to do it. The better
able he is to carry out orders, the better are his chances of being transferred to a bigger town,
4. and this is his chief ambition. What the local communities wish to prevent is the exodus of money
from the town to buy limousines for parasites in other cities.‖[8]
In the early days of opposition to the corporate chains, people seemed confident that they had
the authority to shape local economic processes and outcomes. Harvard philosopher William
Ernest Hocking put it this way: ―Economic processes constitute a single and healthy organism
only when the totality of persons in a community who have a right to consume determine what is
produced.‖[9] This was no mere theoretical or philosophical opinion to the average person at the
outset of the anti-chain store movement. At the heart of the protest loomed the assertion: a local
economy is good for nothing if it‘s not good for the local people!
Many protesters based their ideas on the work of early 20th
Century writers, such as Frederic
Howe. He wrote that ―every city will be an experiment station, offering new experiences of the
world. A single courageous state may, if its citizens choose, serve as a laboratory and try novel
social and economic experiments without risk to the rest of the country.‖[10] The notion that
local governments ought to be free to decide what is good for the community was commonplace.
Future Supreme Court Justice Louis Brandeis, a staunch proponent of local self governance,
attacked the ―Curse of Bigness.‖ He described in detail how chain store corporations undermined
local political and economic independence, and destroyed the capacity of individuals to achieve
self-mastery and of communities to achieve self-government.[11]
In 1930, another future Supreme Court Justice and then Alabama Senator, Hugo Black, told
Congress: ―We are rapidly becoming a nation of a few business masters and many clerks and
servants. The local man and merchant is passing and his community loses his contribution to
local affairs as an independent thinker and executive. A few of these useful citizens, thus
supplanted, become clerks of the great chain machines, at inadequate salaries, while many enter
the growing ranks of the unemployed. A wild craze for efficiency in production, sale and
distribution has swept over the land, increasing the number of unemployed, building up a caste
system, dangerous to any government.‖[12]
By 1935, the pressure on Congress was sufficient to enable Congressman Wright Patman of
Texas to introduce legislation that would literally have taxed the chains out of existence. He
initially lined up congressional support for what became known as the chain store ―Death
Sentence Tax.‖ Over 75 Congressmen from thirty-three states signed on as co-sponsors.
Grassroots arguments that the political clout of the corporate chains enabled them to pressure
suppliers for uncompetitive discounts, maintain non-union operations, pay low wages, vacuum
money out of communities, deny people‘s rights and prevent local democratic self-governance
were finally swaying Congress.
That same year, Congressman Patman held House hearings to investigate the American Retail
Federation (ARF). The House Resolution establishing the Committee declared that it was ―inimical
to the welfare of the citizens of the United States to permit the organization and functioning of
such a superlobby, designed for the purpose of intimidating and influencing Members of Congress
through direct and subversive lobbying practices.‖[13] In other words, some were moving
toward Congress banning corporate directors and their agents from directly writing – and
influencing – legislation.
At the height of the anti-chain store movement, the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Company
epitomized the mechanization of distribution, retail, and community character that so enraged
chain store opponents. The A&P Corporation operated over 15,000 stores across the United
States and by 1930 was the fifth largest corporation in the U.S., owning more chains than any
5. company then or since. Like the Wal Mart Corporation today, A&P embodied the corporate
usurpation of community rights and governing authority.
Addressing the National Association of Retail Druggists in 1938, Congressman Wright Patman told
the independent businessmen what he thought about the control of food and household
necessities by a very wealthy minority. Referring to the Hartford brothers, who controlled the
fortunes of the A&P Corporation, he commented:
―If it is right for one pair of childless brothers to own ten percent of the retail grocery business in
America, it is likewise right that ten pairs of childless brothers be permitted to own all the grocery
business in America. If it is right for such a few people to own the retail grocery business, it is
right and economically sound for a few childless brothers to own all the retail distribution
business in America. The question is, which is better for the general welfare of all the people of
this great country of ours? Will the country‘s interest be promoted in a better way by the million
and a half retail stores being owned by more than a million local citizens, or will the country be
better off if these million and a half retail stores are owned and controlled by a few childless
brothers?‖[14]
Compelling arguments and mounting political pressure from growing numbers of people verged
on subjugating the corporate chains to public command. But before Wright Patman‘s death knoll
for the chains could be brought to a vote, corporate directors split the coalition of chain
corporation opponents, redefined the problem, and broke the movement‘s back.
THE CORPORATE ASSAULT
The leadership of the nation‘s large corporations saw in the A&P Corporation and other large
multiunit corporations the epitome of scientific management and efficiency. Corporate
boardrooms were buzzing with admiration for a new and successful model for dominating the
buying, distribution, pricing and retailing of products, eliminating competition and dictating terms
to communities.
These corporate leaders were well positioned to impose such a model. By World War I, the
corporate class had been successfully wrapped in the Constitution by the Supreme Court, and
shielded from direct governance by the people. The Justices had given corporations 4th
amendment protections against unreasonable search and seizure, trial by jury under the 6th
amendment, protections from government regulation under the ―takings‖ clause of the 5th
amendment, and immunity from discrimination under due process and equal protections
provisions of the 14th
amendment. They had also ―found‖ the corporation in the Constitution‘s
contracts and commerce clauses.[15]
In addition, during the 50 years prior to the anti-chain store movement, strike-busting court
injunctions had armed corporate leaders with the might of the state against workers and
community residents exercising rights they believed were made inalienable by the 13th
amendment. This ―Glorious Labor Amendment,‖ they naively believed, protected them from
involuntary servitude, including oppressive working conditions and rights-denying corporate
directors.
The corporate class had also succeeded in commandeering the 14th
amendment, co-opting its
bestowal of rights from freed slaves to empower corporations. In 1938, Justice Hugo Black
declared that ―The history of the amendment proves that the people were told that its purpose
was to protect weak and helpless human beings and were not told that it was intended to
remove corporations in any fashion from the control of state governments. Of the cases in this
6. court in which the 14th
amendment was applied during the first fifty years after its adoption, less
than one half of one percent invoked it in protection of the Negro race, and more than fifty
percent asked that its benefits be extended to corporations.‖ [16]
Throughout the 1920s, state and federal courts struck down local and state anti-chain store laws
as unconstitutional. In 1928 the US Supreme Court ruled in three significant cases, overturning
state laws that differentiated between large and small businesses in each of them. The ―harm‖
created by these state laws, according to the Court, was that they violated the corporations‘
―rights‖ to ―substantive due process‖ and ―freedom of contract.‖
Personal memory of the judicial destruction of people‘s victories in driving the Civil War
amendments into the Constitution was still alive at the outset of the anti-chain store movement.
So was the story of the Populists. These farmers in the South, West and plains states had
organized, along with urban workers, the largest democracy movement in American history. In
the last days of the 19th
Century they had ignited a prairie fire of local activism against the
takeover of money, commerce and governance by the corporate class. But corporations and the
U.S. Government barred them from establishing popular democracy.
Corporate leaders of the 1920s clearly understood their position of power in the nation. J.C.
Penney Corporation president Earl C. Sams was confident enough to tell the members of the
National Chain Store Association that ―If we do 25% of the business of the country we must
furnish 25% of its leadership.‖[17] It was not an idle hope, but sound business advice based on
real governing opportunities that had been opened up for corporate managers.
The Supreme Court had empowered corporations with new constitutional powers, and so
corporate leaders lined up their resources to assert those powers to govern. They staged ―town
meetings‖ to persuade communities that the chains were ―good citizens.‖ They coerced their
employees to the cause, bullied dependent suppliers and their customers. They filed lawsuits and
challenged municipal and state laws across the country. Creating numerous non-profit
propaganda corporations, they invented a new public image for the chain stores and barreled
their way into state legislatures and Congress.
The state associations of chain stores possessed enormous financial capacity. They hired PR firms
to reframe the debate as a problem of protecting the inalienable rights of corporations. What
they spent on their long-term strategy of busting the coalition of unions, farmers, manufacturers
and independent businessmen who formed the backbone of the anti-chain store movement was
written off as a cost of doing business. The California corporate chain store tax referendum of
1937 offers insight into how this strategy worked.
The California Chain Store Association, in conjunction with the A&P Corporation and smaller
corporate chains, hired the Lord and Thomas Advertising Corporation to engineer a ballot
referendum to repeal a chain store tax passed by the legislature. Paid to violate the
democratizing spirit of the Populists, who had brought referenda to the state, Lord and Thomas
organized the collection of 135,000 voter‘s signatures to put a question on the ballot.
After identifying potential allies for the chain stores, the PR firm drafted a strategy that would
win-over the chain stores‘ employees, their producers and processors, and their customers. Their
tactics included simple fixes, like changing the employee identification system to one that used
workers‘ names instead of numbers, and organizing corporate picnics and dances. An
inspirational movie, The Spirit of ‘36, rounded-out the corporate boosterism that prepared
employees to participate in the referendum.
7. Lord and Thomas Corporation also mapped out a series of favors that the corporate chains would
offer the farmers, including relief from unreasonable quantity discounts, better compensation for
loss leaders on produce, and a reduction of ―advertising allowances‖ that forced farmers to
subsidize the chain corporations‘ advertising costs.
For seven months leading up to the vote, the corporations financed a speakers‘ bureau packed
with PR men that ran the circuit of men‘s clubs, farm groups and women‘s clubs. On Monday
evenings the radio program California Hour treated listeners to regional professional and amateur
performers, and invited listeners to enter an essay contest that asked would-be winners to
describe the benefits of chains. In the last few weeks before the vote, the corporations doubled
their sponsorship of radio broadcasts. They plastered streetcars and buses with posters. They
distributed lapel buttons, bumper stickers, and windshield flyers. They advertised public meetings
in large auditoriums and offered free entertainment, plus a dose of commentary on the
referendum.[18]
The California Chain Store Association‘s strategy to split the anti-chain store coalition was
bolstered by these tactics, but there were more focused maneuvers that led to the peeling away
of support for the anti-chain campaign. Prior to the referendum, California peach growing
cooperatives---remnants of Populists‘ agrarian organizing---picked a bumper crop that was in
jeopardy of spoiling because the coops had too few retail outlets. A&P Corporation executives
saw opportunity in the farmers‘ plight and decided to buy up the fruit. They sold it in stores
across the nation in every imaginable form---canned peaches became a heavily marketed
mainstay in their grocery stores. The A&P Corporation capitalized publicly on their rescue of the
farm coops. As a result, the staunch anti-chain activism of organized farmers was neutralized.
The coalition-splitting strategy of the chains was not just a California phenomenon. At the same
time the California Chain Store Association was employing the Lord and Thomas Advertising
Corporation to manufacture a ―popular‖ referendum to overturn a state chain store tax law,
Wright Patman was pressing his Congressional allies to pass national legislation that would put
the corporate chains out of business. His ―Death Sentence Tax‖ that would, in the words of
Patman, ―restrict retail distribution to a small area and to a comparatively small number of units,‖
[19] would have made irrelevant laws like the one challenged by the referendum in California. In
Washington, the American Farm Bureau Federation, a lobbying and advocacy organization for
corporate agriculture, and the National Council of Farmer Cooperatives took a stand against
Patman‘s legislation. Even the National Grange argued that the chains had ―frequently been very
helpful to farmers in the distribution of surplus crops.‖ [20]
The corporate strategists then turned to labor. The A&P Corporation cut a deal with William
Green, president of the AFL, which delivered union opposition to the Patman tax in exchange for
unionization of the chain store. The A&P Corporation deftly stripped labor away from the anti-
chain store campaign, and the movement buckled.
Both houses of Congress then overwhelmingly passed the Robinson-Patman Act instead.
Although promoted as enacting the reforms that the anti-chain movement wanted, this was not
the chain store ―Death Sentence Tax.‖ It was a bill with much different intent. It conceded that
the corporate chains would spread. The law carefully avoided the movement‘s demand for
popular authority over corporate decisions; it failed even to wound the corporate ―superlobby‖
that Patman‘s investigative hearings found to be ―inimical to the welfare of the citizens of the
United States.‖ It placed the burden of proof that chains were engaging in monopoly practices
entirely on independent businesses and communities harmed by the chain stores.
And nothing in the law challenged the constitutionality of judge bestowed corporate privileges.
Under cover of law, the ―few‖ continued to govern the ―many.‖
8. By 1940 the corporate chains were entrenched in communities that had fought so hard against
them. State legislatures, buried under an avalanche of court decisions overturning their laws that
tried to say ―no,‖ settled for diversionary regulatory laws and dead-end tax laws that the courts
would approve. Ironically, state laws that increased taxes based on the number of stores led to a
business trend emphasizing square footage. Instead of more stores, the corporations built bigger
stores. They opened huge supermarkets on the outskirts of town and drew business away from
town centers, and at the same time increased people‘s dependence on the automobile.
With the Supreme Court‘s rapid-fire nullification of one state law after another that subordinated
corporations to communities, people‘s confidence in their ability to govern waned. After that,
tepid chain store tax legislation was introduced in more than 40 states and passed into law in 26
states. Although the Court upheld these graduated tax laws for chain stores, it more significantly
vindicated corporate constitutional privileges. The state tax laws that stood did nothing to
challenge those privileges, and the bolstering of constitutional corporate authority as a political
weapon enabled corporate managers to dictate communities‘ futures.
When the dust settled, the corporations had channeled anti-chain store activists into regulatory
remedies that they hoped would lessen the harms inflicted by corporate managers. By adopting
regulatory ―solutions,‖ chain store foes effectively conceded the right of corporate directors to
impose themselves on unwilling communities, and in the process destroyed the popular
mobilization they had built.
That the Robinson-Patman Act, absurdly labeled the ―Magna Charta of small business,‖ is still on
the books speaks volumes about its irrelevance.
DELIBERATIONS and LIBERATIONS
People in communities across America are struggling to stop the Wal Mart Corporation and other
global corporate empires from wielding the law of the land and colluding with government
officials to deny people‘s fundamental right to govern their communities.
The local assaults which inevitably accompany such rights denial include: putting local merchants
out of business, paying neighbors low wages with no health benefits, vacuuming out local wealth,
destroying pristine farmland and natural areas.
There are also far-away harms, largely invisible and unmentioned. These harms result when a
handful of corporate emperors join the elites of other countries to deny worker and community
rights, and when they rewrite the laws for global investment, sales, labor and trade, reconfigure
global production methods that maximize harms to workers and the planet, and when they
institutionalize everything based on an insane Wal Mart Corporation model of ever-increasing
sales, made possible by virtual slave labor and the endless environmentally destructive extraction
of resources and dumping of toxic junk.
Ignorant of the lessons of the anti-chain store movement of the 1920s and 1930s, people
springing into action for justice are being channeled into zoning and planning board hearings,
and into regulatory processes designed to enable and protect corporations. Little or no attention
is paid to the reality that ―We the People‖ are supposed to be the source of all governing
authority, that the people have the responsibility to interpret the Constitution. Never during local
hearings or regulatory proceedings are people asked what they actually want. Over and over
corporate and government lawyers and elected officials instruct citizens that the rule of law and
the Constitution of the United States forbid their communities to just say ‗No!‘
9. Too many people accept this pap as true.
Throughout all these legal dramas, corporate directors wield the law of the land, and steal the
people‘s governing authority. Majority disenfranchisement is accepted as the norm. Even lawyers
hired to represent local governments and community groups say that‘s the way things are
supposed to be.
The ritual is repeated solemnly as local civic groups come together, scrounging whatever money
they can to pay lawyers whose goals are limited to making corporate chain store siting plans a
little less horrible. They hire traffic and lighting experts, environmental, hydrology, geology and
engineering consultants. If a group is exceptionally lucky, maybe an old zoning ordinance or a
newly discovered wetland will temporarily fend off a corporation. More often than not, however,
corporate lawyers will use assorted zoning ordinances and procedures to back citizen groups into
a corner, demean the legitimacy of their claims, and deny the authority of their testimony. In
either case, people accept that ―the law‖ denies majorities of people the authority to keep
corporate chains out of their communities.
It‘s hard to find fault with people who fight so persistently and courageously against injustice.
Many activists believe in and perform well the roles they‘ve been taught to fill. They master the
fine points of regulatory law, learn every detail about the corporation‘s policies and record, and
educate large segments of their communities. They flood the hearing rooms, file appeal after
appeal. They publicize the corporation‘s record of violence and law breaking and give thousands
and thousands of dollars to lawyers. They hold onto the hope that if their lawyers make the right
presentations and marshal the best evidence, then the good people working at regulatory
agencies and in local government will take note and protect their communities. To this end, many
valiant people invest years of their lives, only to watch corporations triumph by wrapping
themselves in the people‘s Bill of Rights.
Some who have lived through this disheartening process have come to understand that resisting
corporate chain stores by opposing their many permit applications, and trying to zone them
away, is simply a waste of time. Some have begun to look for -- and forge -- different goals and
different strategies.
In Pennsylvania, I work with people who are saying ‗No!‘ to unwanted corporate projects. Here,
people are joining forces to assert their sovereign authority to make the rules for determining
what happens in their communities. They are learning that saying ―no‖ requires community
majorities to contest corporate claims to constitutional authority. They are learning that saying
―no‖ requires majorities to challenge public officials who illegitimately enable corporate directors
to deny people‘s fundamental rights.
To date, people in more than eighty townships in nine rural counties in Pennsylvania have forced
their local legislators to pass laws banning certain kinds of corporations from doing business
within their borders. Two townships have passed laws explicitly refusing to recognize corporate
claims to power and authority rooted in the United States and Pennsylvania constitutions – not as
an abstract organizing concept, but to protect and vindicate their authority to say ―no‖ to
corporate assaults.
Because these are not nice-sounding, ineffectual ―resolutions,‖ but real laws which local sheriffs
and courts must enforce, our corporate-run state legislature has taken steps to preempt, and
nullify, some of these local laws. Several townships have responded to this legislative preemption
by beginning the process of changing their legal status as subordinate Second Class Townships
and ―going Home Rule.‖ To accomplish this, they are bringing the people of their communities
10. together to write Home Rule charters—that is, to write their communities‘ new constitutions. With
these constitutions, people will do what the corporate class has been doing for well over a
century in legislatures and judges‘ chambers: make the rules for making the rules.
What distinguishes these people from those still putting their hopes in zoning and data and
resistance to permit applications? It‘s simple: they have attended Democracy Schools, launched
in Pennsylvania by Richard Grossman and the Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund
(CELDF). At these weekend gatherings, people have been exploring how corporate leaders
mobilized long ago to direct government to deny people‘s rights, and how they put today‘s
elaborate Regulatory System in place to divert people from demanding (or even aspiring to)
democracy, self-governance, and corporate subordination.
At Democracy Schools, folks look at the apparently endless ―single issue‖ corporate assaults that
communities across the country have been resisting. The focus is not just corporate chain
invasions but also corporate toxic dumps, incinerators, factory farms, clear cutting of forests,
cyanide mining, power plants, superhighways, quarries, urban sludge spreading, aquifer seizures,
corporatization of the commons, microwave cell phone towers, landfills, corporatization of
prisons, education, hospitals, and every aspect of what once passed for public endeavors. These
folks examine key threads running through all the apparently ―single issues,‖ and examine
questions like: who gets to use the law against whom? And: how did a few corporate directors
get to wield the Constitution to get their way?
People in Pennsylvania are using Democracy Schools to begin changing how they think about the
problems facing their communities, about the goals they want to achieve, and about walking
away from regulatory laws and arenas. They have been coming together to look into the past
and figure out how our communities got into such a jam. And they have been learning to reframe
past defensive campaigns into offensive struggles, to pass laws asserting people‘s fundamental
rights to define their own communities, to write the rules for democratic self-governance with
authority, and to define the very nature of corporate entities.
Imagine if people in hundreds of towns across Pennsylvania began taking a closer look at US
history, leaving regulatory hearings behind, and passing laws to assert their communities‘
authority to make the rules. What if the passion, energies and resources which environmental,
labor and community organizers have been pouring into bottomless pits of regulatory processes
and expensive court appeals started coalescing around challenging the denial of people‘s rights
and the wrapping of corporations in the Constitution?
What if people in thousands of communities around the nation began exercising their rights to
pass laws explicitly defining the terms under which corporations could enter into their
jurisdictions? What if they denied corporate claims to constitutional power and privilege while
tossing out public officials who won‘t get on board?
This will take hard work. There‘s much to learn about corporations and the Constitution, about
law and history, about rights and local governance, about past people‘s movements, and about
giving meaning to the words ‗We the People.‘ There may be even more to un-learn than there is
to learn about this country: laws and customs that empower corporate directors and deny
people‘s rights have been accumulating for generations, and there are many barriers to break
down.
But it will take no more work to be successful than it has taken to fail. It will take thinking
differently, and that‘s one of the hardest tasks there is! Doing battle in the Regulatory System,
while conceding Constitutional power and authority to a privileged corporate few, also ranks right
up there. No one shows more passion for justice or spends more energy in its pursuit than
11. community organizers who invest years in zoning and planning and environmental boards, and in
local, state and federal courts. The question is: can we figure out together how better to direct
our energies, passions and resources, so that when we win a struggle we not only stop an
imminent harm, but also expand the scope of people‘s rights and democratic self-governance?
CELDF‘s and Grossman‘s Democracy Schools are places where people can begin moving down
these roads. So far, Pennsylvanians and visitors from other states have shared their experiences
at over fifty schools across the country, teaching one another to think critically about the past in
order to reframe today‘s challenges in exciting, energizing and winnable ways.
Exciting and energizing as they are, Democracy Schools are only a beginning. Corporate
usurpations of people‘s rights remain largely unacknowledged and, since the days of the
Populists, minimally contested. The story of the anti-chain store movement of the last century is
but one place people can start reclaiming our histories, uncolonizing our minds, refashioning our
goals and tactics, and integrating the key lessons of the anti-chain store movement into new
strategies.
One lesson is that majorities of people in more than forty states said ‗No!‘ to A&P Corporation
and other corporate chain empires. But when corporate leaders pulled the Constitution out of
their pockets, the movement was not prepared to challenge the judges and legislators who had
given the people‘s Constitution away. Movement leaders were not prepared to walk away from
false victories like the Robinson Patman Act. And so, when the corporations clubbed the people
with their own Constitution, the remaining chain store foes retreated into regulatory agencies to
ask only that their corporate chains be made a little less tight.
The movement simply did not challenge corporate and government leaders who wielded the law
to deny people‘s rights. Its leaders failed to engage their movement in the aspirations for self-
governance pioneered by the American Revolutionaries, Abolitionists, Women‘s Suffragists,
Knights of Labor and the Populists, who had consciously labored to turn our property and
commerce Constitution into a human rights and liberty Constitution.
Today, new passions against corporate chain stores are rising. But instead of beginning where
the first anti-chain movement began, asserting the rights of self-governing people, today‘s
organizers start their fight where that earlier movement failed.
In his 1929 article, The Chain Store Mind, Jesse Rainsford Sprague told us that ―this tendency to
buy ready-made thoughts and ideas has spread amazingly during the past few years. In our
town, and I suppose in other towns, its progress has pretty well paralleled the increasing
absentee ownership of the stores.‖[21]
Like all great people‘s movements, the corporate chain store foes of the 1920s and 1930a left us
a clear guide: as long as we let corporate leaders, town solicitors, judges, newspaper editors,
politicians and Washington DC labor and environmental insiders flood us with ready-made
thoughts and ideas, tell us what to yearn for, and what the law says, we will fail. As long as we
let these ‗experts‘ channel us into zoning boards and planning boards and environmental boards
and permit appeals begging for crumbs, we will remain forever chained by the corporate culture
that has not only invaded our towns, but also has taken over our minds.
We are ‗We the People.‘ We must write the laws. We must enforce them. There is no one else.
Ben Price is Project Director for the Corporations and Democracy Program of the Community
Environmental Legal Defense Fund (CELDF). He can be contacted at BenGPrice@aol.com He adds
12. one last note: ―You know as well as I do that the problems facing our communities, and this
country, do not start and do not end with corporate chain stores. There are other chains, some of
them in our minds, which need breaking. Come to Democracy School. See what it‘s like to go on
the offense for a change.‖
For information on Democracy Schools, contact:
The Community Environmental Legal Defense Fund
675 Mower Road
Chambersburg, PA 17202
(717) 709-0457
info@celdf.org
http://www.celdf.org/
[1]Richard C. Schragger, The Anti-Chain Store Movement, Localist Ideology, and the Remnants of the
Progressive Constitution, 1920-1940 Iowa Law Review, Vol. 90, 2005, p 1011.
[2] Carl G. Ryant, The South and the Movement Against Chain Stores, The Journal of Southern History,
(39, 1973), p 208.
[3] Sears, Roebuck & Co. Sales Catalogue Disclaimer, inside front cover, 1902.
[4] Carl G. Ryant, p 209.
[5] Paul Ingram and Hayagreeva Rao, Store Wars: The Enactment and Repeal of Anti-Chain-Store
Legislation in America, American Journal of Sociology, Volume 110, Number 2 (September 2004) pp 451-
452.
[6] Carl G. Ryant, p 211.
[7] Jesse Rainsford Sprague, The Chain Store Mind: Reflections of a Shopkeeper, Harper‘s Monthly
Magazine, 1929, p 356-359.
[8] Edward G. Ernst and Emil M. Hartl, Chains Versus Independents, The Nation, November 19, 1930, pp
545-546.
[9] Howard Zinn in The Zinn Reader by Howard Zinn, (New York: Seven Stories Press, 1977) p 214.
[10] Richard C. Schragger, p 1060 (49).
[11] Ibid. P1015 (4).
[12] Ibid. P1030-1031 (19-20).
[13] Ibid. P1080 (69).
[14] Carl G. Ryant, p 215.
[15] Thomas Alan Linzey, Esq., Richard Grossman, Daniel E. Brannen, Jr., Esq, Model Amici Curiae Brief
to Eliminate Corporate Rights, 2003 http://www.ratical.org/corporations/demoBrief.html .
[16] Peter Kellman, You‘ve Heard of Santa Clara, Now Meet Dartmouth, By What Authority, Vol. 2, No. 2,
Spring 2000.
[17] Earl C. Sams, President, J.C. Penny, What is the Chain Store‘s Responsibility to its Community?
Address delivered before the Second Annual Convention of the National Chain Store Association at
Chicago, September 24, 1929, p 19.
[18] Helen Woodward, How to Swing an Election, The Nation, December 11, 1937, pp 638-640.
[19] Carl G. Ryant, p 214.
[20] Ibid. p 216.
[21] Jesse Rainsford Sprague, p 359.