FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
Contact: Kat Walter, (937) 223-1577,
kat@democracyohio.org
“When Injustice is Legal:
What Do Abolitionists Teach Us About Challenging Corporate Rule?”
Historian Richard Grossman
to speak at the Dayton
International Peace Museum
Saturday, December 2 at
7:00 PM
Project Democracy Ohio welcomes national activist,
writer, lecturer, and legal historian, Richard Grossman, to Dayton,
Ohio. He will talk about the parallels between the slave system of 150
years ago and today’s corporate system. The talk is open to the public,
and will be held at the Dayton International Peace Museum, 208 W.
Monument Avenue in Dayton.
The parallels are uncanny: Laws reaching back over 150
years have enabled corporations to wield power over people’s and
communities’ rights. Like the slave system in which human beings were
considered property under the law, corporate property not only has more
rights than do natural persons-but corporations are also considered
persons under the law! Why do corporations have Bill of Rights
protections
How does this affect organizing in Ohio? What are the
connections between corporate rights and a community majority’s lack of
rights to stop a factory farm or a waste incinerator? When the state
legislature passes a bill that further strips local power on behalf of
agribusiness, whom is the legislature enabling with rights? Certainly
not the majority in the community-whose rights are denied.
Consider Ohio’s ranking in recent pollution indices: Ten
Ohio counties rank among the nation’s worst 100 in toxic chemical
releases; five are among the top 25 in longterm particle pollution; and
3 Ohio cities are in the top 25 ozone polluters. Isn’t it time to
rethink the strategy and examine how it is that corporations legally
pollute? Ohio has waste incinerators, landfills, factory farms,
development sprawl, coal mining, and tire burning-all in the name of
"efficiency" for the sake of constant growth. How much longer can we
waste our time at zoning and regulatory hearings to be told these
corporate assaults are legal?
Richard Grossman served as a Peace Corps Volunteer in the
Philippines in the 1960s. Over the next 20 years, he worked in multiple
states with anti-poverty, educational, environmental, labor, community
and other civic groups, including Environmentalists For Full Employment
(EFFE) in Washington, D.C. In the late 1980s, he helped create "Stop The
Poisoning" Schools at the Highlander Center in Tennessee, to serve
communities invaded by corporate and government toxic chemicals.
Richard co-authored the best selling pamphlet "Taking
Care of Business: Citizenship and the Charter of Incorporation" in
1993. He co-authored the books Energy, Jobs & the Economy (1978); Fear
at Work: Job Blackmail, Labor & the Environment (1982); and Defying
Corporations, Defining Democracy: A book of History and Strategy (2001).
In 1995 Richard began working closely with Pennsylvania
attorney Thomas Linzey, and in 2003 they co-founded the Daniel Pennock
Democracy School. In early 2006 Richard joined the Community
Environmental Legal Defense Fund, co-founded by Thomas in 1994. The
Defense Fund is a nonprofit organization that assists communities who
are fed up with corporations dictating their future and trumping their
rights. Together, Richard and Thomas have taught a long-overdue approach
to organizing through the Democracy School.
Project Democracy Ohio is a nonprofit organization
co-founded by Eme Lybarger and Kat Walter to assist with rights-based
organizing to challenge corporate control in people’s communities. The
organization is bringing in Richard to help teach the first Democracy
School at Antioch College. The weekend seminar includes U.S. history not
taught in school-about law, the Constitution, the founders, and people’s
struggles for rights and justice-as well as current-day organizing by
Pennsylvanians who see the need to challenge corporate minorities who
wield constitutional rights in their communities.
The School will take place from December 1st
through December 3rd. Richard will also speak to Antioch
College’s freshman class on Peace Studies and the Environment.
Free and open to the public
Project Democracy Ohio