Gangs of America: The Rise of Corporate Power and the Disabling of Democracy

Front Cover
Berrett-Koehler Publishers, 2003 - Business & Economics - 281 pages
The corporation has become the core institution of the modern world. Designed to seek profit and power, it has pursued both with endless tenacity, steadily bending the framework of law and even challenging the sovereign status of the state. Where did the corporation come from? How did it get so much power? What is its ultimate trajectory?
After he sold his successful computer book publishing business to a large corporation, Ted Nace felt increasingly driven to find answers to these questions. In Gangs of America he details the rise of corporate power in America through a series of fascinating stories, each organized around a different facet of the central question: "How did corporations get more rights than people?" Beginning with the origin of the corporation in medieval Great Britain, Nace traces both the events that shaped the evolution of corporate power and the colorful personalities who played major roles. Gangs of America is a uniquely accessible synthesis of the latest scholarly research, a compelling historical narrative, and a distinctive personal voice.
 

Contents

Two From Street Fights to Empire
19
FOUR Why the Colonists Feared Corporations
38
SIX The Genius
56
SEVEN Superpowers
70
EIGHT The Judge
87
NINE The Court Reporter
102
TEN The LavenderVested Turkey Gobbler
110
TWELVE The Revolt of the Bosses
137
THIRTEEN Speech Money
152
FIFTEEN Crime Wave
178
SEVENTEEN Fighting Back
197
EIGHTEEN Intelligent Amoral Evolving
219
APPENDIX B The Bill of Rights and the Fourteenth
238
REFERENCES
262
ABOUT THE AUTHOR 282
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About the author (2003)

While working for the u.s. forest service during high school, Ted Nace learned about the plans of several major corporations to develop coal strip mines and other energy projects near his hometown of Dickinson, North Dakota. During graduate school, Nace worked for the Environmental Defense Fund, where he helped develop computerized simulations that demonstrated the investor and ratepayer benefits of re- placing coal-fired power plants with alternative energy programs. The EDF simulations led to the cancellation of a multi-billion-dollar coal- based power complex proposed by two California utilities. After completing his graduate studies, Nace worked for the Dakota Resource Council, a citizens' group concerned about the impacts of energy development on agriculture and rural communities.