Original Writings on Community Rights Topics

“Free Trade’s” Footprint a Decade after Seattle

This article by Jane Anne Morris (DemocracyThemePark.org) was originally published in the Spring 2010 edition of Synthesis/Regeneration. On this Tenth Anniversary of the “Battle for Seattle,” we could celebrate, we should commemorate, but we must evaluate. Right, then. What seemed so important at the time? It is difficult to even see back to 1999 without becoming [...]

(Citizens United) Court’s Campaign Money Ruling Is a Red Herring (2010)

This article by Jane Anne Morris (DemocracyThemePark.org) was originally published in the March 15, 2010 edition of Progressive Populist. Before running off trying to counter the recent Supreme Court decision in Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (FEC), we ought to sort out what this decision does and does not do. The Citizens United decision does make [...]

Why a Green Future is “Unconstitutional” and What to Do About It

This article by Jane Anne Morris (DemocracyThemePark.org) was originally published in the Spring 2009 edition of Synthesis/Regeneration, and was based on remarks made at Synthesis/Regeneration’s “Surviving Climate Change: Producing Less and Enjoying It More” Roundtable, in St. Louis, Missouri in June 2008. Working in tandem with a cooperative Supreme Court, corporate lawyers have insinuated themselves into [...]

Devolution and Preemption

This short article on the history and background of devolution and preemption was published by the Institute for Local Self-Reliance (ILSR) on, November 25th, 2008. What level of government should exercise what kinds of authority? That question has been vigorously debated throughout U.S. history. Indeed, the U.S. Constitution itself represented a radical departure from the [...]

Meat, ‘Free Trade’ and Democracy: As Goes South Korea, So Went Missouri

This article by Jane Anne Morris (DemocracyThemePark.org) was originally published in the August 1, 2008 edition of Progressive Populist. In the Spring of 2008, tens of thousands of South Koreans held candlelight vigils every day for over a month to protest being forced to accept beef from the United States. The US government claims that barring our [...]

The Pink Oleo Saga: Why So Many Good State Laws Are “Unconstitutional” (and What We Should Do About It)

This article by Jane Anne Morris (DemocracyThemePark.org) was originally published in the Spring 2008 edition of By What Authority, and was adapted from her book, Gaveling Down the Rabble. What’s pink, French, and unconstitutional? Hint: The story of this early “frankenfood” provides an advance script for the current global “free trade” frenzy. Over a century ago, [...]

State “Laboratories of Democracy” Threatened, Overlooked

This article by Jane Anne Morris (DemocracyThemePark.org) was published in the January 1, 2008 edition of Progressive Populist. How to be sure that toy under the holiday tree has no lead paint? With only a month of shopping days remaining, the public depends–more than at any other time–on our federal regulatory agencies’ ability to protect us [...]

Confronting the Corporate Constitution in Pennsylvania

This article by Richard Grossman was originally published in 2004. Invoking the people's constitutional maxim: "Where there is harm, there must be remedy," Friends and Residents of St. Thomas Township (FROST) have turned a conventional defense against a giant quarry-asphalt-cement corporation into a confrontation over corporate claims to constitutional rights. FROST members live in South-Central [...]

Try This At Home

This extraordinary article by corporate anthrop0logist Jane Anne Morris (DemocracyThemePark.org) is a kind of Primer on Activist Groups vs Corporate Strategy. It was originally published in Globalize Liberation (City Lights Books, 2004). ..... In the U.S., this corporatized world is an open-air Democracy Theme Park where people go to hearings and pull voting levers, while decisions are being made elsewhere. [...]

Since everyone lives somewhere, there’s no better place to begin to dismantle corporate media than in one’s own community

In 2003, Paul Cienfuegos was invited to lead his new workshop, “Taking OUR Local Mass Media Back From Large Corporations”, at the National Conference on Media Reform in Madison, Wisconsin. Paul has since led this workshop in many U.S. communities, including Florence and Portland, OR, Eureka, Arcata, Fort Bragg, Ukiah, and Nevada City, CA, Bellingham, WA, and Minneapolis, [...]

By |2021-02-08T14:41:25-08:00September 1st, 2003|Original Writings on Community Rights Topics|
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