Clean(er) Capitalism

Published: Sept. 23, 2023, 5:33 p.m.

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Ralph welcomes Toby Heaps, co-founder and editor-in-chief of the Canadian magazine \\u201cCorporate Knights,\\u201d which ranks the world\\u2019s 100 most sustainable corporations. And we welcome back Dr. Bandy Lee, psychiatrist and editor of \\u201cThe Dangerous Case of Donald Trump\\u201d to discuss Donald Trump\\u2019s continuing hold on 30% of the American population.

Toby Heaps is the CEO and co-founder of Corporate Knights, and Editor-in-Chief of Corporate Knights magazine. He spearheaded the first global ranking of the world\\u2019s 100 most sustainable corporations in 2005, and in 2007 coined the term \\u201cclean capitalism.\\u201d Toby has been published in the Financial Times, Wall Street Journal, and the Globe and Mail, and is a regular guest speaker on CBC.

You see these stories happening all over the world, whether it\\u2019s from the oil companies or the electric power companies, fossil power companies, or food companies, or real estate companies. And the ones who are going all in, investing big in the green economy and the more sustainable economy are, more often than not, the ones who are hitting the biggest numbers financially.

Toby Heaps, Corporate Knights

We don\\u2019t want to just be doing a beauty contest or be subject to the latest headline. We\\u2019re trying to do something that\\u2019s reasonably rooted in evidence, and it can be defensible, and it can be considered fair. And we recognize that none of the big companies that we rank are perfect\\u2014 they all have major issues, which is kind of the nature of the human condition.

Toby Heaps, Corporate Knights

Dr. Bandy Lee is a medical doctor, a forensic psychiatrist, and a world expert on violence who taught at Yale School of Medicine and Yale Law School for 17 years before transferring recently to Columbia and Harvard. She is currently president of the World Mental Health Coalition, an educational organization that assembles mental health experts to collaborate with other disciplines for the betterment of public mental health and public safety. She is the editor of The Dangerous Case of Donald Trump: 37 Psychiatrists and Mental Health Experts Assess a President and Profile of a Nation: Trump\\u2019s Mind, America\\u2019s Soul.

Essentially, [Trump] did not have the capacity to have ideologies or policies. He can\\u2019t think at that level. What he can do is to manipulate psychologically those who are vulnerably predisposed and those who have formed emotional bonds with him.

Dr. Bandy Lee

These are the kinds of effects that we expect from having a person with severe mental symptoms holding an influential position and having lots of public exposure. We do have a propagation of symptoms. I\\u2019ve been calling this the \\u201cTrump Contagion\\u201d but what it really is is shared psychosis, which is a psychosocial phenomenon that\\u2019s been researched and described since around the mid-19th century.

Dr. Bandy Lee

[Trump voters] are still with him. But they would never support a friend or a neighbor who lied all the time, who had power over them, who described things that weren\\u2019t real about what was going on around them or what he did in the past, or who cheated his workers.

Ralph Nader

In Case You Haven\\u2019t Heard with Francesco DeSantis

1. The United Autoworkers Union is on strike against the big three automakers. Just before the strike began, the Lever reported that General Motors claimed the union\\u2019s demands \\u201cwould threaten our ability to do what\\u2019s right for the long-term benefit of the team.\\u201d Yet, for all their crying poverty, the Big Three \\u201chave reported $21 billion in profits in just the first six months of 2023,\\u201d and \\u201chave authorized $5 billion in stock buybacks.\\u201d The union\\u2019s strategy is also worth touching on, as it is novel for this industry. Instead of all workers going on strike at once, the union plans on \\u201ctargeting a trio of strategic factories while keeping 90 percent of its members working under expired contracts,\\u201d per Axios. However, this story notes the ways industry plans to strike back, notably by utilizing quasi-lockouts at active plants.

2. In a nigh-unprecedented shot across the bow, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit has issued a \\u201c\\u2018writ of body attachment\\u2019, directing the United States Marshals Service to take two corporate officials of Haven Salon + Spa in Muskego, Wisconsin into custody [after they] repeatedly failed and refused to comply with an enforced [National Labor Relations] Board order.\\u201d This followed years of opportunities for the corporate officials to settle this dispute and represents the strongest signal so far that the re-energized NLRB will use every weapon in its legal arsenal to protect workers. The Board\\u2019s full statement is available at NLRB.gov.

3. The Washington Post reports that since retaking power in Afghanistan, the Taliban has \\u201call but extinguished al-Qaeda.\\u201d Yet buried within this story is a much more intriguing tidbit. According to this piece, \\u201cThe CIA shares counterterrorism information with the Taliban,\\u201d per a senior Biden administration official. This official emphasized that this does not include \\u201ctargeting data or \\u2018actionable intelligence,\\u2019\\u201d raising the question of what information exactly the CIA is passing along to the Taliban.\\xa0

4. In Maine, voters are set to decide on a proposal to \\u201cturn the state\\u2019s two big private electric companies\\u2014Central Maine Power and Versant\\u2014into Pine Tree Power, a nonprofit, publicly run utility,\\u201d per Bill McKibben in the Nation. McKibben points out that the private utility companies \\u201csent $187 million in profits out of Maine last year\\u2014much of it to shareholders in such far-flung places as Qatar, Norway, and Canada.\\u201d Moreover, this move could lower rates by \\u201can average of $367 per household per year.\\u201d Bernie Sanders has endorsed this effort, declaring \\u201cPower belongs in the hands of the people, not greedy corporations.\\u201d

5. In an effort to combat food deserts, Chicago Mayor Brandon Johnson has announced the city will explore the possibility of opening a municipally-owned grocery store. The announcement highlighted that \\u201cHistoric disinvestment has led to inequitable access to food retail across Chicago, [which] have been exacerbated as at least six grocery stores closed on the South and West sides over the past two years.\\u201d This project would seek to provide healthy food for South and West side residents, as well as an economic anchor in these communities.

6. From Variety: The California Senate has passed a bill to \\u201cgrant unemployment benefits to workers who are on strike,\\u201d in a major win for the Writers Guild, SAG-AFTRA, and organized labor more generally. If signed, this will go into effect January 1st, 2024. Currently, only New York and New Jersey offer this safety net to striking workers.

7. A story in LA Public Press traces the disturbing rise of so-called \\u201cTenant relocators.\\u201d According to the story, \\u201cLawmakers, tenants and tenant groups say that, across Los Angeles, landlords are buying rent-controlled buildings predominantly occupied by immigrants and using illegal tenant harassment to force people out so they can re-rent their units at market rate.\\u201d Further, \\u201cOrganizers...say tenant harassment is so profitable that it has become an industry in its own right, and that the industry has spawned a profession: the tenant relocator, who cajoles or threatens tenants into leaving while their building falls to pieces around them.\\u201d This is yet another case showing the stunning lengths the rich will go to in order to acquire yet more wealth.

8. In Atlanta, over 115,000 signatures have been collected and submitted calling for a referendum on the \\u201cCop City,\\u201d project. Yet, when these signatures were submitted, the Clerk\\u2019s Office refused to accept them, citing obscure deadline rules. Now, Georgia Senator Raphael Warnock is weighing in with a letter to Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens urging the City to \\u201cerr on the side of giving people the ability to express their views,\\u201d the Atlanta Voice reports. This contentious project will likely continue to be a political flash-point going forward.

9. Arundhati Roy, the world-famous Indian dissident writer, received a major European essay prize on September 12th. She used this opportunity to deliver an explosive speech warning of the danger posed to the world by \\u201cthe dismantling of democracy in India.\\u201d Roy is explicit in naming \\u201cIndia\\u2019s descent\\u2026into first majoritarianism and then full-blown fascism,\\u201d and goes into gut-churning detail concerning the plight of religious minorities in what used to be called the world\\u2019s largest democracy. The full speech is available on YouTube.

10. Finally, Yahoo News reports that back in 2015, \\u201cElon Musk Stormed Into the Tesla Office Furious That Autopilot Tried to Kill Him.\\u201d Taken from the new blockbuster biography of the tech magnate, the story goes on to say that the Tesla autopilot, \\u201cthrown off by the road\'s faded lane lines,\\u201d steered into and almost hit oncoming traffic. This, the book argues, was due to Musk\\u2019s insistence on removing light detection and ranging technology \\u2013 better known as LiDAR \\u2013 from his vehicles in an attempt to cut costs. Ultimately, the autopilot was not actually fixed; instead, Musk\\u2019s chief of staff Sam Teller got the faded lane lines repainted. That may be a functional solution for the world\\u2019s richest man, but personally, I wouldn\\u2019t take my chances.



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