Ralph welcomes back public interest advocate Donald Cohen to discuss the long history of corporate propaganda covering for corporate greed, and his new book Corporate Bullsh*t: Exposing the Lies and Half-Truths That Protect Profit, Power, and Wealth in America. Then Ralph is joined by founder of the Free Law Project, Michael Lissner, to talk about why the American legal system is so hard to use and the ongoing fight to make it more accessible.
Donald Cohen is the founder and executive director of the research and policy center In the Public Interest. He is the co-author of The Privatization of Everything and his latest book, co-authored with Nick Hanauer and Joan Wals, is Corporate B******t: Exposing the Lies and Half-Truths That Protect Profit, Power, and Wealth in America.
Every time they say something, our natural instinct is to debunk it, which means we're playing on their playing field. We want to pre-bunk it. We say, \u201cThat's bull. You're just playing a game. And listen to how you've done it in the past.\u201d Because many of the quotes in this book are kind of hilarious, actually. We want to make fun of them and we're hoping that this becomes a little bit of a vaccine going forward.\xa0
Donald Cohen
This is more than just lies, falsehoods, off-the-wall predictive phoniness. It's more than that. It's deadly. In other words, it's not just rhetoric. It's not just craziness. It leads to the suppression of the society's response to foresee and forestall hazards, ripoffs, and the like, and to engage in preventive activity\u2014 regulations, opening it up for lawsuits under tort law\u2014and deterrence. So we're dealing here with not only malicious patterns of rhetoric, we're dealing here with deadly delays.\xa0
Ralph Nader
Michael Lissner is Executive Director and Chief Technology Officer of the Free Law Project. The Free Law Project is a nonprofit that uses technology, data, and advocacy to make the legal ecosystem more equitable and competitive. They build open-source tools to make legal information more accessible, and they host major open databases of opinions, federal filings, judges, financial disclosures, and oral arguments.\xa0
Open information is really how government works\u2026 You can imagine if the Supreme Court didn't publish its opinions. Right now you can go to their website, you can find their latest decisions. But you could imagine a system where people went to the Supreme Court, they decided who was right and who was wrong, and they told those people\u2014 and that was it, and they didn't explain themselves. It wouldn't work very well, because we wouldn't know how the laws are being interpreted. And I hate to say so, but when you get a little bit away from the Supreme Court\u2026you realize that's kind of the system we have.\xa0
Michael Lissner
In Case You Haven\u2019t Heard with Francesco DeSantis
1. On Saturday November 4th, the largest ever pro-Palestine demonstration was held in Washington. The Real News Network reports over 100,000 demonstrators gathered in Freedom Plaza and marched on the White House, demanding a ceasefire. CNN reports that another 100,000 protesters gathered in London, along with demonstrations throughout the world, including in Paris and Berlin, where authorities have sought to quash or outright ban pro-Palestine protests. These tremendous shows of solidarity underline how much the politics of this issue have changed in the western world.
2. Rashida Tlaib, the only Palestinian member of Congress, has been censured by the House of Representatives. Defending herself on the floor of the House, Rep. Tlaib said \u201cI will not be silenced, and I will not let you distort my words\u2026Trying to bully or censure me won\u2019t work because this movement for a cease-fire is much bigger than one person. It is growing every single day. There are millions of people across our country who oppose Netanyahu\u2019s extremism and are done watching our government support collective punishment and the use of white phosphorus bombs that melt flesh to the bone. They are done watching our government\u2026supporting cutting off food, water, electricity, and medical care to millions of people with nowhere to go\u2026they don\u2019t believe the answer to war crimes is more war crimes. The refusal of Congress and the administration to acknowledge Palestinian lives is chipping away at my soul. Over 10,000 Palestinians have been killed. The majority were children\u2026The idea that criticizing the Government of Israel is anti-Semitic sets a very dangerous precedent, and it is being used to silence diverse voices speaking up for human rights across our Nation\u2026I can\u2019t believe I have to say this, but Palestinian people are not disposable. We are human beings just like anyone else\u2026Speaking up to save lives\u2026no matter faith, no matter ethnicity, should not be controversial\u2026The cries of Palestinian and Israeli children sound no different to me. What I do not understand is why the cries of Palestinians sound different to you-all\u2026We cannot lose our shared humanity\u2026We will continue to call for a cease-fire\u2026for the immediate delivery of critical humanitarian aid to Gaza, for the release of all hostages and those arbitrarily detained, and for every American to come home. We will continue to work for real, lasting peace that upholds human rights and the dignity of all people and centers peaceful coexistence between Israelis and Palestinians, censures no one, and ensures that no person, no child, has to suffer or live in fear of violence.\u201d Despite enormous pressure by the Israel lobby, support for a ceasefire in Congress continues to grow \u2013 adding powerful new allies like Rep. Maxine Waters and Senate Democratic Whip Dick Durbin, who has, incredibly, taken a bolder stance than longtime progressives like Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren.
3. Two recent stories reveal widespread dissent within the State Department regarding the administration\u2019s policy on Gaza. POLITCO is out with a report on a leaked State Department memo calling for the U.S. to support a ceasefire and allow for criticism of Israel\u2019s military tactics, the gag on which \u201ccontributes to regional public perceptions that the United States is a biased and dishonest actor,\u201d further arguing that American \u201ctolerance\u201d for wanton civilian death \u201cengenders doubt in the rules-based international order that we have long championed.\u201d Meanwhile, the Huffington Post reports State Department officials feel sidelined by the administration and unable to steer policy at this vital moment. One unnamed official decried the department for using \u201chollow moves\u201d which \u201cfail to acknowledge the complicity of our decisions and policy in the relentless suffering of Gazans\u2026igno[ing] the fact that we still aren\u2019t pushing for a cease-fire, still not asking Israel to control itself.\u201d
4. The State Department isn\u2019t the only institution dealing with internal dissent over Gaza. Democracy Now! reports that Jazmine Hughes, an award-winning writer for The New York Times Magazine, \u201cresigned after signing an open letter condemning Israel\u2019s genocide in Gaza. The move constituted a violation of newsroom policy. New York Times contributor Jamie Lauren Keiles, who describes himself as a \u201creligiously observant Jew,\u201d also left the publication after signing on to the letter.\u201d
5. Brandeis University has banned their campus\u2019 chapter of Students for Justice in Palestine. The group posted on their Instagram that the Student Affairs department at the university \u201cderecognized\u201d the group after they planned a vigil for the dead in Palestine, deeming the demonstration \u201ca genuine threat or harassment.\u201d Brooklyn College Professor Corey Robin wrote \u201cthe idea of an institution bearing [the] name [Brandeis], of all names, to investigate student groups exercising their speech rights\u2014in the name of combating alleged danger\u2014is outrageous. "Men feared witches and burnt women," he wrote. Quite.\u201d The ACLU has urged higher education leaders to \u201cReject calls to investigate, disband, or penalize pro-Palestinian student groups for exercising their free speech rights.\u201d
6. According to the Intercept, Director of the National Counterterrorism Center, Christine Abizaid is using the October 7th Hamas attack in Israel to argue for reauthorization of section 702 of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act, or FISA. Section 702 \u201cenables the U.S. government to gather vast amounts of intelligence \u2014 including about U.S. citizens \u2014 under the broad category of foreign intelligence information, without first seeking a warrant.\u201d This section of the law is set to expire at the end of this year, though lawmakers are likely to renew it in some form. The Brennan Center for Justice recently published a report documenting how the FBI \u201chas used the 702 authority to spy on U.S. representatives, senators, civil liberties organizations, political campaigns, and activists.\u201d
7. CNN reports that South Africa and Chad have recalled their diplomats from Israel. South African officials also \u201cnoted the continuing disparaging remarks of the Israeli ambassador to South Africa about those who are opposing the atrocities and the genocide of the Israeli government,\u201d adding that \u201cA genocide under the watch of the international community cannot be tolerated.\u201d South Africa and Chad now join Turkey, Honduras, Colombia, Chile, Jordan and Bahrain, in withdrawing diplomats from Israel, while Bolivia has opted to cut off diplomatic relations with Israel entirely, citing \u201ccrimes against humanity committed against the Palestinian people.\u201d
8. In domestic politics on Israel, Wisconsin Rep. and outspoken progressive Mark Pocan made waves this week for criticizing AIPAC, Israel\u2019s chief lobbying arm in the U.S. In an interview with Slate, Pocan said \u201cI don\u2019t give a f**k about AIPAC\u2014period\u2026I think they\u2019re a cancerous presence on our democracy and politics in general, and if I can be a surgeon, that\u2019s great.\u201d The Slate article goes to say \u201cfollowing Pocan\u2019s lead, a small number of congressional Democrats (and one congressional Republican) have openly accused the organization of spreading falsehoods and misrepresentations in its lobbying efforts.\u201d AIPAC was the top 2022 donor to both Reps. Mike Johnson and Hakeem Jeffries, respectively the Speaker and Minority Leader of the House.
9. Finally, in non-Palestinian news, More Perfect Union reports that \u201cTens of thousands of garment workers in Bangladesh who make products for brands like Zara, H&M and GAP are on strike. Their minimum wage is $75 a month, and they're demanding it rise to $208. The bosses are only offering $90. They've shut down over 300 factories so far.\u201d
This has been Francesco DeSantis, with In Case You Haven\u2019t Heard.