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Thursday, June 30, 2005

Property Rites

Many pundits –- especially on the political right -– are incensed about the Supreme Court’s recent verdict in Kelo v. City of New London, which backed the Connecticut town's use of eminent domain to take (with compensation) a woman’s house for economic development.

Whatever one thinks about the court’s decision, let’s be clear: “confiscation” of people’s property is hardly new. Any Native American can tell you that. Nathan Newman points to renters, as opposed to home owners, who are routinely evicted from their homes at the whims of developers. In many of the "corporate recruitment" deals in the South and beyond, state and local governments muscle private landowners out of their property -- publicly and privately -- to clear the way for incoming businesses.

So let's not pretend Kelo is an earth-shattering decision reversing years of policy sticking up for little folks.

What's even more troubling is absence of any discussion about the rampant "seizure" of assets that belong to the public:
  • Every day, the public’s air is “confiscated” by big polluters, who destroy the value of this common resource with toxic emissions – causing untold harm to public health and our environment;
  • The media airwaves, which by law belong to each and every American, have been “seized” by a handful of conglomerates that routinely flout public oversight;
  • Dozens of community institutions – hospitals, school programs, services for low-income citizens – are being privatized and handed over to corporations whose top priority is often making money, not serving the common good.
  • Our national forests – a treasure owned by all of us – are being cut, logged and sold off to powerful timber interests for a fraction of their fair market value.
This is our property – common assets that all of us own, but which in one way or another are being taken away, often without our consent and usually without fair compensation.

Where are the Kelo critics in defending the public’s property?
posted by Chris Kromm at 12:05 PM | Email this post | Post a Comment
1 Comments:
Blogger reilly said...

Thanks for this very provocative post. This seems to zero in on one of the places where with the right effort a change of mind could take place here in the South. Raising out of the subconscious the idea Southerners have towards the shared assets ("the woods" "the fishing hole" "the state park" and widening it to include the ones that can't have boundaries drawn around it, like the elemental natural resources. Great points.

7/01/2005 9:25 AM  

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CHRIS KROMM blogs three days a week for Facing South. Chris is Executive Director of the Institute for Southern Studies and publisher of the Institute’s award-winning magazine, Southern Exposure.

SUE STURGIS blogs four days a week for Facing South. Sue is the Institute’s Editorial Director and a former reporter for The Independent Weekly and The Raleigh News & Observer.

DESIREE EVANS blogs four days a week for Facing South. Desiree is a Research Associate at the Institute and former policy analyst for TransAfrica.

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