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NEWS & LETTERS, January-February 2002

Enron fraud exposes capitalist shell game

Oakland, Cal.— The mainstream press initially saw Argentina and Enron as if they were unrelated stories. To a worker, these stories are hardly separate or unique. We don’t yet see the same street demonstrations and worker rebellion here in the U.S. as in Argentina, but workers at Enron face the same kind of man-made calamities suffered by workers in Argentina. Workers are made to bail out capitalists after rampant deregulation, privatization, and globalization schemes fail.

Instead of calling it corporate welfare, they use the euphemism "austerity measures," which means workers will be bled even further. Enron executive hucksters not only lied to creditors and authorities alike of their real worth, but committed the lowest form of fraud by hoodwinking their own employees into investing virtually all of their retirement savings in Enron.

Making mountains of profit out of California’s energy crisis, everyone was led to believe that there was nothing but more blue skies ahead. Bush and Cheney even reserved a seat for Enron on their secret energy task force. Before Enron stocks hit bottom, of course, the top hucksters were able to unload their holdings, while fine print locked workers into losing virtually all of their life savings and pensions.

 If you thought it couldn’t get any worse than this kind of parasitism at Enron, consider Polaroid. Workers there were not only encouraged to invest in Employee Stock Option Plans, they were told that it was the only way to stave off layoffs as a way to keep the company afloat. Executives didn’t tell workers that they were maneuvering to prevent a hostile takeover.

Given the stark choice of losing their jobs or accepting the company’s offer, workers were fooled into choosing the company’s plan and accepted a drastic paycut for these ESOPs. One worker said Polaroid stock was now worth as much as soda bottle and can deposits.

Marx talked in CAPITAL about the extraction of surplus labor from workers at the very point of production. Before the exchange of goods and products, the embryo of all of capital’s exchange value, and all its contradictions, resides in production of those very commodities on the production shop floor. Workers are the founding parents of that original value, as well as its midwife, handmaiden, wet nurse—and finally, its gravediggers.

What Marx analyzed so meticulously was at the very specifically crucial embryonic stage of development of this offspring. This prodigal son, the exchange value of abstract labor (what capitalists like to call market value) from its very inception is the spoiled brat that sucks the very life out of its own creators, like a parasite. What we are seeing at Enron and Polaroid however are the adolescent stages of that same value form.

Bush’s idea of tax cuts is refunding to companies like IBM and Boeing billions of dollars of taxes they had already paid in the last 15 years. Bush invited corporations to tap dry the federal surplus—an accumulation of millions upon millions of worker man-hours of surplus labor extracted over the years.

One health care worker said the same bastards at Arthur Andersen who did the accounting for Enron also for ten years advised Kaiser as a health care company to divest itself of its healthcare assets, like clinics and hospitals and workers. Downsizing to become a lean, mean, efficient healthcare machine was really to be a financial machine at the expense of patients and employees.

That advice got Kaiser in an organizational crisis when they lost to the tune of $200 million. Outside vendors were gouging us for care of patients Kaiser was unable to. Kaiser is only coming out of that crisis by being forced by us workers along with consumers to reverse much of Andersen’s market "wisdom." One worker explained, "About the only expertise Andersen is expert in is how to screw the little people, and how to nosedive a thriving company to the ground. They really are the economic terrorists of our times."

At least Al Qaeda left a trail of documents and floppy disks and videos of themselves, for evidence at their own trials. The terrorists at Arthur Anderson however have eliminated much of the evidence of their deeds in a major shredding campaign. If Congress cannot see the monumental high crimes and misdemeanors in this, and still insist on marching in lockstep behind Bush’s combat boots, then they’re even more brain dead than previously thought.

One Puerto Rican immigrant told me that, to the American people, Argentina’s collapse seemed like a distant problem, someone else’s crisis. But with Enron, "White middle class Americans were reduced to the same calamity thought to be suffered only by people living under crony capitalism in banana republics. They will want heads to roll."

—Kaiser Service worker

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