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ancianita

(36,070 posts)
Thu Sep 23, 2021, 11:16 AM Sep 2021

AT&T Quickly Ditches Pledge Not To Fund Congressional Insurrectionists

Last edited Thu Sep 23, 2021, 01:02 PM - Edit history (1)

Going into 2022, we must go after corporate funders of coup plotters.

from the see-no-evil dept
Thu, Sep 23rd 2021 6:33am — Karl Bode

Much like the company's dedication to women, AT&T's dedication to not funding people eager to overthrow democracy appears to be somewhere between inconsistent and nonexistent. Shortly after January 6 a number of companies, including telecom giants like AT&T, publicly crowed about how they'd be ceasing all funding to politicians that supported the attack on the Capitol and the overturning of, you know, fucking democracy. Of course that promise was never worth all that much, given the the umbrella lobbying orgs companies like AT&T used never really stopped financing terrible people.

Initially, AT&T made a big stink about how it had suspended funding to all 147 Republicans who voted to overturn the 2020 election. But not only did AT&T not actually suspend funding via its numerous policy and lobbying tendrils, it didn't even really ever stop funding insurrectionists directly:
"In February, however, AT&T donated $5,000 to the House Conservatives Fund. The chair of the House Conservatives Fund is Jim Banks (R-IN), who objected to the certification of the Electoral College in January. Banks also signed an amicus brief submitted to the Supreme Court supporting Texas' efforts to throw out the election results in several states."


Back in March, when news outlets like the Dallas News pressed AT&T on why it was still funding insurrectionists, the company offered up some convoluted gibberish about how it was more ethically policing its PAC spending:
"We have been assured that none of the employee PAC’s contributions will go toward the reelection of any of those members of Congress,” Balmoris said. “Any future contributions to multi-candidate PACs will require such consistency with the policy suspending individual contributions."

Six months later, when a reporter tries to press AT&T on the fact it continues to fund insurrectionists, it just goes radio silent...

In short, AT&T funded a bunch of politicians who filled the public's head with propaganda and bullshit, resulting in a violent if clumsy attempt to steal an election. Now AT&T doesn't want to talk about it, and hopes that if it stays quiet about it, the storm will pass. And they're probably right, given the broader press' ongoing tendency to normalize what happened earlier this year (largely because they don't want to offend leak sources and advertisers). Which, of course, all but guarantees that, sooner or later, the same bullshit is going to play out all over again, potentially with more calamitous results.


https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20210922/08254447610/att-quickly-ditches-pledge-not-to-fund-congressional-insurrectionists.shtml

We can't ignore when the press does try to get to donor levels re Jan 6, and we should credit them when they do. Because the long corporate game brought us corporate capture of government.
This is why corporations will continue to make the Constitution, written for humans, be in crisis. Corps' capture and crisis are why their congressional and statehouse tools are the fascist threat.

Dark money corporate fascists must be outed (not just billionaire fascists), especially when they play the GOP lying game, and the Mitch McConnell stall game. Lack of corporate accountability in funding human fascists is the driver of why this nation is an election away from being corporate fascist.

Right now, MSNBC does not call out population vote nullification AS nullification, even though that is exactly what state house moves really are. Popular voter nullification.
MSNBC calls it politics, an interpretation that is blind to forces trying to undo democracy.

This is what the Capitol police reminded us is important about Jan 6: don't just find the political actors, find the funders behind them.

We must. not. let daily he-said/she-said and hype distract us about the tipping point that is 2022.

2022 is as much about fictional personhoods' money vs humans voting rights' democracy, as it is about candidates who are pro- women, pro-infrastructure, climate and immigration and pro-descendants.



6 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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AT&T Quickly Ditches Pledge Not To Fund Congressional Insurrectionists (Original Post) ancianita Sep 2021 OP
This message was self-deleted by its author Chin music Sep 2021 #1
Right? And add these. ancianita Sep 2021 #2
This message was self-deleted by its author Chin music Sep 2021 #3
It's nowhere near complete, but it reveals some range about corporate fascism. ancianita Sep 2021 #4
No surprise there Rebl2 Sep 2021 #5
No. But concrete confirmation always clears legal decisions about bills like "For The People." ancianita Sep 2021 #6

Response to ancianita (Original post)

ancianita

(36,070 posts)
2. Right? And add these.
Thu Sep 23, 2021, 11:38 AM
Sep 2021

These fictional personhoods make decisions about the lives of the humans who work for them, not just the rest of the nation. In 2022, their employees might care how the lives of their own descendants are affected by letting their corporate bosses contribute to the oppressions of the majority of our humans.

-- Coca-Cola CEO Muhtar Kent, Atlanta, GA
-- AT&T CEO Randall L. Stephenson, Dallas, TX
-- Exxon Mobile CEO Darren Woods, Irving, TX

-- Pfizer Albert Bourla and Ian Read, New York, NY
-- Walmart Greg Penner and Doug McMillon,Bentonville, AR
-- Boeing Dennis Muilenburg - Chicago, IL

-- State Farm Michael Tipsord - Bloomington, IL
-- Eli Lilly David A. Ricks, Joshua Smiley, Indianapolis, IN
-- Caterpillar Jim Umpleby, Deerfield, IL

Other corps that are still at it (names of past congresspeople):
Koch Industries, Witchita, KS -- run by the supposedly libertarian Koch brothers, donated $2,500 to Ainsworth, $1,500 to Chambliss, $1,500 to Ledbetter, and $2,000 to Reed.
Fantasy sports site Draft Kings -- Boston, MA -- donated $5,000 to McCutcheon, and $500 to Ainsworth.
Tobacco-maker Altria -- Henrico County, Virginia -- Howard Willard -- donated $1,000 to Chambliss, and $500 to Reed.
Cable provider Comcast -- Tupelo, MS -- Ralph J. Roberts -- donated $2,500 to McCutcheon.
Health insurance giant Caremark -- Birmingham, AL and Northbrook, IL -- donated $1,500 to McCutcheon.
Anheuser-Busch -- St. Louis, MO -- Michael Doukeris -- donated $1,000 to McCutcheon, and $1,500 to Reed.

DONATION UPDATE (5/16/19): From Judd Legum, the corporate contributors to Governor Ivey herself (per tweet) :
Judd Legum
@JuddLegum

Here are the corporations backing @GovernorKayIvey, who signed the AL abortion ban into law
@BCBSAssociation (BlueCross) (75K)
@ATT (113K)
@LillyPad (30K)
@StateFarm (10K)
@Boeing (10K)
@Walmart (7K)
@CocaCola (10K)
@exxonmobil (5K)
@comcast (21K)
@pfizer (5K)

Response to ancianita (Reply #2)

ancianita

(36,070 posts)
4. It's nowhere near complete, but it reveals some range about corporate fascism.
Thu Sep 23, 2021, 11:50 AM
Sep 2021

I'm on a tear with Apple and Facebook.

From this post -- "Your Computer Isn't Yours" -- I got a real eye opener last year about Apple over the last nine years.

https://apple.slashdot.org/story/20/11/13/1726224/your-computer-isnt-yours


ancianita

(36,070 posts)
6. No. But concrete confirmation always clears legal decisions about bills like "For The People."
Thu Sep 23, 2021, 12:36 PM
Sep 2021

The whole reason that we get obfuscations in the press are because of fictional personhood PR messaging to both them, cable news and advertising.

So the point to stay on is, let's not be complacent about who we're up against.

Congress people, so easily wanting to show their appreciation for campaign donor money, often will make morally expedient pro-corporate votes -- like the the anti- trillion dollar infrastructure project, or the "voter integrity" restructuring going on in battleground statehouses -- that ruin democracy's strength -- its humans.

The kill the soul of America. Biden knows this. As goes the filibuster rule, so goes democracy.

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