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Re: Correction Regarding Tea Parties
- To: arn-l@interversity.org
- Subject: Re: Correction Regarding Tea Parties
- From: Scott Hays <shays@ccwebster.net>
- Date: Tue, 1 Jan 2008 08:07:44 -0800
- In-reply-to: <20080101033805.0A0A350D0CB@interversity.net>
- References: <20080101033805.0A0A350D0CB@interversity.net>
A person on this list has tried to pretend that the Boston Tea Party
was an expression of "liberty" and support for "private ownership" by
American colonists because, as the story goes, they were upset at
being taxed without proper representation in Parliament. Though I
have been persuaded by peers on this list from continuing to engage
that individual in (mostly fruitless) discussion, I cannot allow this
claim to go unchallenged.
The Tea Act of 1773 was not, as many confused by the shrouds of
history contend, a "tax on tea". It was, in fact, quite the
opposite. It eliminated the tax on tea charged to the East India
Company and allowed that favored multi-national corporation to import
tea to the American colonies duty-free. This bit of legislation, in
turn, was the direct result of actions of powerful lobbyists within
Parliament who represented the East India Company (a corporation
acting practically as a sovereign nation for 170 years) and sought to
rescue it from certain bankruptcy arising from its imperialistic
adventures and unjust land-use practices in the Punjab that culminated
in a devastating famine that had the unexpected consequences of
reducing tea production (interesting that even in the late 18th
century, the influence of human political and economic activities on
natural systems in distant parts of the world had outward-rippling
effects that would shake the very foundations of that political and
economic system) and thereby threatening sales in the European
marketplace.
The Tea Act actually reduced the price of tea in the colonies, but the
monopoly granted to a large multinational corporation (BEIC) served to
undercut the lucrative tea importation business of the American
merchant class. One could easily argue that the Boston Tea Party was
a revolt against an obvious example of the collusion between
government and corporate power, and point to the long period of time
in American history before "corporations" were allowed to be licensed
for anything other than providing goods and services for the common
good as a lasting legacy of that understanding. Ironic that Adam
Smith opposed the Tea Act and thought the East India Company required
regulation (as opposed to treatment that gave it favored protections),
while modern proponents of laissez-faire capitalism conveniently
ignore the very same cozy relationship between governmental favoritism
and corporate success while glibly proclaiming the supremacy of free
and unregulated marketplaces (that do not exist).
Mr. Harttman is absolutely correct in his analysis of the rise of
corporate power, and its cozy relationship with government. The
connecting point to this list and the interests we share has to do
with privatization of publicly funded "corporations" ... a quaint
(though central and very important) vestige of how private
corporations once were formed and controlled in this country.
"Privatization" works to eliminate an equally quaint notion of
something we used to refer to as the "common good". Hence, the
battles being fought over "public education" vs "private education"
have much larger ramifications than many of us often give thought to.
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