In a bold yet unsurprising move, the American Legislative
Exchange Council (ALEC) has begun crafting legislation to pave the way for
privatization of the English/American alphabet. The ease of drowning out dissenting
speech since the Citizens United ruling of 2010 has just whetted the
appetites of the corporatocracy.
First, a little history.
The rich white guys, after fighting against the occupation
of the English crown's corporations in the early days of the North American
takeover, formed corporations of their own in order to protect their
hard-stolen riches. Natural resources were
deemed ripe for the taking, by any means possible, and so the r(e)aping of the
earth commenced: trees, minerals, degraded fossils, water....all taken out of
public hands. Electricity, another
profitable resource, spawned many more capitalizable ventures, such as
appliances (TVs, computers, radio) and media.
The corporations have
used their vast wealth to spawn and see to fruition legislation which benefits
them, with little to no consideration of the effects on society. Currently, the mainstream media, delivered
mostly via the television, internet and radio, is owned by very few, but
likeminded, corporations. The Citizens United decision of 2010 (the Supreme
Court's nondemocratic ruling that conferred personhood on corporations and
defined speech as whatever one can afford) started the ball rolling toward this
next step: privatization of the alphabet, which, technically, is the basis for
speech, which, thanks to the Supreme Court, is more free if you have lots of
money.
There are many questions that need to be answered about this
development, and an anonymous ALEC spokesperson slithered forward to give us
some answers. Here are a few examples:
How the fuck can something like this happen?
ASP (Anonymous SpokesPerson): Well, first of all, I'd like to say your question would run you about twice the proposed going rate for a declarative sentence. Questions are extra. And if you aren't in the 0.01%, you will only be allowed to use lower case letters. Only the rich will be allowed to capitalize in the future "word" order. Ha ha -- get it! Word...world. Anyway, to answer your question: Blahblahblahwaronterrorblahblahabortionblahblahgaysexblahblahblahstealyourgunsblahblah.... look! Squirrel!
What's next? charging me for every breath I take?
ASP: You learn quickly! No, that would be truly ridic-- er...no comment.
Will I have to pay to use sign language?The potential for maximized profits is there: facial expressions, body language....and double meanings! At this point, we are trying to determine how we would capture the use of language this way. Drone technology is advancing rapidly....
Should I learn Chinese?
ASP: Well, you could. The stock in foreign language software has gone up in price, so word is already out. We are in communication with several foreign entities who have expressed interest in our mission. Our previous efforts to have "English only" laws passed may gain further steam, especially when we charge more for Spanish, for example.
If the 99% of us can barely afford basic necessities, how are people going to be able to afford to speak? In any language?
ASP: We have already started to deal with this by privatizing community libraries. People who can't afford to speak because of credit card debt or kids to feed, for example, can spend time at their local corporate-owned library and put "money in the bank", so to speak. Reading certain literature will grant more speech, as will watching certain video materials. We realize how important it will be for people to be able to say "I love you" to their loved ones at the end of the day.
And we will make available a list of words -- subject to change -- that will be free to use at any time. Heck, we might even give people a little pocket change for certain words and word combinations (e.g. "free market") -- we are still working on that.
So will we be charged by the letter? Or the word?
ASP: Ppl wn't gt to sav mny by shrtning wrds. The collective pool of the 0.01% will actually have shares in certain letters of the alphabet, and the massive data collection centers will determine the compensation based on usage. The Kochs, for example, have already expressed their desire for "p". You can't say "paper products" without "p".
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Elizabeth Adams is a family nurse practitioner living in Marysville, CA. She currently divides her practice between long-term care and women's health.
3 comments:
@Elizabeth--
I would call this brilliant satire, but it's far too close to being a possible truth. So I would call this brilliant investigative reporting, instead.
After all, if segments of the human genome can be patented by private entities, why not the alphabet?
http://www.genome.gov/19016590
I'm sure that there's a huge team of media lawyers working on this idea at this very moment.
Here's the plan:
Get Nader to privatize the numbers 0 through 9. Only people with incomes less than, say, $99,000 will be allowed free usage of the numbers. Higher incomes will pay a small fee calculated according to the factor of income disparity between the minimum wage and the average CEO income for the Top 500 corporations, this "wage disparity tax" to be dedicated to the maintenance of Medicare for all.
Some friendly congresscriter could propose a "How Does It Feel" bill requiring the "disparity factor," as it rises or falls, to be printed as part every weather report, something like the way they keep us alert to the wind chill.
Next, we corner the market on punctuation marks – same terms, however, the money collected dedicated to create well paid jobs repairing the nation's infrastructure and advancing green over carbon technology.
I guarantee a healthier, happier population by 2016, by which time most of the country, in gratitude for the sponsors of these developments, will be voting Third Party.
Privatizing the alphabet might be beneficial. It would be A-OK if I never eat another M&M, take an IQ test, shoot a BB gun, or likely get an F in differential calculus. And wouldn't life be better without the CIA, DOD, FBI and KKK?
As for cornering the market on punctuation marks, it could be a bit asterisk-y. I mean, you go in for your annual colonoscopy, you might get a semi-colonoscopy. Maybe you end up in a higher tax "bracket"? And just suppose males started to have monthly periods--there'd be bloody riots!!
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