from TheDailyBeast Website
Starting in the mid-1960s when Disney set out to establish the Disney World Theme Park, they were determined to get land at below market prices and Disney operatives engaged in a far-ranging conspiracy to make sure sellers had no idea who was buying their Central Florida property.
By resorting to such tactics Disney acquired more than 40 square miles of land for less than $200 an acre, but how to maintain control once Disney's empire had been acquired?
The solution turned out to be cartoon-simple, thanks to the CIA.
in Walt Disney World in 1988.
(Guido Cozzi/Atlantide
Phototravel, via Corbis)
Sometimes called the "Father of the C.I.A," he was also the founding partner of Donovan, Leisure, Newton & Irvine, a New York law firm whose attorneys included future C.I.A. director William Casey.
Donovan’s attorneys provided fake identities for Disney agents; they also set up a secret communications center, and orchestrated a disinformation campaign. In order to maintain "control over the overall development,"
Disney and his advisers realized,
Here again the CIA was there to help.
Disney's principal legal strategist for Florida was a senior clandestine operative named Paul Helliwell. Having helped launch the C.I.A. secret war in Indochina, Helliwell relocated to Miami in 1960 in order to coordinate dirty tricks against Castro.
At a secret "seminar" Disney convened in May 1965 Helliwell came up with the approach that to this day allows the Disney organization to avoid taxation and environmental regulation as well as maintain immunity from the U.S. Constitution.
It was the same strategy the C.I.A. pursued in
the foreign countries. Set up a puppet government; then use that regime to
do your bidding.
On paper Disney World's "cities" would be regular American
home towns - except their only official residents would be the handful of
hand-picked Disney loyalists who periodically "elected" the officials who,
in turn, ceded complete control to Disney executives.
When you visit Disney's Magic Kingdom, you are visiting the City of Bay Lake, Florida. The other was the City of Lake Buena Vista.
In both “cities,” in violation of both the U.S. and Florida Constitutions the Disney-engineered legislation established a property qualification for holding elective office, requiring that each candidate for office there,
Though enacted by the legislature, this and other crucial pieces of Disney-enabling legislation, which would reshape central Florida and affect the lives of tens of millions of people, was written by teams of Disney lawyers working in New York at the Donovan firm, and in Miami at Helliwell's offices.
Disney lawyers in California signed off on the text before it was flown to Tallahassee where, without changing a word, Florida’s compliant legislators enacted it into law.
Later, after the houses
there were sold, compliant legislatures excluded all the residents of
Celebration from Disney’s domain, to prevent them from voting.
On the screen, Walt Disney gave his much beloved,
self-deprecating smile, then announced that in Florida he was going to
create a new kind of America, not just a theme park.
If Florida, among all the many melodramas of the last 500 years, could be said to have had only one defining moment, this was it because in this place, at this particular time, the distinction between reality and fantasy - nature and names - vanished entirely.
Walt Disney was dead when he made this presentation. A chronic smoker, he had died of lung cancer seven weeks earlier.
As the lips of the dead Disney moved, people in the audience
murmured their agreement. As his hands gestured, they nodded their approval.
The posthumous Walt Disney, like the mechanical Andrew Jackson in the Hall
of the Presidents, had joined Mickey, Donald, and the Sorcerer's Apprentice
in that special world where it doesn't matter whether you're real or not.
There would,
Of course he was right about creating a new kind of America.
By turning the State of Florida and its statutes into their enablers, Disney and his successors pioneered a business model based on public subsidy of private profit coupled with corporate immunity from the laws, regulations, and taxes imposed on actual people that now increasingly characterizes the economy of the United States.
Over the decades Disney World has showed that, once tasted, partial impunity is never enough. As Disney World's powers increased, its lobbyists made sure the State of Florida lost even the authority to protect the public from injury and death there.
In June 2005 Rob Jacobs, at the time chief of Florida's Bureau of Fair Rides Inspection, summed up the human meaning of such impunity.
One reason no federal court has ever ruled on the unconstitutionality of Disney World's violation of voting rights is that no one so far has challenged it.
It is as though a crucial sector of the New York metropolitan area - Wall Street, for instance - were exempted from democracy as well as taxation, government regulation and the rule of law, and no one so much as protested.
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