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...and they are greedy foxes.
Ladies and gentlemen, please turn your attention to the Huffington Post article I found today via an anti-lobbying community I watch on Facebook (yeah, I know, talk about shooting for the moon):
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mansur-gidfar/theres-something-absolute_b_4177330.html?utm_hp_ref=politics
In a nutshell: there is a bill currently in the U.S. House of Representatives which eliminates key anti-speculation regulations in the Frank-Dodd Act which supposedly has 'broad bipartisan support'. This is what is destroying the U.S., and by association the rest of the world: corporate lobbying run rampant. Special interest groups which have essentially unlimited lobbying power in the U.S., to the point that U.S. politicians are allowing them to write bills. Sure, there were other examples- SOPA comes to mind, being as it was pretty much exclusively written by MPAA and RIAA shills. But in both cases, this is proof that the U.S. is no longer anything like a representative government- it is a plutocracy, plain and simple.
And while it is easy to say 'lobbying must stop', unfortunately I see three problems here (and two are fundamental with the U.S. system of governnance). One, the very people who in the United States would be drafting and approving anti-lobbying legislation are the same people who benefit the most from lobbying - the foxes (U.S. Congresspeople). You can hardly expect anyone to cut their own throats, especially career politicians! Second, thanks to SCOTUS rulings on corporate personhood and campaign contributions, any kind of meaningful lobbying reform, will most likely require a Constitutional amendment. And who traditionally implements Constitutional Amendments? That's right: Congress. The third and possibly most insidious problem, though, is public apathy. We argue back and forth about Left versus Right, Conservative versus Liberal, with gusto here and all the time. But really, those arguments are pointless while the system is fundamentally broken. The fact that most Americans even are totally ignorant of how lobbying affects them and how much it has diluted the political power of the voter only makes the status quo more resilient to change.
EDIT: so we know what must change to prevent another 2008 housing collapse, or another 2013 government shutdown / borderline default. The question is: given the above, how do we change it?
(no subject)
Date: 1/11/13 01:24 (UTC)We have no national paper of record (except maybe for USA Today, and it sucks balls, written for the shortest attention spans still allowable to control functional breathing).