Stop Being Cynical About Corporate Money in Politics and Start Being Angry
Stop Being Cynical About Corporate Money in Politics and Start Being Angry
Citizens United handed our country over to corporations. Time to take it back.
By Bill McKibben
| Thu Jan. 5, 2012 10:53 AM PST
This story first appeared on the TomDispatch website.
My resolution for 2012 is to be naïvedangerously naïve.
I'm aware that the usual recipe for political effectiveness is just the opposite: to be cynical, calculating, an insider. But if you think, as I do, that we need deep change in this country, then cynicism is a sucker's bet. Try as hard as you can, you're never going to be as cynical as the corporations and the harem of politicians they pay for. It's like trying to outchant a Buddhist monastery.
snip//
We've reached the point where we're unfazed by things that should shake us to the core. So, just for a moment, be naïve and consider what really happened in that vote: the people's representatives who happen to have taken the bulk of the money from those energy companies promptly voted on behalf of their interests.
They weren't weighing science or the national interest; they weren't balancing present benefits against future costs. Instead of doing the work of legislators, that is, they were acting like employees. Forget the idea that they're public servants; the truth is that, in every way that matters, they work for Exxon and its kin. They should, by rights, wear logos on their lapels like NASCAR drivers.
If you find this too harsh, think about how obligated you feel when someone gives you something. Did you get a Christmas present last month from someone you hadn't remembered to buy one for? Are you going to send them an extra-special one next year?
And that's for a pair of socks. Speaker of the House John Boehner, who insisted that the Keystone approval decision be speeded up, has gotten $1,111,080 from the fossil-fuel industry during his tenure. His Senate counterpart Mitch McConnell, who shepherded the bill through his chamber, has raked in $1,277,208 in the course of his tenure in Washington.
If someone had helped your career to the tune of a million dollars, wouldn't you feel in their debt? I would. I get somewhat less than that from my employer, Middlebury College, and yet I bleed Panther blue. Don't ask me to compare my school with, say, Dartmouth unless you want a biased answer, because that's what you'll get. Which is fineI am an employee.
But you'd be a fool to let me referee the homecoming football game. In fact, in any other walk of life we wouldn't think twice before concluding that paying off the referees is wrong. If the Patriots make the Super Bowl, everyone in America would be outraged to see owner Robert Kraft trot out to midfield before the game and hand a $1,000 bill to each of the linesmen and field judges.
more...
http://motherjones.com/politics/2012/01/how-to-stop-corporate-control-politicians
orpupilofnature57
(15,472 posts)and curbing the rational that has brought us to this.
getdown
(525 posts)Gregorian
(23,867 posts)It may be the wrong phrase, but it's what I've come up with so far.
In effect, the "free" speech that is being waged upon our election process by corporations and their massive donations dilutes the votes that any given individual casts. This isn't really what is happening. But in effect it is.
Bill USA
(6,436 posts)"Boehner, who insisted that the Keystone approval decision be speeded up, has gotten $1,111,080 from the fossil-fuel industry during his tenure. His Senate counterpart Mitch McConnell, who shepherded the bill through his chamber, has raked in $1,277,208 in the course of his tenure in Washington."
see opensecrets oil & gas industry contributions, top contributors and party split:
top contributors
by party
Stop being cynical and start getting angry (and also inform the idiots and suckers)!..... couldn't agree more!
RECOMMENDED!
Uncle Joe
(58,420 posts)Thanks for the thread, babylonsister.