How about something depressing for a change?
You know, I post a lot of links and crap on this journal and more so on Facebook, but if you never read anything else I link to, read this article by Larry Lessig from this week's _The Nation_:
How to Get Our Democracy Back
He argues that the most important issue in the US right now is the insidious presence of corporate campaign contributions that effectively allow votes to be bought and sold. No, this isn't a new point, but Lessig argues for it with clarity and passion. The part I found most insightful:
I agree with Lessig that you have to fix the campaign financing system before you can fix much else. I suspect I might disagree with him in that I think the most fundamental problems are those that don't yield to such a solution (we might still find that even if we get into a situation where all individuals have an equal say in politics, many of those individuals will still be racist and will have an interest in framing poverty moralistically). Still, I think the article is worth overcoming all of our Internet-induced antipathy to anything that takes more than five minutes to read.
How to Get Our Democracy Back
He argues that the most important issue in the US right now is the insidious presence of corporate campaign contributions that effectively allow votes to be bought and sold. No, this isn't a new point, but Lessig argues for it with clarity and passion. The part I found most insightful:
Everyone inside this game recognizes that if the public saw too clearly that the driving force in Washington is campaign cash, the public might actually do something to change that. So every issue gets reframed as if it were really a question touching some deep (or not so deep) ideological question. Drug companies fund members, for example, to stop reforms that might actually test whether "me too" drugs are worth the money they cost. But the reforms get stopped by being framed as debates about "death panels" or "denying doctor choice" rather than the simple argument of cost-effectiveness that motivates the original reform. A very effective campaign succeeds in obscuring the source of conflict over major issues of reform with the pretense that it is ideology rather than campaign cash that divides us.[Emphasis added.]
I agree with Lessig that you have to fix the campaign financing system before you can fix much else. I suspect I might disagree with him in that I think the most fundamental problems are those that don't yield to such a solution (we might still find that even if we get into a situation where all individuals have an equal say in politics, many of those individuals will still be racist and will have an interest in framing poverty moralistically). Still, I think the article is worth overcoming all of our Internet-induced antipathy to anything that takes more than five minutes to read.
no subject
The most notorious special interest in America is midwestern farmers, who have left us with farm subsidies that are, as near as I can tell, indefensible on social, ecological, or economic grounds. But farmers aren't poor, but they're not at all "absurdly rich". Even ADM isn't all that rich compared to the set of people who buy food.
You could certainly hand public money to candidates, though I don't see why allowing incumbent politicians to control campaign finance would necessary improve democracy.
The reason why I brought up private expenditures and "independent" expenditures on behalf of candidates is that there isn't much point in barring direct expenditures on behalf of candidates if the people with the money can just spend it "independently." Moving campaign spending from the parties to independent 527 groups is only a limited benefit. So any serious reform along the lines Lessig is proposing really does need to restrict independent private expenditures. I assumed that was taken for granted.
no subject
It's a significant benefit. Buying access to a politician is much easier than buying the opinions of the voters. To buy the voters, you have to have a public debate where the opposing side gets a chance to refute (in practice, to shout louder than) the other side. And it's tough to persuade voters to give preferential treatment to, say, a monopolistic collection of health insurance companies. You may, after a great deal of effort and money, convince them that the system of having private health insurance is fine, but you can't publicly convince the population that a particular set of companies should get to write their own regulations, which is what access to a politician gets you.
The most notorious special interest in America is midwestern farmers
Farmers, a more notorious special interest than defense contractors and health insurance companies? Seriously? When I lived in the US, I didn't notice food prices skyrocketing, and I didn't hear about thousands of people going bankrupt and starving to death because they hit whatever the food equivalent of the Illness Jackpot would be.