|
printer-friendly version www.NewDemocracyWorld.org Lawrence Lessig's Wrongheaded March to End Corruption Lawrence Lessig, a Harvard Constitutional scholar (like President Obama once was), is leading a march against corruption, by which he means the inordinate influence of Big Money on Congress. In this interview by a fawning Bill Moyers, Lessig says:
As well-intentioned as the people following Lessig may be, and as well-intentioned as Lessig himself may be, their proposed solution to the problem of Big Money power in the United States is wrongheaded. It is wrongheaded because it purports to solve the problem at its root, but in fact leaves the root of the problem unchanged. The root of the problem of Big Money's undue influence on elected politicians is not the manner in which political campaigns are funded. The root of the problem is the fact that wealth in our society is concentrated in the hands of a few. Our society is one in which money is power and most people have little or none. This remains true no matter what the laws are regarding campaign funding. Our entire capitalist society is based on the principle that individuals can own vast amounts of wealth as their private property (or as the private property of a corporation obliged legally to enrich its private owners.) Our society is based on the principle that the few can be vastly wealthier than the many. Vast wealth in our society confers vast power to the few: the power to threaten the public that if it doesn't give a corporation a huge tax break then it will relocate to Mexico or China; the power to tell a politician that if he or she threatens the interests of Big Money then he or she will be portrayed in the mass media as "not serious" or "reckless" or "irresponsible" or otherwise be character assassinated; the power to reward an obedient politician (or his or her family members and friends) with lucrative jobs; and other powers that ordinary people such as you and I aren't even savvy enough to think of but which our billionaires and their paid "smart guys" surely employ routinely. For every law purporting to "get Big Money out of politics" (and there have been lots already) there are a thousand and one ways that Big Money gets around the law to exert its overwhelming influence on our government and our society. High powered "think tanks" (such as the Council on Foreign Relations, the Brookings Institute, the Committe for Economic Development, etc.) funded by Big Money set government policy. Wealthy people sit on the boards of trustees of the most influential universities and ensure that the ideas and policies that emerge from them are acceptable to Big Money.* The Big Money owners of the mass media slant the news coverage (and the pundit babble) to make the public draw the conclusions Big Money wants them to draw, never the opposite.** To think that a campaign finance law will stop Big Money from having inordinate power over our government and our whole society is as wrongheaded as to think that building a dam will prevent the water in a river from reaching the sea. Lawrence Lessig, for all his academic smarts, is wrongheaded. He tells Bill Moyers:
Why is an apparently smart man like Lessig so wrongheaded? There are three possible answers that come to mind: 1) He's deliberately misleading people to protect the very rich. 2) He's sincere but not very smart. 3) He excludes from consideration any solution that he believes is unrealistic, in particular the actual solution, which is to remove the rich from power and create an egalitarian society with no rich and no poor. I cannot, of course, read Lessig's mind, but let's assume the third answer above is the reason he pursues his wrongheaded approach. I make this assumption because the third reason is the one that, even if it doesn't explain Lessig's actions, does probably explain why lots of regular people follow Lessig's wrongheaded leadership. The third explanation is illustrated by the story of a man who lost the key to his car and searches for it under a street light even though he knows he dropped it elsewhere, because "the light's better under the streetlight." People are drawn to what they consider to be "realistic" solutions the way that man was drawn to the well-lit area to search for his key. No matter how inadequate a solution is, it looks a whole lot better than the actual solution if one thinks the former is realistic and the latter is not. To read about an actual solution to the problem of Big Money's power over us, and to read about how this actual solution is also realistically possible, and to read about why this actual and possible solution seems unrealistic to most people, please read "How to Remove the Rich from Power and Abolish Class Inequality" [at http://newdemocracyworld.org/revolution/how.html .] -------------------------- * When is the last time you read a newspaper headline even remotely similar to: "Harvard study shows that the public welfare requires removing the rich from power"? ** This website provides enormous detail on the ownership of corporations including those such as CBS and NBC, which are among the six that, by themselves, control the American mass media. Here is an excerpt from this site:
This article may be copied and posted on other websites. Please include all hyperlinks.
|
|