Corporate Money, Corporate Press, Corporate Congress
Posted: December 29, 2010 | Author: dakinikat | Filed under: Barack Obama, Corporate Crime, Democratic Politics, Main Stream Media, president teleprompter jesus, Team Obama, the villagers, U.S. Economy, U.S. Politics, Voter Ignorance, We are so F'd, Wikileaks, Women's Rights | Tags: Citizen's United, Congressman John Hall, corporate congress, corporate interests, corporate press, Facism | 40 CommentsSome astute and somewhat outrageous comments by outgoing Congressman John Hall in The New York Observer
should cause pause and some good discussions. That is, if any one pays attention to them.
Speaking about the Citizen’s United decision, which allowed unregulated flow of cash into campaign coffers, Hall said, “I learned when I was in social studies class in school that corporate ownership or corporate control of government is called Fascism. So that’s really the question— is that the destination if this court decision goes unchecked?”
That’s the astute part. The outrageous part is “the flow of corporate dollars is why he and the Democrats lost control of Congress”. Well, imho, there’s some yes and no in that. Here’s a CNN corporate sponsored poll that may shine some light on that.
President Barack Obama enters the new year with a growing number of Americans pessimistic about his policies and a growing number rooting for him to fail, according to a new national poll.
But a CNN/Opinion Research Corporation survey released Wednesday also indicates that while a majority of the public says Republican control of the House of Representatives is good for the country, only one in four say the GOP will do a better job running things than the Democrats did when they controlled the chamber.
Sixty-one percent of people questioned in the poll say they hope the president’s policies will succeed.
“That’s a fairly robust number but it’s down 10 points since last December,” says CNN Polling Director Keating Holland. “Twelve months ago a majority of the public said that they thought Obama’s policies would succeed; now that number has dropped to 44 percent, with a plurality predicting that his policies will likely fail.”
There’s a large number of people out there that seem to see no real difference between the Republicans, INC. and Democrats Inc. in terms of outcomes. They hope the explicitly stated goals of Obama policy succeed. They doubt the laws passed support those goals. They believe they will fail. I think people see the disconnect between the rhetoric and the product delivered now. I honestly don’t believe that voters put the Republicans in charge of the house because they love Republican policy, if these polls mean anything. That poll and many others show voters support the outcomes of authentically Democratic policy. I believe this election was more a play for gridlock simply because they don’t see what’s been passed as achieving the ends of what they want. They believe it will fail.
How many people really want the kinds of things pushed by John Bohener who–as an example–just met with culture thug Randall Terry and other monsters of the Republican base after their mid-November victory lap? There’s only so far you can get by pushing a repeal to DADT on the basis of gays and straights showering together. This is especially true when the vast majority of people support repeal. Remember Terry Schiavo? Played well with the base but horrified the country? What would happen if we saw more reporting of this kind of thing on CNN? I bet you never saw that before I pointed it out to you via Salon.
Let’s get back to Hall’s comments.
The extra money floating around, he said, compounded the Democrats’ weaknesses on the economy, unemployment and the mortgage crisis. And he said that for of the accomplishments of the lame duck Congress, their failure to pass the Disclose Act—which would have at least forced corporations to reveal who they were donating to—stood out a as a black mark on the session.
“We are talking about supposedly wholesome names like Revere America, American Crossroads, Americans for Apple Pie and Motherhood—if somebody hasn’t trademarked that one I probably should. The fact is you can call it anything and the money could be coming from BP or Aramco or any corporation domestic or foreign,” Congressman Hall said.
Well, that’s a good point. I’m still pushing for congress critterz to be forced to wear NASCR-like jackets listing their top corporate contributors as long as they’re in office. That would include the ones hiding behind their advocacy ad creating subsidiaries okayed by SCOTUS, INC. I’m still not certain that the extra money floating around was the reason for The Big Shellac. I’m still guessing that every one was hoping to stop the Washington DC Pork Train and laws so long and complex that no one can really figure out what they really do. These are the laws that people think will fail them. If anything, we should see a slow down of that process. I think the American people want to slow the process down so they can figure out if it’s good or bad for them and if it will achieve what they support.
BUT, The Big Shellac came at the high cost of forwarding Republican laws and agendas that please the Republican Bircher Base. Plus, there’s more possible SCOTUS fights and appointments that only please the Bircher and Religionist Base. Hence, the nice get together with Randall Terry whom Salon described as:
Randall Terry is a psychopath, an antiabortion zealot who endorses domestic terror and compares coldblooded murderers to heroic abolitionists. He’s also a ridiculous character whose true calling is self-promotion, by any means necessary.
He long ago went from prominent figure in the raging abortion debate to desperate self-parody. He renounced his gay son, left his wife for a campaign volunteer, and sought a reality television show. If it weren’t for YouTube, no one would’ve even noticed his inflammatory statements about the murder of Dr. George Tiller. In short, Randall Terry’s not only an extremist nutcase, he’s also old news.
But now that the Republicans are back, this faded celebrity is mounting a comeback. Terry’s most recent e-mail blast featured a photo of the radical Catholic cleric sitting down with incoming Speaker John Boehner himself. “With Boehner’s chief of staff, after the election,” the caption read. (Terry also presented the incoming speaker with a fetus doll resting on some sort of “decree.”)
A Speaker of the House Boehner does not return to Congress to any degree of sanity. I won’t even go in to the incredible problems some one must have to cry that much and drink that hard. A Republican congress just increases the show factor, imho. It also brings us back to the idea that we not only need to get corporate money out of politics,we need it out of the press. The CNN indicates that the President is likable enough, he’s just not focused on the right things. That’s where the money comes in. If congressional leaders and the White House continue to go back and forth between corporate and state interests and the only folks with real access are either groups that can deliver zealous voters and big bucks, we’re in trouble. We’re especially in trouble of the press continues on in its route of “sins of omission” that appear to play into the hands of their advertisers and the interests of government. The Village does not want to run off their advertisers and the few readers/viewers left standing.
This is the importance of Wikileaks and independent media organizations like Democracy Now. They produce things of Public Interest that are not censored, swayed, or bullied by corporate and state interests. As we’ve seen in one after another of the dribbles of diplomatic cables coming from European press, there appears to be a lot of melding of corporate and state interests. This is not good for any one but corporate and authoritarian state interests. European press is filtering the leaked diplomatic cables right now. The majority of them remain out of the public domain. The European papers are less corporate than their U.S. counterparts which is better. We may still not actually see all of the material. Press, government and corporate interests are way too cozy in this country. If you go back to what Congressman Hall said, it’s the classic definition of fascism.
update: I wanted to add the link above on the “classic definition of fascism” because I just read some posts from right wing sources linked to this article at Mememorandum that are obviously trying to rewrite history. I’ve linked to the writings of Mussolini. This is part of the definition of fascism as put forward by Mussolini. Socialism and Marxism are NOT fascism in Mussolini’s definition. The right frequently tries to shove them into the same package. It was a post war trick used to focus hate of Nazis/Facism over to our former allies, the Soviets. Mussolini wrote this in 1932 as part of his definition.
…Fascism [is] the complete opposite of…Marxian Socialism, the materialist conception of history of human civilization can be explained simply through the conflict of interests among the various social groups and by the change and development in the means and instruments of production…. Fascism, now and always, believes in holiness and in heroism; that is to say, in actions influenced by no economic motive, direct or indirect. And if the economic conception of history be denied, according to which theory men are no more than puppets, carried to and fro by the waves of chance, while the real directing forces are quite out of their control, it follows that the existence of an unchangeable and unchanging class-war is also denied – the natural progeny of the economic conception of history. And above all Fascism denies that class-war can be the preponderant force in the transformation of society.
I think if you go read it much of it sounds like the Republican manifesto.
“Given that the nineteenth century was the century of Socialism, of Liberalism, and of Democracy, it does not necessarily follow that the twentieth century must also be a century of Socialism, Liberalism and Democracy …”
Mussolini spit out the world socialism, liberalism, and democracy in the same way the Bircher wing of the Republican party spits those words out.
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