Friday, February 19, 2010

The Week In Review

BILL MOYERS: Over the course of a long career in journalism, I've covered this story of money in politics more than any other. From time to time, I've been hopeful about a change for the better, but truth is, it just keeps getting uglier every year. 
Those who write the checks keep buying the results they want at the expense of the public. As a reputedly self-governing democracy, we desperately need to address the problems that we've created for ourselves, but money makes impossible the reforms that might save us. 
Nothing in this country seems to be working to anyone's satisfaction except the wealth machine that rewards those who game the system. Unless we break their grip on our political institution, their power to buy the agenda they want no matter the cost to everyone else, we're finished as a functioning democracy.
In this I am sympathetic to the people who show up at tea party rallies asking what happened to their jobs, their pensions, their security — the America they believed in. What's happened, says the political scientist Sheldon Wolin, is the increasing cohabitation of state and corporate power. 
This is why I find the supreme court ruling so preposterous and ominous. Five radical judges have taken a giant step toward legitimating the corporate takeover of democracy. "One person, one vote" — stop kidding yourself. As I once heard a very rich oilman tell congress after he paid $300,000 to the democratic party to get a moment of President Clinton's ear, "Money is a bit more than a vote." The huge sums of money that already flood our elections will now be multiplied many times over, most likely in secret. 
Just this week, that indispensable journalistic website Talking Points Memo.com reported that an influential Washington lobbying firm is alerting corporate clients on how to use trade associations like the Chamber of Commerce as pass-throughs to dump unlimited amounts of cash directly into elections. They can specifically advocate or oppose a candidate — right up to election day — while keeping a low profile to prevent "public scrutiny" and negative press coverage. We'll never know what hit us, and like the titanic, we'll go down but with even fewer lifeboats. 
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I've made several art pieces this week that I think are okay.  I tried to take some pictures of them to include in the blog, but they didn't really turn out so I'll do it later this week maybe.


The Olympics started this week and I watched some of it.  Although I have a difficult time feeling 'the flow' of the Games as televised, there are some exciting stories.  I remember now that short track speed skating is fun to watch.  And I thought biathlon was fun too.  During the week I didn't watch too much.


I'd have to say this was another quiet week.  Both at work and at home.  I've learned some lessons that I hope I can internalize and benefit from.  


Hmmm...that's all I feel like sharing for now.  I think there's more to share, but I'd like to do it with an efficiency of words, which requires me to spend a lot of time thinking about it.  But, I'm tired.  


So, bye for now.

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