In a functioning democracy, free from corruption and the money of
private interest groups, you'd expect that as more and more average
citizens approved of a policy or piece of legislation, lawmakers would
be more and more likely to adopt that policy or piece of legislation.
But that's not the case anymore here in America.
Instead, according to Gilens and Page,
as more and more average American citizens support a policy or piece of
legislation, the probability of it being adopted by lawmakers in
Washington stays the same. It doesn't matter if 10 percent of Americans
support it, or 90 percent of Americans support it.
But the same can't be said for the interests of the wealthy elite.
That's because, as more and more members of the wealthy elite support
a policy or piece of legislation, the likelihood that lawmakers in
Washington adopt that policy or piece of legislation increases steadily.
And the same is true with well-funded special interest groups. The
more special interest groups support a policy or piece of legislation,
the greater the likelihood that lawmakers will adopt it.
You also see similar results when you break up Americans by income groups.
When more and more Americans in the bottom tenth percentile supported
a particular policy or piece of legislation, the likelihood that it
would be adopted by lawmakers stayed relatively the same.
But, as more and more Americans in the 90th income percentile or the
even richer wealthy elite supported a policy or piece of legislation,
the likelihood that it would be adopted by lawmakers increased
dramatically.
When it comes to working class Americans, it doesn't matter if
they're in the bottom 10th income percentile or the 50th income
percentile: they're ignored by our politicians for the preferences of
the wealthy elite.
The bottom line here is that the elites are getting what they want,
while the rest of us aren't, because money has taken over our political
process.
For the first time in American history, a majority of lawmakers in
the House of Representatives are millionaires, and a startling number -
at both the federal and state level - are being bankrolled by
billionaires like the Koch brothers.
This isn't what the founders had in mind when they founded our once-great nation.
Thomas Jefferson once said that, "Those seeking profits, were they
given total freedom, would not be the ones to trust to keep government
pure and our rights secure. Indeed, it has always been those seeking
wealth who were the source of corruption in government..."
Whole article here
2 comments:
American democracy never existed.
'American democracy never existed.'
You're absolutely right. Further more, I don't believe anyone could name a country where real democracy exists. That is why SOYMB consistently promotes the only alternative: world socialism.
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