I can't argue with any of that. (Plus it's early morning and I'm not quite awake yet - LOL). At any rate, I totally agree. The Supreme Court giving corporations the same status as an individual citizen was a disastrous ruling. A good solution would be to limit the amount of money anyone could spend in campaigning ... but that will never happen. To think that they all spend millions seeking a job that pays a 100k plus or minus is insane, but tells anyone with a brain what it's really all about.
Government corruption is real, on display daily, yet there appears to be no way to combat it.
I can't argue with any of that. (Plus it's early morning and I'm not quite awake yet - LOL). At any rate, I totally agree. The Supreme Court giving corporations the same status as an individual citizen was a disastrous ruling. A good solution would be to limit the amount of money anyone could spend in campaigning ... but that will never happen. To think that they all spend millions seeking a job that pays a 100k plus or minus is insane, but tells anyone with a brain what it's really all about.
Government corruption is real, on display daily, yet there appears to be no way to combat it.
Its sad, but I think we lost this country before most of us were born. Lobbying is actually protected under the first amendment (not the bribery, but the right to petition government), but it was never a significant issue until the federal government centralized so much power over the economy. In the late 1800's most lobbying was was done at the state level, and the number of politicians involved made it far less practical to pay everyone off. If the power has never been centralized at the federal level, companies would probably never have gained enough sway over the law to build themselves into the monoliths of commerce we see today.
And indeed, if antitrust laws had been applied properly along the way, it would have slowed the growth of influence of the major corporations significantly.