Candidates for Sale: Big Business Is Making Sure It Wins the Presidency
Matt Taibbi's picture
Article Tools
E-mail | Print
Comments (18)
by Matt Taibbi | August 9, 2008 - 12:07pm

What do Obama and McCain have in common? The same big donors, who will expect to have their way no matter who wins

Remember the total, hideous, inexcusable absence of oversight that has been the great hallmark of George Bush's America for almost eight years now? Well, now we're getting to see that same regulatory malfeasance applied to yet another cornerstone of our political system. The Federal Election Commission — the body that supposedly enforces campaign-finance laws in this country — has been out of business for more than six months. That's because Congress was dragging its feet over confirmation hearings for new FEC commissioners, leaving the agency without a quorum. The commission just started work again for the first time on July 10th under its new chairman, Donald McGahn, a classic Republican Party yahoo whose chief qualifications include representing Tom DeLay, the corrupt ex-speaker of the House, in matters of campaign finance.

Apart from the obvious absurdity of not having a functioning election-policing mechanism in an election year in the world's richest democracy, the late start by the FEC makes it almost impossible for the agency to do its job. The commission has a long-standing reluctance to take action in the last months before a vote, a policy designed to help prevent federal regulators from influencing election outcomes. Normally, the FEC tries to root out infractions and loopholes — fining campaigns for incomplete reporting, or for taking shortcuts around spending limits — in the early months of a campaign season. But that ship sailed way too long ago to take the stink off the 2008 race.

"The time for setting the ground rules was earlier," says Craig Holman, a lobbyist with the watchdog group Public Citizen. "There isn't time to do much now."

That's especially true given the magnitude of what we're dealing with here: the biggest pile of political contributions in the history of free elections, nearly a billion dollars given to presidential candidates in this season alone. Because the FEC has been dead in the water for so long, it's likely that we'll still be in the dark about a large chunk of this record manure pile of campaign contributions when we go to vote in November.

But that doesn't mean that a little sifting through campaign records doesn't tell us quite a lot about who's backing whom in these races. The truth is that the campaigns of both Barack Obama and John McCain are being inundated with cash from more or less exactly the same gorgons of the corporate scene. From Wall Street to the Big Oil powerhouses to the military-industrial complex, America's fat-cat business leaders know that the Animal House-style party of the last eight years that made almost all of them rich with bonuses, government contracts and bubble profits is about to come to an end, and someone is going to have to pay to clean up the mess. They want that someone to be you, not them, and they've spared no expense to make sure both presidential candidates will be there to bail them out next year.

They're succeeding. Both would-be presidents have already sold us out. They've taken the money and run — completing the cyclical transformation of the American political narrative from one of monopolistic Republican iniquity to an even more depressing tale about the overweening power of corporate money and the essentially fictitious nature of our two-party system.

In layman's terms, we've gone from being screwed to being fucked. Who knows — maybe Barack Obama will surprise us if he wins the election. But if you look at the money, it doesn't look good.

* * *

Thanks in part to the dormant FEC, corporate America has had even easier access to the candidates than usual in its effort to buy off the next government before the crash. In fact, this election has seen some excellent new innovations in the area of campaign-fundraising atrocities. Chief among them is the rise of so-called "joint committees."

It used to be that campaigns could raise a maximum of $2,300 from each individual. Now, both candidates — but especially McCain, who far outstrips Obama in this area — routinely hold fundraisers in which individuals can give far more to a joint committee. Technically, the candidate still pockets only $2,300 in contributions. The bulk of the money raised — in McCain's case, a whopping $70,100, or 30 times the previous limit — goes to the state and national arms of the candidate's party, which can then spend the unprecedented haul on behalf of the candidate. "This allows CEOs to walk in the door and drop $70,100," says Holman. "It basically allows campaigns to exceed the spending limits."

McCain has raised more than $63 million via these joint committees, thanks to more than 1,000 "megadonors" who have each given at least $25,000 to his campaign effort. Obama, by contrast, has some 471 megadonors — and a close examination of their backgrounds underscores some of the differences in corporate America's attitudes toward the two candidates.

One of McCain's chief sources of corporate money is the private-equity firm Kohlberg Kravis Roberts, memorialized for its takeover of RJR Nabisco in the movie Barbarians at the Gate. Through the pretext of joint committees, 10 KKR executives have given McCain $285,000, and it's not hard to figure out why. Two of McCain's key campaign proposals — lowering the corporate tax rate to 25 percent and making purchases of industrial equipment fully deductible — would save a single KKR subsidiary, Energy Future Holdings, $49 million.

"Just in his tax policies alone, McCain is saving corporate America $175 billion a year," says James Kvaal, who analyzed McCain's tax policy for the nonprofit Center for American Progress.

McCain has also raked in big contributions from two other giants of the buyout world: the Carlyle Group (famous for its close ties to the Bush administration) and the Blackstone Group (whose co-founder, Pete Peterson, wrote a $28,500 check to McCain after he took home almost $1.8 billion from a public offering last year). McCain has also received monstrous sums from hedge-fund managers, attracted by his pledge to keep the tax rate on their earnings at only 15 percent. Executives and family members in a single hedge fund, Knott Partners, have contributed some $225,700 to McCain's campaign.

Then there's the predictable influx of cash from would-be military contractors. John Lehman, a former secretary of the Navy whose firm builds the Superferry transport vessel, not only donated $28,500 of his own money, but bundled at least $250,000 for McCain from other donors. Donald Bollinger, who is a contractor on the controversial Littoral Combat Ship, gave $27,300 and bundled a whopping $500,000. Anyone want to bet on a decrease in Naval appropriations in a McCain presidency?

McCain has also received big money from telecommunications magnates. The senator has always been a friend to the industry: Back in 2003, just four days after AT&T sent him a check for $10,500, he sponsored a bill to ban state and local taxes on Internet service. Since 2007, McCain has taken in some $1.3 million from the communications industry. Just four members of the McCaw family, which owns the telecommunications firm Eagle River, have kicked in $123,200. McCain's campaign manager, Rick Davis, was a former lobbyist for BellSouth, Verizon and SBC Communications. His deputy campaign manager, Christian Ferry, was a partner to Davis at Verizon. One of his chief advisers, Charlie Black, is the head of the lobbying firm BKSH and Associates, which represents AT&T. His Senate chief of staff, Mark Buse, worked for AT&T Wireless. All told, of 66 current and former lobbyists working for McCain, some 23 come from the telecommunications industry.

Given McCain's telecom backing, it's not surprising that the senator has had one of his characteristic changes of heart. As recently as last November, McCain was staunchly opposed to retroactive immunity for telecommunication companies that took part in Bush's illegal spying on American consumers, saying their actions "undermine our respect for the law." Now, jammed to the gills with telecom cash, McCain calls himself an "unqualified" supporter of immunity, praising the telecom industry's warrantless wiretapping as "constitutional and appropriate."

* * *

All the same, plenty of other evidence suggests that much of Wall Street is betting on an Obama win. In fact, some observers believe that KKR announced a multibillion-dollar public offering this summer because it expects McCain to lose. "They're doing the public offering now so that the compensation can be taxed at the lower rate while Bush is still in office," says a strategist for a major labor union. "They're betting Obama is going to win, and they're getting their money while they can."

Other companies are getting in on the ground floor with the new chief by stuffing money in his ears. Overall, Obama is flat-out kicking McCain's ass when it comes to Wall Street contributions, raking in nearly $9 million from securities and investment executives, compared to $6.2 million for McCain. Obama has received more contributions from Goldman Sachs than from any other employer — more than $627,000 at this writing — not to mention $398,021 from JP Morgan Chase, $353,922 from Lehman Brothers and $291,388 from Morgan Stanley. Even among hedge-fund executives, who have an unequivocal interest in electing McCain, Obama is whipping the Republican, collecting $500,000 more than McCain. All of which begs the question: Why would corporate giants like these throw so much weight behind a man who promises to strip them of billions in tax breaks?

Sadly, the answer to that question increasingly appears to be that Obama is, well, full of shit. He has made no bones about his plans to raise income by soaking the rich, promising to roll back the Bush tax cuts for people making over $250,000, increase the top tax rate on capital gains to 25 percent and raise the top rate on qualified dividends. He has also pledged to deliver a real stomach punch to hedge-fund managers, raising the tax rate on most of their income from 15 percent to 35 percent.

These populist pledges sound good, but many business moguls appear to be betting that the tax policies, like Obama himself, are only that: something that sounds good. "I think we don't want to make too much of his promises on taxes," says Robert Pollin, professor of economics at the University of Massachusetts. "Not all of these things will happen." Noting the overwhelming amount of Wall Street money pouring into Obama's campaign, even elitist fuckwad David Brooks was recently moved to write, "Once the Republicans are vanquished, I wouldn't hold your breath waiting for that capital-gains tax hike."

Those worried that Obama might be all talk when it comes to needed reform had a real scare in July, when the senator failed to show up to vote for the Stop Excessive Speculation Act, a bill designed to curb rampant oil speculation. Oil speculators provide the perfect microcosm of what happened to the economy under Bush. Back in 2001, investment banks like Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan got together and created an online exchange called the ICE for trading energy commodities. The ICE ended up buying the British-regulated International Petroleum Exchange; it then opened trading windows in the U.S., allowing Wall Street investment banks to make oil-futures trades on American soil, on their very own commodities exchange, without any federal regulation whatsoever.

"In financial terms, they were playing blackjack at tables where they themselves were the dealers, in casinos they themselves owned," says Warren Gunnels, a senior policy adviser to Sen. Bernie Sanders. "It was crazy." Trading on the ICE had a massive impact on U.S. gasoline prices, and more than one legislator wondered if energy speculators were manipulating the market, as energy traders like Enron had been before. The speculation bill was designed to regulate the ICE and place limits on trades. But on the day before Obama returned from his eight-day, eight-country, megadazzling international photo op, Democrats failed by a vote of 50-43 to force a vote on the bill, as heavy lobbying by investment banks like Goldman Sachs torpedoed the effort.

Not only did Obama not show up to vote, he appeared at a public forum three days later flanked by Jon Corzine and Robert Rubin, two former Goldman executives, to discuss how to revive the economy. Here you have the basic formula of campaign contributions in a nutshell: Powerful investment bank gives big money to candidate, needed reform requires candidate to cross said investment bank, candidate pussies out and finds way to be gone at the moment of truth, candidate resurfaces later in arms of aforementioned investment bankers.

Obama's absence on oil speculation was eerily reminiscent of his previous decision to change his mind about giving retroactive immunity to telecom companies for spying on Americans. Obama withdrew his pledge to filibuster the immunity bill right around the time the Democrats announced that AT&T would be sponsoring the Democratic convention. So no filibuster on retroactive immunity from the top Democrat — but conventiongoers in Denver will get tote bags emblazoned with the AT&T logo. So that's something.

* * *

Look, we all knew this was coming. Once Obama vanquished Hillary Clinton, it was inevitable that his campaign would start roping in the Clinton moneymen for the fall confrontation with McCain. Among those snagged by Obama were Iranian millionaire and former Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee chairman Hassan Nemazee, venture capitalist Alan Patricof and the touchingly plugged-in Wall Street power couple Maureen White (First Boston) and Steven Rattner (Morgan Stanley). Rattner and White, the former chief fundraiser for the DNC, are longtime friends of the Clintons; she quit the DNC in 2006 to build Hillary's war chest, while he backed Joe Lieberman against Ned Lamont and flirted with a Mike Bloomberg presidential run. Such are the people who are now whispering in Obama's ear.

Over the summer, the Obama camp has relentlessly pushed the notion that its record fundraising is mainly the result of small online donations. The first presidential candidate to raise so much money that he could afford to eschew the spending limits that would be imposed if he accepted federal matching funds, Obama claims that he opted out of public funding so that he could have a campaign "truly funded by the American people." And indeed, he has a record number of small donors, with some 45 percent of his campaign cash coming from contributions smaller than $200.

Which is a great percentage — but it's only eight points better than John Kerry in 2004 and only 14 points better than George Bush that same year. In truth, Obama is still raising tons of money from big corporate donors. In June alone, as Obama was raking in more than $30 million from small donors, he also bagged $6 million in a single fundraiser at Ethel Kennedy's home in Virginia and another $5 million at an event in Hollywood. But time and time again, you see Obama aides boasting about how the day of the big-dollar donor is over. "More people are involved, and I think that necessarily dilutes the impact of any individual — which is probably a good thing," one prominent Obama supporter recently declared. This staunch champion of the small donor happened to be none other than James Rubin, son of former Goldman Sachs co-chairman Bob Rubin.

Obama's decision to embrace Clinton's moneymen coincided with his decision to attend a public forum on economic policy with an A list of Clinton-era economic advisors, including Rubin and Corzine. "The message is that he's going to be a friend to Wall Street, just as Bill Clinton was a friend to Wall Street," says Pollin. "Wall Street will want to be at the head of the table."

By now it should be clear what type of service Wall Street will demand. The financial disaster dumped on us by eight years of Bush's mismanagement has left America with the prospect of short-term solutions in the form of massive government bailouts, and long-term solutions in the form of reform and regulation. A big chunk of the $1 billion in cash that will be spent on the presidential race this year represents Wall Street's desire to make sure that both candidates can be counted on to make the short-term bailouts large and passionate, and the reforms gentle and halfhearted. "They want to make sure there's socialism when they need it — bailouts — and capitalism when they need that," says Pollin.

Both candidates are already falling all over themselves to signal their business-friendly approach to the economy. McCain entered this election with a reputation as a strict Goldwater conservative. "I have always been committed to the principle that it is not the duty of government to bail out and reward those who act irresponsibly," he declared. McCain also sounded off in the past about troubled quasi-governmental lenders Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, pledging to "make them go away" and to strip them of their right to lobby.

But this year, McCain — perhaps emboldened by the $238,100 he got from seven JP Morgan Chase executives or the $500,000 bundled for him by Chase executive James Lee Jr. — caved in and supported Chase's outrageous government-backed acquisition of Bear Stearns. He also backed the recent bailout of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae — no surprise given that former Fannie Mae lobbyists are serving as his chief of staff and the head of his vice presidential vetting panel.

Obama also supported the Freddie Mac-Fannie Mae rescue, and that, too, is no surprise, given that he hired one former chairman of Fannie Mae to chair his vice presidential vetting panel and hired another former Fannie Mae chairman to serve as his consultant on housing issues. Most of us will never get within a hundred miles of a single Fannie Mae chairman, but Obama has already hired two — and he isn't even president yet.

This, folks, is the way of the world. Forget all the promises to make the rich pay their fair share. As the candidates get closer to office, the actual paying customers move to the front of the line.

* * *

Sadly, both candidates have an extensive history of being dependable pals of campaign contributors. Back in 2000, when Obama was a state senator in Illinois, an entrepreneur named Robert Blackwell Jr. hired him to be his lawyer, paying him a monthly retainer of $8,000 — big money for a part-time legislator with an annual salary of just $58,000. A few months later, Obama sent a letter urging state tourism officials to give a grant to one of Blackwell's companies, the amusingly named Killerspin, to fund a table-tennis tournament. Killerspin received $320,000 in public funds; Obama pocketed $112,000 in fees from Blackwell.

So far this year, Blackwell has bundled more than $100,000 for Obama's campaign. Looks like there's going to be a shitload of table-tennis tournaments all across America next year.

McCain also likes to write letters for big contributors. In 1998, four months after BellSouth contributed $16,750 to the senator, he sent a letter to the FCC asking it to give "serious consideration" to the company's request to enter the long-distance market. He later wrote letters on behalf of Paxson Communications, which donated $20,000 and let him use their company jet, as well as Ameritech and SBC Communications, which raised $120,000 for McCain at a time when they were seeking permission to merge.

McCain's still sticking by that gang. Former Ameritech chairman Richard Notebaert bundled more than $100,000 for him this year, and two of McCain's key fundraisers, Peter Madigan and Tim McKone, hail from SBC. The point is that politicians are intensely loyal to the people who give them money — and not anywhere near as loyal to the promises they've made to suckers like us. No matter who's in the White House, the direction of the government has remained remarkably stable. Clinton's treasury secretary, Rubin, was a Goldman Sachs man; Henry Paulson, the current secretary under Bush, is also a Goldman Sachs man. It'll probably be a Goldman man again next year. Meet the new boss, same as the old boss. In sickness or in health, the faces may change, but the money remains. "It's not an accident that both administrations picked for leading economic advisers people from Goldman Sachs," says Pollin.

The really distressing thing about all of this is the signal it sends to Americans. Goldman Sachs posted a record profit of $11 billion last year, much of it from betting against the subprime mortgage market they themselves helped to fuck up. That little energy exchange Goldman set up, the ICE, made a profit of $240 million last year, as gas prices skyrocketed. It may suck to be you right now, but all that pain isn't so bad if you are a big oil speculator.

When you live in million-dollar Manhattan townhouses and make billions in profits betting on the pain of the ordinary foreclosed homeowner, you shouldn't get to run around on TV with the prospective president on your arm. You should be hung by your balls. But that's not the way it works, and despite what you might have heard about "change," it probably never will be.

For all the excitement that Barack Obama has garnered, and all the talk about a new day in Washington, it would be tragic if the real legacy of his election victory was to finally expose the essentially unchanging, oligarchic nature of our political system. It's the same old story: Money talks, and bullshit walks. And don't be surprised if we're the ones still walking after November.
_______

About author I'm a political reporter for Rolling Stone magazine, a sports columnist for Men's Journal, and I also write books for a Random House imprint called Spiegel and Grau. My main ambition in life is to someday strangle that chick in the Progressive Insurance commercials who is always waving her hands back and forth and screaming, "Discount!!!" Anyone who has suggestions for how to dump her body without being caught is welcome to write to me. I already have plenty of plastic and a staple-gun.
Vote Result
+++++++++-
Score: 9.7, Votes: 10

Comment viewing options

Select your preferred way to display the comments and click "Save settings" to activate your changes.

Well Matt, it's nice to see

Well Matt, it's nice to see you go two weeks in a row. Not as shocking as last weeks blog but overall, more important. As a Russian immigrant, a cynic and someone who never bought in to either candidates bullshit from the beginning, what I find most disturbing about all this is just how bad of the job the candidates are doing hiding their motives. Their intentions are in every way typical but their transparency is astounding. One of the great legacies left to us by the Bush administration is that politicians no longer even attempt to veil their motives. It's almost how they do it in my country of origin. America has always been incredibly corrupt but it used to be much more adept at hiding that fact. Now it just waves its middle finger directly at our faces. Oh, and its not just the availability of info from the internet- it's largely that they figured that we, the ever-distracted, dipshit public can't do a damn thing about it other than write blogs and bitch. (That's not meant as an aside to you) Anyway, it appears your correct: The rich will receive all the benefits of socialism while the middle and poor will suffer through all of the hardships of cutthroat capitalism. And the public high on lexapro and xanax will eat chicken and buy flatscreens, you know, considering how shitty the economy is and all. But really, what's their to complain about? None of this is new. We never had a chance in the first place.

_______

...not sure what we're all doing here.

blindmookie's picture
Submitted by blindmookie on August 9, 2008 - 1:27pm.

Is There A Way To Be Elected Without Big Donor Support

As far as I can tell it seems impossible the way it works now for anyone to be elected if they don't have money from big donors.
I realize it is naive but I believe Obama is doing what he has to do to get in a position to have the ability to change the system.
How else can anyone get the necessary power without playing and winning the game as it is set up?
I am asking not arguing because I have thought of it a lot and don't know enough to have an answer.
And I have never heard it discussed.

JDS's picture
Submitted by JDS on August 9, 2008 - 2:17pm.

How else to run for President?

How many black men come from monied families? Not everyone is independently wealthy. It's inevitable that poorer candidates take money from corporations - but they don't have to kowtow to those corporations afterwards!

canadianperson's picture
Submitted by canadianperson on August 9, 2008 - 3:36pm.

Let's go with your premise...

and say that Barack is doing what he doesn't believe in because it is the only way to get elected. Then when he wins he will proceed to push congress to enact all the reforms that we "libruls" want. Congress, especially his own Dems, will tell him to calm down, take a seat, and tell him the fax of life, raw.

They won't change the system that feeds the fatcats more and beggars thy neighbor. They won't prosecute the Bush criminals for an infinity of treasons. Barack will be told that he should feel lucky just to be president and enjoy it. After all, he's got nothing to worry about.

And this scenario presupposes that Barack intends to attempt such bold action, which I don't believe at all. Taibbi has hit the bullseye, dead on. Unless you can get the majority of Americans (that would over 150 million people) in the streets demanding change or else, there will be no change. The American sheeple are tame, fearful, weak. It will take many years of work at the grassroots level to have even a small chance of creating a movement powerful enough to succeed. Most are too busy working two jobs to do that.

The elections are a sham, just another TV show. That's why they spend so much time on bullshit like whether Obama wears a flag pin. Many Progressives will get excited if Obama wins, thinking that salvation is at hand - Delusional.

Have you ever heard any of the MSM talk about what Taibbi has posted here? Of course not. If true, it is explosive stuff. Try talking to some regular Americans about the specifics of Taibbi's post. See what kind of reaction you get.

macgp44's picture
Submitted by macgp44 on August 9, 2008 - 9:29pm.

Obama is already a millionaire

Obama is already a millionaire in his own right. He is not a poor Black man. He belongs to the tiny elite of African-Americans who have become rich, and he will continue to support the system that made him so. In fact, that is what he is doing now.

Obama will have to repay the corporate donors who gave him the big money, and he knows it. That's why he is making every effort to reassure them that he will be a "safe" president and will not do anything to upset their gold-filled apple carts. It's like The Godfather. They made him an offer he couldn't refuse and he knows what will happen if he doesn't pay them back when he is elected.

_______

Zwoman

To argue with a person who has renounced the use of reason is like administering medicine to the dead. -- Thomas Paine, US patriot & political philosopher (1737 - 1809)

Zwoman's picture
Submitted by Zwoman on August 10, 2008 - 3:02pm.

well framed

1. The power would hypothetically come from the people. If there were real popular pressure and voters willing to make their support for Obama conditional, he'd be forced to get up off his knees and stop sucking. In other words, "the game as it's set up" includes public pressure or, in this case, lack thereof.

2. Given the lack of such pressure, any hypothetical populist candidate would have to play by the rules, as you indicate, and then change back into the Savior once elected. Karl Rove would have a better chance of winning America's Next Top Model than such a person would have of working his way through the elitist vetting process to reach the Presidency. Put differently, if you've made it as far as Obama has, you're not that person.

3. The last thing the general population should do is empathize with a politician. Empathy is a weak point that every good salesman, seducer, and propagandist knows how to exploit. Politicians should be viewed as objects, not subjects. If the people care about how tough it is to be a politician, they lose political will. Obama's big money bosses don't care if it's tough to placate the people. "Just do it," they insist, and apparently, it's not that tough after all. The people for their part shouldn't be concerned if it's tough to placate big money. "Do it or we'll find someone else," they should, but don't, say. Instead, they'll sit at home until the election, which they wrongly consider their one great hope for change, then vote, with no conditions attached, for someone who has proven himself so corrupt as to be Wall Street's favorite candidate.

propagantidote's picture
Submitted by propagantidote on August 9, 2008 - 11:05pm.

thank you.

there are, even on this site, too few voices of realism.

The russian immigrant responder wonders how/why the candidates need not even try to hide their nefarious intent. The answer is easy: because nobody will do anything about it and few voters even notice.

Another responder raised another salient point. Even if obama transmogrifies from ARTICULATE fascist to FDR, he'll be hobbled by the 111th congress, lousy with incumbent fascists, incompetents and antichrists. The numbers will not matter. No altruism will be allowed by either 'party'.

mcpantload has worked hard for his big donors ever since at least the time of keating/milken. his 180s from 8 years ago were inspired by two things: cash and promises of cash/electability. every political 'flip/flop' can be so attributed. ask willard romney.

after vanquishing hilbillary, obama veered into mussolini territory. why? Thanks to Mr. Taibbi, we can now be certain we know why. It has much less to do with getting the undecided votes as it has to do with getting the big money from the corporate fascists. His odious vote on the fisa thing was politically superfluous. A 'not present' would have probably been more effective with the electorate. But we now know for CERTAIN that his vote was bought for large contributions. Which harkens back to the question of why do they not even TRY to hide their corruption? Cuz nobody connects the dots and nobody cares.

Any question any more whether this country is fascist or not?

This entire election can be summed up thus:
the fascist party is pure evil. And "Sadly, the answer to that question increasingly appears to be that Obama is, well, full of shit."

So vote for obama. I understand. He APPEARS to be less horrible than mcpantload. But when he does not turn into FDR, we'll be stuck with another 4 years of rapacious fascism. At the end, that will have made it 32 straight years. An entire generation of americans will have no knowledge of democracy at all... unless they've been to europe.

_______

"We are in the beginning of a mass extinction, and all you can talk about is money and fairy tales of eternal economic growth. How dare you!" - Greta Thunberg

jtree's picture
Submitted by jtree on August 9, 2008 - 10:20pm.

When from power broker institutions...bribes...

Campaign contributions are bribes when made by powerful institutions like corporations and not from individual citizens. Why is big money needed? To carry out consumer style marketing? Take the big industry money away and candidates will be stripped down to discussing the issues, not the special interests of financial power brokers.

_______

Mark Biskeborn
Author of thrillers: Mojave Winds, A Suif's Ghost, Mexican Trade
Short Stories: Californians and Other Cowboys...NEW.
http://biskeborn.com

Visit Mark on Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/Mark-Biskeborn/e/B002BMIB10/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_1

Mark Biskeborn's picture
Submitted by Mark Biskeborn on August 9, 2008 - 10:47pm.

Change the system then

In Canada we made rules about how much spending is allowed on election campaigns. The sky ISN'T the limit.

canadianperson's picture
Submitted by canadianperson on August 10, 2008 - 2:33pm.

fact checking -- a good thing!

After I read this in the Rolling Stone, I gave it to my son who is an Obama campaign staffer in Iowa. His first reaction was "there's a factual error in the second paragraph: Tom Delay was the House Majority Leader not the Speaker." That's beside the point of the article, but good fact checking is an attribute is the hallmark of publications that mean to be taken seriously.

I found this article disturbing, but I don't know as how it's really news. Barack Obama is a politician, and was always a politician. Which is worse -- that he sells himself as something different, or that so many people bought it? I don't think we're going to get anywhere as a democracy until voters realize that they're making choices amongst people who comprimise for a living.

That being said, I still think he's the best choice for President, but I have no illusions about who actually runs the country. I do believe he genuinely wants to change things for the better, but to have any effect, he has to be subtle and pragmatic in how he tries to implement that change. Those are the sort of good intentions of which the road to hell is paved, but hey, maybe we'll get lucky this time.

The alternative -- the absolutist, idealist, bull in the china shop approach -- is Ralph Nader, who bears no small responsibility for the clusterfuck we're currently enduring. I have all sorts of respect for the work he's done in the past, but the idea of putting him in charge of anything other than a personal checking account is dangerous and absurd.

I wish Matt Taibbi would turn his not inconsiderable talents to write pieces that would encourage and motivate readers, and provide some idea of how things might be made better. That would go a long way to convince me that the only tricks in his bag are cynicism and snark. Not so easy to do, eh? Not your job? Fair enough, but don't pretend that you're anything other than a sniper.

Oh, and Matt -- I've kinda wanted to sock you one in the kisser ever since you wrote that there is 'fuck all to do in Iowa.' The fact is that bored is as bored does, and there's plenty to do here. Maybe not the same things or as many things to do as in e.g. New York City, but maybe it's time to wipe the smirk off your face and investigate whether it's true, as your writing conveys, that everyone besides you is a mark or a loser.

chaircrusher's picture
Submitted by chaircrusher on August 10, 2008 - 10:36am.

re: fact checking error

"I don't think we're going to get anywhere as a democracy until voters realize that they're making choices amongst people who comprimise for a living."

Please. There's a difference between compromising and selling out. The problem, which Taibbi has elegantly pointed out here---a minor error which was probably a typo, not a "fact checking error" notwithstanding---is that Obama is not compromising. He is selling out, in every way possible. Politics does not have to be the kind of dirty game it is in this country, and by assuming from the get go that it must be you are enabling the same rotten system which you can only hope Obama will challenge after he's elected.

The alternative -- the absolutist, idealist, bull in the china shop approach -- is Ralph Nader, who bears no small responsibility for the clusterfuck we're currently enduring.

Oh God, not this canard again. You know was responsible for the past eight years? How about Bush and the people who voted for him? Or the people who didn't vote at all---the majority of American voters. Or how about the this---the people who choose to endorse the same system, year after year, even though they know it's a broken system, because trying to change it is just too "idealist". I'm talking about the people who voted for Pelosi, and Kerry, and everyone useless member of the so called "opposition party".

But of course, trying to bring the people who are responsible for the "cluterfuck" of the Bush administration to justice is hard work. Much easier to blame somebody like Nader, who is one of the few people who actually bothers to address issues relevant to the working class---you know, the class of people Democratic Party is supposed to represent, but hasn't for decades now.

In his speech in Denver Mr. Nader quoted E. V. Debs: E.V. Debs once said, "It is better to vote for what you want and not get it than to vote for what you don't want and get it."

Well, I for one have had it with the Democratic Party because I'm tired of voting for what I don't want and getting it. The day the rest of the Left in this god-forsaken country wakes up does the same is the day we take back America. Until then, we can look forward to more of the same.

_______

"Freedom is participation in power."

(Cicero)

greengorrilla's picture
Submitted by greengorrilla on September 3, 2008 - 8:01pm.

Oh I see

So you're going to follow Eugene Debs advice... and NOT get the government you want. All because you're afraid Obama is going to be beholden to the Corporations who gave him money. I don't believe he's that much of a wimp - I personally think he's laughing all the way to the bank.

canadianperson's picture
Submitted by canadianperson on September 3, 2008 - 8:19pm.

Who says I like Obama's

Who says I like Obama's government? I don't like his militarism, his supposedly "universal" healthcare, his support of Israel, his vice presidential candidate (and his ties to the credit card companies), or his environmental policies. I don't think Obama is a wimp, either---I think he is either very shrewd or very naive. Time will tell which it is. In the meantime I refuse to support a candidate like Obama.

_______

"Freedom is participation in power."

(Cicero)

greengorrilla's picture
Submitted by greengorrilla on September 4, 2008 - 1:11am.

A paltry few billions of dollars

elects Congress and the president, the embodiment of the only constitutional protection the middle class has, via regulatory statute, when it comes to making the system work for the utilitarian benefit of the people.

Not only that a $13 trillion economy can be leveraged, but that it can be done SO CHEAPLY, is the beauty of the con.

For pennies on the dollar and by making our livelihood more vulnerable, like tied goats awaiting rapacious capitalists, the system is rigged. It's time for a new declaration of independence, from the latest tyrant, the latest King George equivalent, the elephant in the room, the unchecked and unbalanced rule of greed.

_______

Randy James is an avid reader and a dedicated scholar who has read 3000+ nonfiction books and is the author of Every Man a Song. I am a progressive and an idealist and a dreamer; an unrepentant Hippie who believes that without peace and the environment,

REJames50's picture
Submitted by REJames50 on August 10, 2008 - 3:27pm.

The Rethuglican Motto

Greed is good, Greed is great, Let the little people eat some cake. M Grey

mr grey's picture
Submitted by mr grey on August 10, 2008 - 8:27pm.

Greed

Remember your history and what happened to those who"let them eat cake". The golden ages of history were of peace and prosperity. Leaders that put their people first.

Both McCain and Obama are corporate stooges. Slowly, but surely more and more people are waking up and pushing against the grain. Change of this magnitude doesn't occur overnight. The "little people" as you put it will demand change, real change, or heads will roll!

Jenn's picture
Submitted by Jenn on September 3, 2008 - 6:48am.

Great article!

Any hope from the third-party candidates? Would love to see Nader and Barr get in the debates and shake things up.

MC13's picture
Submitted by MC13 on September 3, 2008 - 10:28am.

Candidates for Sale

One of the definitions of insanity is doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. Sadly, once again, America is faced with two corporate-controlled presidential candidates who will put corporate interests above the interests of 'We the people". And like so many times before, the American electorate will elect (or let the Supreme Court select) one of these criminals thinking that they're actually going to get change in Washington. When will we ever learn?

Let Nader, McKinney, and Barr into the debates. Let their voices be heard. Vote Nader/Gonzalez in 2008 for real change!

montag's picture
Submitted by montag on September 3, 2008 - 11:44am.
-->
User login
ChimpsterNation
more »
Recent Threads
Socialism


Smirking Chimp on Facebook

Upcoming events
  • no upcoming events available
Browse archives
« September 2024  
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
20 21
22 23 24 25 26 27 28
29 30          
The Daily Chimp
Links to our front-page articles, emailed to you once a day.
Syndicate content
Syndicate
Syndicate content
Who's online
There are currently 2 users and 48 guests online.
 
100 Most Recent Threads | Topics & Issues | Events | Polls | Chimp 1.0

Home | Top

Note: As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases.

About | Contact | Advertise | Shop | Donate

Privacy Policy | Terms of Use

© 2023 Smirking Chimp Media

bot trap

Mastodon