March 19, 2010
Mr. President: I remember you railing against lobbyists and Washington ways
when you were a candidate and I thought at first we might see change. But then,
Sir, you decided to forgo public campaign money which limited private funding
and I began to wonder. Now I am certainly not saying there is any connection, but
so far it seems as if, on every major issue, the lobbyists have won.
The basic idea of a lobbyist implies a private interest inimical to the general
public good, for if the two were the same, the lobbyists would become
redundant. No surprise then that the public rallied behind your banner. And it is
the same issue that has caused many to be disillusioned for their perception of
this administration’s policies implies a volte-face.
On health care reform, the bill to be voted on in the House this Sunday will bring
in an additional one-third trillion dollars into the coffers of insurers through its
mandatory insurance provision. If the public does not support this bill perhaps it
is because it rewards the people who have made illness a living hell for many. If
the bill fails, then given the recent premium trends, the insurers are likely to
make even more money. They win both ways. And hospitals, now run as
monopolies in local markets by for-profit corporations, have raised prices
astronomically in the last decade. What happened to the Medicare-for-all single-
payer plan favored by a vast majority of the public? A new research report
produced by the California Nurses Association shows such a plan would even be
a stimulus for jobs. Well, we are told it is not feasible. Apparently our democracy
no longer responds to the will of the people.
In the banking crisis we have now spent $700 billion on the Troubled Asset Relief
Program (TARP) plus $1.25 trillion on the Quantitative easing program with the
Fed using ex nihilo money to transfer toxic assets to its own balance sheet while
rewarding the perpetrators of this financial meltdown. These assets are likely to
be forced on Freddie and Fanny eventually. Why could we not have put the
major banks through FDIC interventions so the worthless assets could have
been written off and used the money being spent to rewrite the homeowners’
mortgages at current home prices — the expertise at Freddie and Fanny would
have eased the administrative burden. The homeowners would have been happy
— fewer would have lost homes — and the banks, without the toxic assets
hanging over them, would have started lending. Instead our banks are off
gambling again. So much so that the Prime Minister of Greece came all the way
here to complain about their behavior. Wouldn’t reinstating Glass-Steagall have
stopped it? One could ask if that is not in the public good instead of having to
bail out the same culprits in different guises. I write this as another trillion
bailout is on its way to cover second liens.
The public are both weary and angry.
ZNetwork is funded solely through the generosity of its readers.
Donate