I had at one time planned to do an entire post where I laid out all of my political opinions on every subject, all the way through the spectrum, and it might be 100 pages long but it would save me ever having to explain a political opinion again unless I changed my mind on something (and more importantly, defuse any temptation to jump into a political discussion if I knew my views were already out there). In laying the groundwork, I started compiling a list of terms that I would need to define before I ever started trying to explain anything, and that list was going to be longer than any post I've done to date without taking in any of the other factors I'd like to discuss.
So, what's going to happen instead is that when I have a political idea (and the time, with my now 65+ hour workweek) I'm just going to have to put them up one at a time. I will try to label my posts whether they're political, or religious, or personal, or what have you from now on. I don't have a regular following so I can't imagine there are a lot of people who care. You'll never find me apologizing for not writing anything. I haven't had time and I've not been pressured with requests or comments.
That said, one of the political topics I get discussing more than anything right now is how we ought to implement the sort of changes people think ought to be made. I've said before, I think, that one of our biggest obstacles right now is that there is NO consensus at all about what our country ought to do, or ought to stand for, or ought to adopt as policies. I blame some of that on the government - a) they're not doing anything about that complete lack of direction because it means they can do whatever they want, and b) most of us have had so little control or choice for so long that it's no surprise people aren't thinking like voters and aren't voting like it matters. I blame even more of it on the population in general, though, because we're the ones who got so distracted by the "bread and circuses" that we turned into the metaphorical population of sheep that begets its government of wolves.
It's a good thing, in my opinion, that people are starting to wake up to just how powerless we are. A lot of it has to do with the degree that our government is doing things in our name that are so far removed from what we want. Even the most overstimulated entertainment junkie (and I include myself in that group) can't help but notice that our representative system hasn't represented us for a long time now. Even though we aren't really sure what we'd like them to do, we have identified a few problems that are stopping us from doing anything at the moment. One of them I don't see a way around is our absentee president. I voted for Obama the first time, although I learned my lesson pretty quickly. My line on him is that he promised change, and we thought he meant turning the steering wheel but it turns out he meant stepping on the gas. The continued selling out of the government to special interests has gone so fast the veneer has torn away, and they can't even try to hide it anymore.
I recognize that our system is nearing the corruption tipping point, but I see a glimmer of hope that might get us back to a working model again. The thing is, counter intuitively, we need to legitimize and endorse some of this corruption in order to contain it. Let me explain:
We can't get out of the Middle East in particular but a lot of foreign countries the US people have no interest in because US businesses have a lot of interest in them. We can't stop drilling for oil and find something more efficient because the oil industry has a century of profits tied up in it. We can't stop interfering in other countries politically and militarily because Eisenhower's "military industrial complex" has way too much tied up in it. We're bogged down in three wars, of dubious justification, that we'll admit to and at least two more we won't because there's no national justification. And because there are some very powerful people who are making a lot of money on them.
Now this is where the conservatives start complaining about government waste and pork and where the liberals start screaming about corporate greed and profiteering, and they've both got good arguments but they're both missing one thing: the guys with the gold are friends with the guys who make the rules. My hero Henry Kissinger can definitely see that there's no way even an overwhelming majority are going to separate those groups, because they're the ones who control that ability. He's got his own consulting business in it as much as anyone else, and you can't blame him. Free markets and free societies have a hard time telling people, even bad people, what not to do. I really don't think the people running things are all that bad either. They're at the top because they're the best at playing the game and most of the people who are complaining about how crooked that game is wouldn't be if they had a better score.
We really don't want to change that system, either (a few extremists aside) because the ability to gain money and power and influence is the hallmark of every social and economic institution in history. Ours is really much better than most of the previous versions because no one's stuck in the box they're born in. Look at how rare that idea was prior to the 1720s when the social contract philosophers first starting writing down their ideas. But that system has gone a little awry in the past 60 years in this country because it turns out that when business and government work together they can tie up that invisible hand of the market and make it do whatever they want.
Really, what seems to be the best solution is the most elusive, and it's the title of the post. We are going to have to buy our way out. The only way we're going to divest oil companies of their billions in overseas interests is to give them billions to let them go. That's true almost across the board - we need to give the military contractors a few billion to stop picking fights; give the financial companies a few billion to stop trying to figure out how to squeeze every last decimal point of interest out of everything; give the pharmaceutical companies a few billions so they can stop producing their pointless meds and focus on the real ones.
Why would we do that? That really just sounds like it's making the problem worse, doesn't it? I don't support just writing them a blank check, because that certainly would, but I propose a few thoughtful and active measures to get the forces that are holding us in place to let go. It has to be done or we're never going to move forward, and there are both real and idealistic reasons to do so.
Let's start with why we as the people ought to give the money to the industries in question: They earned the money we're trying to get them to leave. People have different opinions about what a prescription ought to cost or what a barrel of oil should cost, but remember that the systems didn't just spring out of the ground like that. Businesses built things and made things and manufactured and refined and did a full century worth of work to get the money they have. They don't want to let that go because they built and earned their ability to continue to make money doing what they're doing. We ought to vote them at least some of the money that they would have to give up because, let's face it, we have been swimming in oil, and coal, and steel, and glass, and security, and food, and medication, and everything else those giants produce for years. They're going to keep making those things because we demand it and it's the only way they have to sustain themselves. So changing that dynamic means saying "Thanks for providing us with everything we could ever want for the past 100 years; here's 10 years' worth of income as our way of saying thank you for that, but we need you to stop now."
We are definitely going to have to put some severe measures in there to make sure they do stop, though, or they really will just pocket the money and keep going. Again, that's not such a bad thing. If your job accidentally gave you two paychecks one week, would you come clean and give one back? If you can't say for certain that you would, don't be so quick to condemn people as greedy when they take something they think they've earned. I've not really addressed the topic of "entitlement" because I just can't do it without losing my temper, but I can quote you a citizen during the healthcare debate a few years ago who said "I don't know a thing about healthcare, but I know it ought to be a right, and available for free to everyone." If that's the attitude we the common people have, what makes you think the people who do know all about healthcare (or any other industry) are going to be any less selfish?
The first safeguard we need is an expiration date. The details need to be worked out by the lawyers and the industry insiders and, yes, even the lobbyists, but the law needs to read like "the government agrees to pay [controversial dollar amount] to [list of controversial companies] every year until [controversial expiration date]. That date needs to be unalterable and strictly enforced. In fact, anyone in business or government who succeeds in getting it extended should be arrested for treason because they are deliberately gaining personally at the expense of the nation. There's nothing more treasonous than that.
The second safeguard is the ironclad guarantee, again with penalty of treason, for businesses who take the money and don't alter their operations in the specified ways. If the people vote that one of the conditions is we drop what we're doing in military involvement in other countries and bring our troops home, then the paramilitary groups don't get to stay over there on patrol at public expense. If we're writing you a check to get out, then get out. If you want to stay on your armed vacation in a dirt poor country, then do it without the USA's official endorsement.
The final safeguard that will have to be written into the law is perfect transparency. Nothing gets hidden; no backroom deals or under-the-counter-payments. We're effectively paying you not to work because we need that type of work to stop. It's a small concession on your part that your money is publicly visible. The amount, date, time, etc. of every payment needs to be on the public record. The companies involved need to list the details of each one on their corporate tax returns. The corporate officers who get any of that money personally need to have all of that visible as well. Just for good measure, I would say all the banks handling the transfers need to have those records publicly visible as well, even if it's just a weekly newsletter or something that's published specifically for that purpose. If you're getting free money from the taxpayers, you don't have any right or need to hide where any of it is going, and again anyone who hides some of it or takes it when they're not supposed to should be arrested for treason.
If this plan were put into action tomorrow, our financial problems would be pretty much solved.
Look at this infographic: 2013 Billions
That info is a few years old but still quite relevant. If we took a giant bite out of that tax haven block, foreign debt block, military spending block, and war on terror block, just look how much money that's basically being wasted would be put back into the economy. The fact that businesses wouldn't have to keep doing the things they've been doing would mean they could focus on entirely different areas, and the global economic crisis would melt away. Nations could stop hemorrhaging trillions at the cost of a few billion in stitches. The money to do what I'm proposing is already there.
Who loses? The government doesn't have to stop propping up business, and the businesses don't suffer any losses. The people are paying substantially less to support government/business activity, and other countries don't have Americans wandering around looking for things to exploit. There's absolutely no reason we can't do this. We just haven't yet.
If only our president (and others) would get back in their offices and do their jobs. Don't blame me this time; I voted Libertarian.
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