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Marty Kaplan

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Occupy K Street

Posted: 10/03/11 01:01 PM ET

It's premature to give the Nobel Peace Prize to those Occupy Wall Street kids. But it also may be too soon to blow them off as clueless hipsters "with nowhere to go," as New York Times columnist Charles Blow did, calling the two weeks "a festival of frustrations, a collective venting session with little edge or urgency."

But there is somewhere for them to go -- for us all to go -- and it really does have enormous urgency.

Campaign finance reform.

I know. Dream on. Can you think of three words less likely to ignite a movement?

Even if you give it a snappy name -- the Times' editorial page called it "sewer money" for a few years -- it always polls way down on the list of issues that voters care about.

There's a lot of noise, but Occupy Wall Street sort of has a message. It's unfair that our generation has to pay for the mess Wall Street made. They have us over a barrel. If the banks screw up again, they can just hold the world financial system hostage, and we'll have no choice but to bail them out again. And then they'll give themselves more billion-dollar bonuses just to stick it to us. While the rich get unbelievably richer, the rest of us are struggling. We can't find jobs. Our prospects are bleak. This isn't how America is supposed to work. Something's got to change.

It's good that some people who are not in the Tea Party are also getting their voices heard. The more talk about reining in the excesses of a runaway financial services sector, the better. But I wish these protesters were more pissed that whatever changes they want, the political system they will task to bring them about is rigged for the rich. It's hard to imagine anything getting better without first ending the insane, obscene money chase at the heart of our democratic institutions.

But politicians know that as issues go, getting big money out of Washington, and out of state capitals, too, is about as sexy as steamed broccoli.

The $6 billion it will take to run for office in 2012 has to come from someone, mainly in big bundles, and that someone isn't you or me. Those contributions come with strings attached. It's illegal to trade money for votes, but few politicians are stupid enough to get caught doing that. There's nothing illegal about privileging your big donors and their lobbyists with access to you and your staff. It's perfectly understandable that you say, and even believe, that you make decisions by weighing the merits, not the wallets.

But wouldn't it be bizarre if the insurance companies, securities and investment firms, real estate interests and commercial banks shoveling money into campaigns were doing so without expecting to get something for it? Drug companies, energy companies, telecoms and agribusiness aren't in it for generic good government; they're in it to get the legislative and regulatory outcomes they want. The same is true for labor. This is the interest-group system we have, and anyone too pure to play it is committing unilateral disarmament.

The money politicians raise, and the money raised by "independent" super PACs, doesn't go for golf trips or tanning beds. (Not usually, anyway.) Nor does what campaigns pay for travel, field staff and events amount to much. The paid media budget is what counts. It's the ads, stupid.

Campaigns spend three out of four dollars on media, which is a huge bonanza for TV and radio stations, and for political consulting firms. The latter not only get paid to produce the ads, they also take a nice slice for buying the airtime from the stations.

The stations, in turn, have a monopoly on the broadcast spectrum, which we -- the owners of the spectrum -- license to them in exchange for zero dollars, plus their straight-faced promise to serve the public interest.

For years now, conservative judicial activists on the Supreme Court have been striking down every legislative attempt to check the power of big money in politics. Their argument is that money is speech, so you can't restrict it.

Other democracies guarantee free airtime to candidates and put limits on ads and contributions. Not us.

Madison and Hamilton and the rest of the Constitution's framers created a genius of a system that has withstood the ages. But they could not have foreseen that there would one day be a de facto fourth branch of government, powered by big money in politics, and so they did not check that power with other power.

The Founders could not have imagined how technology and mass media could hypnotize a free people, and how the imperative to buy as much of that juju as you can would throw the whole system they created out of whack.

They could not have anticipated Karl Rove, Dick Armey or the Koch brothers. Or the National Association of Broadcasters, Roger Ailes, media illiteracy, civic illiteracy, entertainment-Ă¼ber-alles, the flight from reason, the collapse of moral consensus, and a Supreme Court confirmation process during which nominated Justices pledge allegiance to settled law without meaning it in the slightest.

Without campaign finance reform, the future belongs to the big dogs in the money game. I wish Occupy Wall Street would connect the dots between whatever their issues are and the mother of all issues.

Sure, there are slackers, tourists, naĂ¯fs, nutcases, opportunists and superannuated hippies among the people being pepper sprayed, dragnetted, or just showing up to say there's something's really wrong. That's the beauty of spontaneity -- real democracy is messy. But something connects Occupy Wall Street with last summer's protesters in Madison, Wisconsin: the embryonic notion that the right does not own dissent in America.

No one knows if this whole thing will fizzle, or be the start of something. But if those kids turn their attention from how much money there is on Wall Street to where that money goes, they won't be called kids for long.

This is my column from The Jewish Journal of Greater Los Angeles. You can read more of my columns here, and e-mail me there if you'd like.

 

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10:07 AM on 11/02/2011
You're making the same mistake you say the OWS people are making, Marty.

You need to forget about Wall St. and K St and occupy Congress.

That's the only place where power actually resides and decisions are actually made. And only votes get you there, not money.

Go get actual power - get elected or work on campaigns. Nobody can stop you, not even rich people with money. Stop whining about how unfair it all is and fight, just like every other generation that changed the world.
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Groobiecat
Blogger of Lefteous Indignation
10:30 AM on 10/10/2011
Originally, I disagreed that this should be a thrust, but I've changed my mind (weakness!) :D. this is good stuff
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wanamoka
10:25 PM on 10/04/2011
I was thinking the exact same thing today as I was working on my poster for Occupy Dallas. Perfect Timing.
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WI Patriot
Defending the Constitution.
04:06 PM on 10/04/2011
Ha, K street, I definately agree with that.

I would argue Wisconsin is a good example of Democracy in action - the public unions were hammering local communities in 2009 - and angered the People so much they voted for representatives that were not corrupted by the special interests known as public unions - who spent 23 TIMES more than the nearest corporation in lobbying http://gab.wi.gov/node/2025

Then the elected representatives took down those special interests......the people won - by voting. Go figure........

K street is next, but the targets include organizations that support both parties.........something to keep in mind.
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TRex86
Enjoying life in West Ohio
04:05 PM on 10/04/2011
The power of extreme wealth has done more than create gridlock; it has eroded prized social programs from the 20th century that empowered the middle class. In order to preserve the titanic influence of hereditary wealth the class divide grows even larger and hat the top 0.5% dictate the conditions of servitude for the rest. Examine the case of seven new Repuublican governors, who arrived wiht their pre-fab ALEC agenda. The cost of campaigning creates a huge advantage for a minority party and is the root cause of this phenomenon, abetted by a 24x7 propaganda machine enriched by manufactured information straight from right wing "think tanks." All in the service of the ruling class.

A Republican (or Blue Dog) Representative or Senator--if he/she does the bidding of the plutocrats--can migrate to K Street and pocket vast sums using connections to influence self-serving legislation. the power of lobbyists is the power of money. Grover Norquist has told dissidents that he will "primary them," meaning that he will throw millions behind an empty-headed Tea Bagger to fill the seat and do his bidding. He is merely an obvious example of the complete corruption of the process. Of course the American public is complicit. The slightest critical thinking leads to the conclusion that our government is now only allowed to govern for the benefit of a handful of cranky billionaires. The rest of us should read up on feudalism. It is upon us.
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03:09 PM on 10/04/2011
One of the most interesting and telling things about this whole thing. Is the people that are coming out in panic against it.
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ClevelandLib
I stand with Planned Parenthood
12:16 PM on 10/04/2011
Excellent essay...we need to tear down K-Street, not occupy it.
MarkJudiGoet
Diogenes was an optimist
11:51 AM on 10/04/2011
" It's illegal to trade money for votes, but few politicians are stupid enough to get caught doing that, " few politicians are stupid enough to think that, as the laws are written, they CAN get caught doing that.
11:41 AM on 10/04/2011
It's not just during the campaigns--the cancer of K St. lobbying is an infection that works to destroy the U.S.A. 24/7, all year long, every year. We only hear you dweebs talk about it during campaign years, but you are pretty much silent the rest of the time--and THAT'S when these lobbying forms do their worst--when no one is bothering to look.
10:15 AM on 11/02/2011
Lobbying is protected by the First Amendment. Lobbying is simply telling the government what you think. That's a good thing.
11:20 AM on 10/04/2011
"If the banks screw up again, they can just hold the world financial system hostage, and we'll have no choice but to bail them out again."

No. Let them go through bankruptcy. Yes it will be painful, but it will clear the bad debt. The bank's shareholders will have their investment wiped out, bondholders will take a haircut. Depositors will be protected to the FDIC limit. But best of all, the crooked management will be kicked out - sans golden parachute. The bank can then be restarted with a clean balance sheet and new owners and new management.

Beyond that, it is way past time time to start prosecuting these lawbreakers, not giving them more money.
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03:11 PM on 10/04/2011
The shareholders deserve to be wiped out. Let the chips fall where they belong.
10:57 AM on 10/04/2011
So the kids and regular folks know something is rotten on Wall Street and in Washington...where are the professors, lawyers, analysts with ethics to define the issues and LEAD. Instead of all the pundits harping on the young people for not being able to articulate exactly why their neighborhoods looks like bombed out post apololypse vestiges after the massive foreclosure debacle, why they have no jobs, can't pay their loans, why their friends and family members are on their third tour in the middle east on the serious Vietnam redux, why don't all the intellectuals who DO know something start writing up the agenda to take to Washington. The GOP is useless the Dems are useless - all funded with the blood money from Wall Street etc. Campaign finance is a ways off realistically but the next election is around the corner and votes are jobs for politicians. Start calling it what it is in a more public forum than a blog that really, only a very specific audience is going to read. We ALL need to get off our duffs and hit the streets, not just the "hippy dippy" kids. But we owe them a thank you for literally sticking their necks out to be stepped on by NYPD to do what we are all a little to old and comfortable to do.
10:24 AM on 10/04/2011
Campaign contributions - a lot of money paid out to people to misbehave. END the campaign contributions.
11:23 AM on 10/04/2011
Yes! See Dylan Ratigan's petition at:
http://www.getmoneyout.com/
08:34 AM on 10/04/2011
Too many pessimists here.
Corporations and PACs, for now, still cannot cast votes.
YOU CAN!
Just start voting for the poor, less advertised, canidates.
Turn off the sound when the corporate canidates commericals come on, thow away thier flyers w/o reading them.
Corporate canididates and thier backers count on an ignorant electorate. Educate yourselves on the canidates, TELL your work mates, your friends, your neighbors, tell everybody!
If these people still vote or support the corporate canidate, shun them. They are the problem and you must let them know it.

Money cannot buy everything. Your vote is worth millions, spend it wisely. Voting is THE most important thing you can possibly for your family in todays modern world. Don't take the decisions you make lightly, they are lifelong choices, they effect everything you and your family does.

Simply do not vote for the money canidates...
D's or R's.
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laoshi
my micro-bio is now not empty.
08:10 AM on 10/04/2011
Talk talk talk. At least the " slackers " are making an effort. I support them, and I drove a car load of coffee and water down to them On Saturday. Read their blogs. They're sharp. Don't misunderestimate them.
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rothomaha
The Truth will out
07:13 AM on 10/04/2011
Should, but isn't going to happen! K Street and Corporate Affiliates own this government, lock stock and barrel and they are not going to give it up to the "riff raff"! Our "representative government" represents the interests of the wealthy, exclusively, and they have seen to it that the roots of their control go deep enough that tearing them out will destroy the country. Nonetheless, that is the only remedy that will work - a bit like radical surgery which risks the patient's life in favor of a definitive cure. In this case, it is called the Second Amendment to the Constitution!
10:15 AM on 11/02/2011
Threats of violence don't get you anywhere.
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rothomaha
The Truth will out
08:36 PM on 11/02/2011
Do you dispute the statement regading governmental ownership? If not, the rest follows logically. Show us the government in history which represented the elite class which "negotiated" a settlement to give up much of the wealth for more equitable distribution. More to the point, history, our sole guide to the past and the future, teaches that violence is perpetrated by the monied classes on the have-nots until there is finally an upheaval and complete retaliation. There has never been any other resolution, and please don't insult us by suggesting that we vote in another crop of crooks to carry on strong! If you have a better idea, rooted in reality., please share it!