Here's the latest from Robert Reich - in many ways it connects to the first post this Monday. Please follow link to original.
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http://robertreich.org/
There are two great centers of unaccountable
power in the American political-economic system today — places where
decisions that significantly affect large numbers of Americans are made
in secret, and are unchecked either by effective democratic oversight or
by market competition.
One goes by the name of the “intelligence community” and its
epicenter is the National Security Agency within the Defense Department.
If we trusted that it reasonably balanced its snooping on Americans
with our nation’s security needs, and that our elected representatives
effectively oversaw that balance, there would be little cause for
concern. We would not worry that the information so gathered might be
misused to harass individuals, thereby chilling free speech or
democratic debate, or that some future government might use it to
intimidate critics and opponents. We would feel confident, in other
words, that despite the scale and secrecy of the operation, our privacy,
civil liberties, and democracy were nonetheless adequately protected.
But the NSA has so much power, and oversight of it is so thin, that
we have every reason to be concerned. The fact that its technological
reach is vast, its resources almost limitless, and its operations are
shrouded in secrecy, make it difficult for a handful of elected
representatives to effectively monitor even a tiny fraction of what it
does. And every new revelation of its clandestine “requests” for
companies to hand over information about our personal lives and
communications further undermines our trust. To the contrary, the NSA
seems to be literally out of control.
The second center of unaccountable power goes by the name of Wall
Street and is centered in the largest banks there. If we trusted that
market forces kept them in check and that they did not exercise
inordinate influence over Congress and the executive branch, we would
have no basis for concern. We wouldn’t worry that the Street’s financial
power would be misused to fix markets, profit from insider information,
or make irresponsible bets that imperiled the rest of us. We could be
confident that despite the size and scope of the giant banks, our
economy and everyone who depends on it were nonetheless adequately
protected.
But those banks are now so large (much larger than they were when
they almost melted down five years ago), have such a monopolistic grip
on our financial system, and exercise so much power over Washington,
that we have cause for concern. The fact that not a single Wall Street
executive has been held legally accountable for the excesses that almost
brought the economy to its knees five years ago and continues to burden
millions of Americans, that even the Attorney General confesses the
biggest banks are “too big to jail,” that the big banks continue to make
irresponsible bets (such as those resulting in JP Morgan Chase’s $6
billion “London Whale” loss), and that the Street has effectively
eviscerated much of the Dodd-Frank legislation intended to rein in its
excesses and avoid another meltdown and bailout, all offer evidence that
the Street is still dangerously out of control.
It is rare in these harshly partisan times for the political left and
right to agree on much of anything. But the reason, I think, both are
worried about the encroachments of the NSA on the privacy and civil
liberties of Americans, as well as the depredations of “too big to fail
or jail” Wall Street banks on our economy, is fundamentally the same: It
is this toxic combination of inordinate power and lack of
accountability that renders both of them dangerous, threatening our
basic values and institutions.
That neither Republicans nor Democrats have done much of anything to
effectively rein in these two centers of unaccountable power suggests
that, if there is ever to be a viable third party in America, it will
may borne of the ill-fated consequences.
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