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I don't consider myself a nihilist in the pure sense of the word, but I will admit I recently have started to adopt some level of nihilism in my personal philosophy.
And it may do this country some good if more of John Q. Public started to consider adding a little nihilism to the mix. It’s healthy, in my opinion.
I think our love affair with this political party or that political party should be over. Yes, it feels good to be behind the winner, or work earnestly for the loser and turn the country around, but in my opinion, that task has become similar to chasing rainbows.
Sure, down here in the trenches, it feels really good to think that we are fulfilling all of those democratic principles by working for this candidate or that candidate, but that is only an exercise designed to keep us occupied and busy. We know that special interest groups, Pac’s and big business donates funds to both sides of competing political thoughts. Well, why the hell do you think they do that? Because, in that way, they are going to have their hand up that politicians rear, pulling the strings, no matter what party that politician comes from.
Meanwhile, the real power brokers (who, let me give you a clue, are not us) are playing us for fools. And no, I'm not talking about the One World Order bull, I'm talking about the fact that our politicians are the bag men for the special interest lobby. It doesn't take some deeply entrenched conspiracy to make this all work. There’s not some multi-webbed clandestine plan to take over the world. It’s much more simple than that. Big business will do anything to advance their empire, and we are simply the money producing fodder for their addiction. Big business wants to make big money, at any expense, and they don't care who they steamroll in that quest. We know this, we feel this, we hope it's not true, but we know it is.
What can we do. Vote as many of them out as we can. Look at the ballots. If there is a freshman politician looking for a seat in Washington, vote for that person. If there are two incumbents on the ballot, check out their tenure in DC and vote for the one that has been there the shortest amount of time. Do this across party lines. Our battle is not partisan, it is against the whole entrenched system. We can't stop this in one fell swoop, and the new blood that we send to DC may have to
be removed later by us, but we can punch enough holes in their system to slow them down. Sort of political speed bumps. And after we slow them down, then maybe we can work on real change. The incumbents need to be fired.
Until then, while we keep playing partisan games, we are playing right into their hands, giving them all the room they need to continue to screw us. A little nihilism, think about it.
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SS109 wrote: Do you think that Wall Street and/or big political donors actually control the goverment?
Or do you think they have some influence but voters still have the ability to throw out corrupt politicians?
Personally I think they exercise more influence than they should but I do believe voters can throw out the bums. Look how many incumbents the Tea Party threw out in 2010. But too often people choose (D) or (R) instead of who has been corrupted or not.
1%'rs? Only 1/2 the people in Congress and the Senate are in the 99%.
And would you support a political or voilent overthrow of the goverment?
I think America can still be saved with the ballot box, it is just harder to get people organized but possibly all the new media can help with this.
And yet, winter looms and authorities in other cities have been cracking down on encampments, sometimes violently. The mayor’s patience with the occupation seems to be wearing thin, and local residents have tired of the headaches associated with the protest. An influx of outsiders to the park, meanwhile, has threatened the protesters’ ability to organize.
More broadly, the protest’s leaderless and nonhierarchical structure raises the question of how effective it can be. The demonstrators have yet to proffer clear demands and have rejected any involvement in electoral politics. And it remains to be seen what will become of the action should they lose their foothold at Zuccotti Park.
http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/06/nyreg ... wanted=all
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pineinthegrass wrote: Anybody see the story on Jack Abramoff on 60 Minutes last night? He explained how he bought people in Congressmen's offices and claimed he had influence on over 100 Congress people. It was pretty scary just how easy it was for him.
His main suggestion was to make it illegal for anyone in Congress (including staff) to ever work as a lobbyist after leaving office. That's how he bought many of his people, by offering them a lobbyist job that would pay 3X as much after they left office.
Here's the video...
http://www.cbsnews.com/video/watch/?id=7387331n&tag=contentMain;cbsCarousel
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