Eturnalshift wrote:
Money begets power.
Power begets money.
The problem with boiling it down like this is you ignore everything that happens inside the "begets."
Money isn't automatic power. That takes contacts, connections, an agenda, and a proxy to actually wield the power because we're still pretending not to be a direct plutocracy. Corporate CEOs (name one, this is a hypothetical) are only as good as their influence extends. They can throw money at problems, but at the end of the day, they're not directly making any decisions. Does the money help them get their way? Sure. But they can never be 100% sure it will, because someone else holds enough of the cards.
This is similar for the reverse. Power can turn into money, but it's frequently secondary, and a lot of it has to wait until the "power" phase has run its course. Our political system doesn't directly reward those in positions of real power (Congress/President/Supreme Court) until after they've retired or resigned or lost an election, at which point they're free to use whatever connections they'd established while in power to milk it for cash. If they do so directly while in power, that's called accepting bribes or perpetrating fraud.
Congress still represents constituents, and if we want to pretend there's any legitimacy to the American democratic process, we need to accept that every voice is equal. The Court represents the Constitution, not private interests or personal feelings. The money (beyond salary) made is either tangential to the job being done, or
it's illegal.But if you want to say that American democracy isn't democracy anymore, I'd be more than happy to quote you.
If destruction exists, we must destroy everything.
Shuruppak Yuratuhl Slaad Shrpk Breizh