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| - | # The democracy problem | ||
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| - |  are allowed to [avoid taxes](https:// | ||
| - | - If they fall on hard times, then ‘too-big-to-fail’ corporations – notably banks – are bailed out with our money. Not the case with small businesses. | ||
| - | - Governments spend taxpayers’ money on high-speed rail, motorways and airports that disproportionately benefit national and multinational corporations rather than local businesses. | ||
| - | - It’s been shown many times that [mixed smallholdings are more productive than large-scale](/ | ||
| - | - The state grants monopoly control of the money supply to corporate banks, along with the right to [create money from nothing, and to charge interest on it](http:// | ||
| - | - There are huge [s](https:// | ||
| - | - Giant states will always prefer giant corporations when it comes to government contracts. | ||
| - | - Spending on corporate weaponry hugely exceeds any ‘defence’ requirements. | ||
| - | - and [many more](http:// | ||
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| - | <WRAP center centeralign> | ||
| - | < | ||
| - | {{url> | ||
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| - | _How political influence is bought in the US._ | ||
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| - | Why do governments do this? Well….. | ||
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| - | ### 2. How the political system is corrupted | ||
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| - | The three main ways are: | ||
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| - | - Political donations: politics is awash with corporate money, and SuperPac legislation in the US allows unlimited, anonymous donations to political causes, mainly on TV ads. | ||
| - | - The lobby industry: wealthy corporations can hire expensive lobbyists to approach politicians who regulate their sector, and ask them for favours, whilst helping them raise millions, or offering them a job, which brings us to... | ||
| - | - The ‘revolving door’, when politicians leave office and move straight onto the board of a bank or corporation. | ||
| - | - and [many more](http:// | ||
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| - | Incredibly, these things are legal. But that’s because the corporate sector wants them to be legal, which in itself demonstrates that there’s a ‘democracy problem’. | ||
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| - | \[NB: many of the examples in this introduction are from the US. That’s because of the influence the US has in the world – what happens there affects everywhere.\] | ||
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| - | <WRAP center centeralign> | ||
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| - | : this absurd ‘defence’ budget is not about defence, it’s about punishing countries that step out of line._ | ||
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| - | So the current situation means that communities are weakened by wealth being drained out of them, small businesses are put at a huge disadvantage (‘economies of scale’ doesn’t work without state support), and individuals are underpaid and overworked. | ||
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| - | Meanwhile the corporate media scares the public into believing that maintaining this system is the only way to protect jobs – even though an economy based on [small businesses](/ | ||
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| - | Wealth is deposited in tax havens, when it could be used to stimulate trade in communities, | ||
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| - | Concentrated wealth and political corruption makes war profitable and therefore more likely. | ||
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| - | <WRAP center centeralign> | ||
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| - | , your homes (TV and internet advertising), | ||
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| - | We don’t believe that the necessary change can come through voting, or through overthrowing anything, but by ‘[transcending](http:// | ||
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| - | See also '[40 ways that corporate power trumps political power](http:// | ||
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| - | _Date on Lowimpact: | ||