Author Responds: Will Democrats Restore Our Liberties Stolen in the Bush Era?
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Corporate Accountability and WorkPlace:
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DrugReporter:
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Paul Armentano
Environment:
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Joseph Huff-Hannon
Food:
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Health and Wellness:
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Kathy Freston
Immigration:
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Mary Giovagnoli
Media and Technology:
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Chris Hedges
Movie Mix:
Disney Apocalypse: Why 2012 Sucks
Alexander Zaitchik
Politics:
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Adele M. Stan
Reproductive Justice and Gender:
Have Women's Lives Improved Globally?
Laura Liswood
Rights and Liberties:
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Amy Goodman, Juan Gonzalez
Sex and Relationships:
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Julie Bogart
Take Action:
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Laura Flanders
Water:
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Dan Bacher
World:
Former Member of Afghan Parliament: Obama, We Don't Want a Troop Surge in Our Country
Malalai Joya
The AlterNet article exploring proposals to restore rights and liberties undermined during the Bush era has sparked several debates among readers. AlterNet invited writer Ari Melber to respond.
A persistent critique in several discussion threads contends that constitutional rights cannot be effectively restored within a political and economic system that is dominated by corporations. One reader argues that a Democratic president "will not repeal any of the harms done by Bush" because both parties "are financed by the same corporate masters and thus are indistinguishable." Another, hilaryuk, contends:
... the erosion of civil liberties is merely another symptom of the malaise affecting all western "democracies" [wherein] the political system now serves an economic one [...] multinational corporate capitalism. The new masters of the universe owe no particular loyalty to any one country or political organization, seeing nation and party as useful tools in serving their interests. They don't primarily hanker after world domination, just bigger profits. So a change of political personnel cannot change anything of significance and any "reforms" will be largely cosmetic.It is clear that American corporations have a disproportionate impact on our political process -- readers hardly need a review of the evidence here. Professor and former Labor Secretary Robert Reich now contends that rising corporate power, coupled with a decline in the institutions that once mitigated economic harm, such as unions and regulators, has led to the replacement America's democratic capitalism with "supercapitalism," the title of his new book. The new order runs on "a corporate arms race in which platoons of lobbyists with piles of campaign money pursue laws that will give companies competitive advantage over their rivals," he explains, rather than allowing democracy to facilitate debates over what policies advance the public interest.
See more stories tagged with: democrats, readers write, civil liberties
Ari Melber is a regular contributor to the Nation magazine and writer for its Campaign '08 blog, and a contributing editor at the Personal Democracy Forum. He served as a legislative side in the U.S. Senate and was a national staff member of the 2004 John Kerry Presidential Campaign.
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