Stephen Colbert And The "Politico-Industrial Complex"
Back in 2005, Stephen Colbert introduced a word that has become part of the reality-based community's lexicon: truthiness. And now, he introduces another concept that should become the rallying cry of anyone who wants to return to free and
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Back in 2005, Stephen Colbert introduced a word that has become part of the reality-based community's lexicon: truthiness.
And now, he introduces another concept that should become the rallying cry of anyone who wants to return to free and fair elections in this country: "The Politico-Industrial Complex":
And what I found out was-- is that there’s an entire industry in politics but I didn’t know, I suspected. There’s an entire industry. There’s a politico industrial complex that is not only raising money but that is built around making money off of the fact that there is so much money in politics. And that there are almost no rules.
Of course, David Gregory, being the useless tool that he is, doesn't follow up on that notion. And that is the crux of the problem of our electoral process now, the one thing that could resolve so many other issues.
The presidential election has already taken in and spent over a BILLION dollars. And congressional races add another $4 billion. Think how much good that money could have done for people in this country. How many underwater mortgages could have been forgiven? How many economically disadvantaged youths could have gone to college? How many Medicaid patients could get services they need? How many job re-training programs could have helped add workers to the economy?
This is the framework for a failing democracy. And unfortunately, it is left to the satirists like Colbert to make the point our media won't.