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In reply to the discussion: Banks Behind HRC's Canadian Speeches Really Want Keystone Pipeline [View all]JonLP24
(29,929 posts)While I don't agree necessarily with the headline of this article -- domestic-wise the are far more corrupt countries but foreign policy America is very corrupt and part of the reason why Afghanistan & Iraq ranks as top 10 most corrupt countries and the Yemen government -- also in the top 10 -- have our support -- but the facts detailed are dead on.
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While it is true that you dont typically have to bribe your postman to deliver the mail in the US, in many key ways Americas political and financial practices make it in absolute terms far more corrupt than the usual global South suspects. After all, the US economy is worth over $16 trillion a year, so in our corruption a lot more money changes hands.
1. Instead of having short, publicly-funded political campaigns with limited and/or free advertising (as a number of Western European countries do), the US has long political campaigns in which candidates are dunned big bucks for advertising. They are therefore forced to spend much of their time fundraising, which is to say, seeking bribes. All American politicians are basically on the take, though many are honorable people. They are forced into it by the system. House Majority leader John Boehner has actually just handed out cash on the floor of the House from the tobacco industry to other representatives.
When French President Nicolas Sarkozy was defeated in 2012, soon thereafter French police actually went into his private residence searching for an alleged $50,000 in illicit campaign contributions from the LOreale heiress. I thought to myself, seriously? $50,000 in a presidential campaign? Our presidential campaigns cost a billion dollars each! $50,000 is a rounding error, not a basis for police action. Why, George W. Bush took millions from arms manufacturers and then ginned up a war for them, and the police havent been anywhere near his house.
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2. That politicians can be bribed to reduce regulation of industries like banking (what is called regulatory capture) means that they will be so bribed. Billions were spent and 3,000 lobbyists employed by bankers to remove cumbersome rules in the zeroes. Thus, political corruption enabled financial corruption (in some cases legalizing it!) Without regulations and government auditing, the finance sector went wild and engaged in corrupt practices that caused the 2008 crash. Too bad the poor Afghans cant just legislate their corruption out of existence by regularizing it, the way Wall street did.
3. That the chief villains of the 2008 meltdown (from which 90% of Americans have not recovered) have not been prosecuted is itself a form of corruption.
4. The US military budget is bloated and enormous, bigger than the military budgets of the next twelve major states. What isnt usually realized is that perhaps half of it is spent on outsourced services, not on the military. It is corporate welfare on a cosmic scale. Ive seen with my own eyes how officers in the military get out and then form companies to sell things to their former colleagues still on the inside.
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6. The rich are well placed to bribe our politicians to reduce taxes on the rich. This and other government policies has produced a situation where 400 American billionaires are worth $2 trillion, as much as the bottom 150 million Americans. That kind of wealth inequality hasnt been seen in the US since the age of the robber barons in the nineteenth century. Both eras are marked by extreme corruption.
http://www.juancole.com/2013/12/corrupt-country-world.html
On point #4 -- oddly in an article on corruption omit the corruption on a very wide-scale from private defense contractors (a big reason why Afghanistan is a top 10 most corrupt country) but I'll just point out Hillary Clinton leads all candidates of both parties with donations from the private defense industry.