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I'm going against the better judgment here and will publicly disagree with OMM on something. Lord help me.
I don't believe that state and local governments are somehow more resistant to corporate lobbying. But they are harder to influence, on a national level, for the reasons I enumerated earlier. If Sam Walton wants to lobby government for a legal loophole that will advantage his stock holders at the expense of his workers, it's far easier for him to hire a single firm on K Street to influence a few of the right congressmen on Capitol Hill than it is for him to hire 50 different lobbying firms to influence the right congressmen in 50 different legislative bodies. I think decentralizing where possible is the best defense against corporatism.
And far better for local and state governments to be dominated by their respective big economic "residents" than for our Federal government to be dominated by shady multinationals. The former are at least embedded in the communities they're seeking to influence; they support the local little leagues, YMCA, etc. Wal-mart and Amazon don't do that. This AmCon article lays out this argument more clearly.
I agree, but I don't think it can be done. Money always finds a way in politics. Might as well try to dam the Amazon River. But we can at least redirect it somewhat (thereby blunting its impact) through decentralization.
I'm not against the redistribution of wealth. I used welfare as an example because it's one policy issue over which there's strong disagreement as to who should get what and how much. Allowing the states to craft their own welfare programs would diffuse a lot of vitriol in Washington, and it would ultimately result in better policy all around as Justice Brandeis' "laboratories of democracy" try and discard new ideas in favor of what works best. But you're right to point out that doing so would make inter-state redistribution challenging. I still think it's worth the trade-off.
My argument is simply that the Feds should devolve power in any area where individual states are able to adequately handle things themselves. The regulation of interstate commerce obviously isn't one of those areas. Neither is the regulation of most types of pollution, etc. As I mentioned previously, technological advancement and global economic integration have undermined state sovereignty necessarily and permanently; but that doesn't mean we should throw Federalism out the window. There are still lots of things that can be handled more effectively at lower rungs of government, but which the Feds are trying to do now (and poorly). That's what I'd like to see changed.
This I have to strongly disagree with. "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" is a fairy tale, particularly in our current day and age. There is so much power, money and influence in D.C. now that individual politicians, no matter how well-intentioned at the outset, cannot help but be corrupted by it. I don't think it's hyperbole to describe the concentration of extreme amounts of power and money among the hands of so few as evil, plain and simple.
A revival of Federalism (to the extent possible) seems, to me at least, like the only real hope we have of combating corporatism.
1). Anyone who believes that the states are less "owned" by corporations than the federal government is hasn't spent much time trying to get state politicians to move on anything. In my experience, the states are FAR more dominated by their big economic "residents" at all levels of involvement [right down to whether I can get credit for making my own energy or growing my own almond trees].
I don't believe that state and local governments are somehow more resistant to corporate lobbying. But they are harder to influence, on a national level, for the reasons I enumerated earlier. If Sam Walton wants to lobby government for a legal loophole that will advantage his stock holders at the expense of his workers, it's far easier for him to hire a single firm on K Street to influence a few of the right congressmen on Capitol Hill than it is for him to hire 50 different lobbying firms to influence the right congressmen in 50 different legislative bodies. I think decentralizing where possible is the best defense against corporatism.
And far better for local and state governments to be dominated by their respective big economic "residents" than for our Federal government to be dominated by shady multinationals. The former are at least embedded in the communities they're seeking to influence; they support the local little leagues, YMCA, etc. Wal-mart and Amazon don't do that. This AmCon article lays out this argument more clearly.
2). Severe change in leveling the field for candidates to run for office without fear of being monumentally outspent is far and away the first "domino" which has to fall if anyone seriously wants government to be more citizen-responsive.
I agree, but I don't think it can be done. Money always finds a way in politics. Might as well try to dam the Amazon River. But we can at least redirect it somewhat (thereby blunting its impact) through decentralization.
3). All states and all cities are economically like micro-nations. Left entirely to their own devices, it will be entirely the "product out" vs "product in" equation which determines their affluent vs depressed status. If America wants to engage in absolutely no "redistribution of wealth", then we need to clearly face the consequences of that. Going "hard-a$$" is the Social Darwinist approach. Other citizens don't want to do it that way.
I'm not against the redistribution of wealth. I used welfare as an example because it's one policy issue over which there's strong disagreement as to who should get what and how much. Allowing the states to craft their own welfare programs would diffuse a lot of vitriol in Washington, and it would ultimately result in better policy all around as Justice Brandeis' "laboratories of democracy" try and discard new ideas in favor of what works best. But you're right to point out that doing so would make inter-state redistribution challenging. I still think it's worth the trade-off.
4). Because we insist on a transportation dependent // regional product specialization model of "The Good Economy", there arises endless [and unexamined in this thread] aspects of modern American life, which even affluent conservatives demand [conveniently forgetting that individual states cannot easily oversee all these pieces of the mindblurring complexity of interstate and international commerce. Health and Product Safety demands are the crude tip of the Iceberg.
My argument is simply that the Feds should devolve power in any area where individual states are able to adequately handle things themselves. The regulation of interstate commerce obviously isn't one of those areas. Neither is the regulation of most types of pollution, etc. As I mentioned previously, technological advancement and global economic integration have undermined state sovereignty necessarily and permanently; but that doesn't mean we should throw Federalism out the window. There are still lots of things that can be handled more effectively at lower rungs of government, but which the Feds are trying to do now (and poorly). That's what I'd like to see changed.
5). What we have here is failure to communicate. That phrase when applied to these issues means that everything about this interstate and international economy is long ago grown lightyears beyond humanscale and the abilities of actual people to concert together and do something which might take everyone into account. We have a MASSIVE "BIG" problem. There is no MASSIVE ORGANIZATIONAL way to solve it and stop bloodletting of the little guys [like citizens, villages, small businesses, small farms]. The only even mild hope is to try to give the smaller candidate a chance to win, so that candidate can really talk with his human constituents.
This I have to strongly disagree with. "Mr. Smith Goes to Washington" is a fairy tale, particularly in our current day and age. There is so much power, money and influence in D.C. now that individual politicians, no matter how well-intentioned at the outset, cannot help but be corrupted by it. I don't think it's hyperbole to describe the concentration of extreme amounts of power and money among the hands of so few as evil, plain and simple.
A revival of Federalism (to the extent possible) seems, to me at least, like the only real hope we have of combating corporatism.