Three men walk into a bar ...
To the Editor:
A rich man, a middle class man and a poor man walk into a bar. They sit at a table with 12 cookies. The rich man takes 11 cookies and then tells the middle class man that the poor man is trying to steal the last cookie. Such is the state of American political landscape at the beginning of the 21 century.
The Koch brothers are the rich man. They are going to raise and spend almost $1 billion on the next presidential campaign. They are going to tell the hard-working middle class that the money given to the less fortunate in our society is being taken away from them.
They are going to spend more money in this election cycle than the whole of the Republican Party — or for that matter the Democratic Party — spent in 2012. And that was the most expensive campaign in history.
Their Libertarian agenda is even to the right of the Tea Party. But with all that money to throw around, the possible Republican party candidates for president are now lining up to became their new best friends. It is quite possible that they will choose who gets the money to run as the Republican nominee.
When the Supreme Court said via the Citizens United decision that money equals speech, they created new political order. One man, one vote, now seems like a quaint, old-fashioned notion, gone the way of the dodo bird. Money for advertising; money for paid staff; money to pay lobbyists; money to fund campaigns; money to register voters; money for sophisticated computer programs to get out the vote, money, money, money is the lifeblood of politics.
The next time your friendly Republican or Democratic Party fundraiser asks for a $5 donation, try not to laugh. Even if 5 million people each give $5 and raise $25 million, that is only 2.5 percent of a billion dollars. The Koch brothers are worth over $41.5 billion; so, even if they contribute a billion dollars all by themselves, that is only 2.5 percent of their personal fortune.
This is not how democracy is supposed to work.
Louis Vitale
Franklin