System boosts wealthy
The good idea of a revenue-neutral carbon tax has been presented for the umpteenth time. (Letters to the Editor, Chicago Tribune, Nov. 19) It would discourage the use of fossil fuels and reflect their costs for causing health problems and damage from global warming. The tax proceeds would be rebated back equally to consumers.
But it is not a good idea to fossil-fuel interests, which pour millions of dollars into political contributions-mostly to Republicans-and the idea goes nowhere.
Likewise, a ban on automatic weapons which is not good for gun sellers; prescription drug prices similar to what Canadians pay, which is not good for pharmaceuticals; national health insurance such as every other advanced country has which costs less per capita with better results than our system which insurance companies do not like; and higher taxes on hedge funds and the billionaires that run them which they do not like.
These interests overwhelm the system with so much money that they usually get their way no matter how good ideas are for ordinary people.
The Supreme Court's 5-4, precedent-overturning, 2010 Citizens United decision permitted unlimited contributions and unlimited ability for wealthy interests to get their way. The five justices in the majority were appointed by Republican presidents.
The system is rigged when one or a few billionaires can buy more political speech than tens of millions of ordinary people combined. This is democracy overridden and subverted by dollars. When people see our system continuously working for the wealthy and not for them, they become receptive to demagogues and other types of government including a strong man system.
The top priority of anyone who wants to see good ideas prevail should be to get big money out of politics so good ideas that hurt wealthy interests are not dead on arrival.
Richard Barsanti
Western Springs