WHO RULES AMERICA HD
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welcome to Wall Street the epicenter of financial power in America perhaps the
money capital of the world the globally oriented Financial firms
based here in the New York Stock Exchange that operates here have extraordinary influence on the politics
and policies of this country no one has elected them and in fact
these these firms are trying to undo the regulations and new laws governing them
imposed by the congress the people on Wall Street are just one of a number of
unelected and very powerful forces that operate in the shadows behind the scenes
they're the media of forces they're the military and Industrial forces they're
the corporate forces and they're the forces that we'll be investigating in this television series which asks a
question that most of our media does not who rules America
[Music]
every four years Americans go to the polls to elect a president
it's a ritual that goes back to the founding of the nation in 1776.
our economy seemingly on the brink of class high unemployment every four years
politics and politicians dominate our television screens dominate our news and
dominate our national discourse I'm Ron Paul and I approve this message
what independent Watchdogs call this present president Barack Obama is running for reelection Mitt Romney stood
with big oil for their tax breaks attacking higher mileage standards and
Renewables he is attacking and being attacked by Republicans
he said he would turn this economy around in three years or he'd be looking at a one-term proposition we're here to
collect all right the two parties may be fighting a political war but pundits labeled it a
horse race fueled literally by billions of dollars in campaign contributions
used for pervasive advertisings where one president's failed policies really
hit home [Music] welcome to obamaville the focus is on
political personalities not the forces they represent a large industry of commentators and
pollsters are paid to tell us who's ahead and who's behind
the focus invariably is on the candidates not the issues but everyone
knows the campaigns are run behind the scenes by professional strategists media
experts and political advisors
the political ads are cynical and slick almost every word is scripted symbols
Trump substance slogans are Market tested aimed at promoting perception and
reinforcing prejudices that a world nation marketing is the mission selling
not telling on one level this whole spectacle is presented as a Triumph of democracy as
if the candidate who wins will run the country but being in office doesn't necessarily mean being in power
Americans believe they are determining their future are they do most know or
are they ever told who rules America I just think that these people uh you
can't really see them yeah that's what I think the people who rule America people
are behind the screen they are behind screen invisible to the General Public
people really know what's going on [Applause] to some extent yes and to some extent no
to what extent yes to what extent no about 50 50. who rules America there's no one right
answer Pulitzer prize-winning American historian Eric foner says it's a
question that raises many more questions about power that works from the Shadows
who rules America uh you know there's no one single easily defined group who
rules America but I think you know not just now but I think for a couple of
generations we have had a what what the sociologists see Wright Mills called in
the 1950s a power elite an interlocking set of connections of people in business
in politics in the military who pretty much determine the parameters of
possible change it's not that they rule America in a conspiratorial way and of
course there are elected officials but the leeway of those officials is constrained by what you might call the
permanent government presidents come and go but there's a kind of permanent establishment what you know President
Eisenhower called the military industrial complex but now it's more a military Financial complex
that really you know determine as I say determines the limits
foreign we're at the left Forum a gathering of progressive intellectuals
and Scholars and students held every year here in New York City there are 1400 speakers this year they don't agree
on everything but they do agree that America is not the Democracy it claims to be they all want to know who rules
America Professor Stanley aranowicz writes about the research of this man C
Wright Mills who half century ago wrote about the existence of a power elite
that activists today refer to as the one percent the people who run things his
contribution to understanding the nature of power in America is in the first place to identify three institutional
orders that really together form the power of lead an elite that is generally
speaking unresponsive to the people unresponsive to democratic Liberties and Democratic procedures and he said the
three groups were the corporate capitalist uh institutions
the military and the third one was the top layer of the political uh
directorate he called them and they were they are the national uh leaders like the executive branch of government not
even Congress he said Congress was in the middle levels of power it doesn't really share
decision to make war the major economic policies and so on it participates at
some level but basically it's out of power and he said that really has undercut
the whole pretense of progressive and of representative government
this may be why in recent surveys only seven to nine percent of the American
people in both parties believe that the Congress the so-called people's house of government is representative and capable
of solving the country's problems if politicians are trapped in a
polarized and highly partisan stalemate who does exercise the power to decide
what the country's priorities and policies should be we asked JK Fowler an editor of the
mantle a political magazine I think it's extremely complicated I think there's
not one particular answer for it I think that a lot of the stuff going on in America right now is
being led by money and money of interest in Washington in particular but I think there's a bubbling movement from the
ground up as well that's happening is there a ruling class in America or is that a
in particular in New York City where but I don't think it's they're not hitting
away in some room with Mercury's deeds and mind it's it's more it's more structural there's certain
clubs they go to there's certain streets they live on they're interacting with one another more we put that question to
Aaron crowl a 30 year old working-class mother from a small town in Wisconsin who was working two jobs while pursuing
her education if I was to ask you like who runs America who rules America what what is
your you know what what is your perception of that the money to do so you know
um you know people that that that have the money and the the resources to send
a lobbyist to Washington you know like nobody from my town could afford to send
a lobbyist you know and say hey Harley Davidson is you know threatening to to
move their plants to China unless you know everybody takes pay cuts
you know and could literally shut our town down you know we can't afford to defend ourselves
do you feel as an American citizen that you have power you know in our country do you
feel as if you have the ability to get your dream achieved
I feel like it's slipping away um
I don't think I do you know because it feels like the closer and closer I would get to that
you know like just a dream for me is to finish college you know and take care of
myself and take care of my son you know but even that now you know and and I
understand like most a lot of people in my position aren't even able to get that far now
so if the citizens who are supposed to be in charge don't feel they are who does what we found is that by and large
it's the wealthiest Americans who call the shots through unelected institutions
that drive agendas in their own interests
there may be a cabal running things but in the end the state and the system merges argues Canadian political analyst
Leo panich yeah I don't think there's an external Force controlling the American state the
American state is capitalist to its core in the very way it's organized it
doesn't do it because there's too much influence from Wall Street it does it because it is structurally embedded with
Wall Street it doesn't do it because there's too much influence from the military-industrial complex it doesn't
because the military-industrial complex is inside this thing is funded by the state it's part of the state sure there
are people who conspire and there's people who act in secret but capitalism is not a conspiracy the people who have
the wealth they're not a conspiracy we know who they are we know how they
collect this money they take it out of our pocket they put it in theirs and it's not a big mystery there seems to be
corporate forces in addition to Wall Street that essentially help guide our
political and economic Direction leading our America's top corporations
political analyst Michael Claire has studied the political economy of oil for
20 years and says a lack of media coverage keeps the public in the dark
does the media cover it the media doesn't cover this for the most part in fact the media is largely
in League because of the advertising dollars that the oil and gas Lobby
provides they're very heavily dependent on Advertising Revenue so they're very
careful in what they say who are they accountable to are their laws really
controlling and regulating what they do there are laws but they have been
written largely by their lobbyists to favor them so in fact uh the laws for
the most part are in their favor not in the favor of most Americans is there an
issue where we've seen this very clearly where the interests of the oil industry or the or the energy industry is in
conflict with the interests of Americans well I would give an example that uh the
oil industry has been pushing for drilling in the Deep Waters of the Gulf
of Mexico and off the coast of Alaska for example and they get all kinds of
tax benefits for that kind of Deep Water Drilling and they were able to do so
during the bush period with absolutely no oversight whatsoever hence the deep
water Horizon disaster most Americans experience the oil
industry in two places at the gas pump where prices often rise because of
speculation not just supply and demand and also through TV advertising that
paints this very profitable business in the most positive of terms I'm still
here and so is BP we're committed to the goal for everyone who loves it and
everyone who calls it home that's good for our country's energy security and our economy
which brings us to another set of Corporations the media companies
Jeff Cohn has been in the media and written books about its impact in shaping how Americans think about their
country and its system of power he says media companies push propaganda for war
it's the same exact media quoting the same exact experts that
pushed our country and the world into a war with Iraq and we were told by these
media oh we're so sorry we didn't know you know we made a mistake next time we'll be more Vigilant but here we are
next time ten years later and the same media are blowing smoke about a weapons
program in Iran that doesn't exist there was no weapons of mass destruction in
Iraq either and so we're hearing uh it's it's like you know when the war drums
are beating and I worked in mainstream television news in this country during the run-up to the Iraq War when the war
drums are beating they don't let you put on at Point opposing views we try to get
opposing views that question the evidence the intelligence that would
justify an attack on Iraq but we were kicked off the air and now you're
finding it's it's a nightmare it's a nightmare that's happening again at the same time you have most people who work
in major well buy this they feel like they do have the
freedom to cover issues and that the networks are much more diverse in their
point of view than Outsiders like you and maybe now me would say well the the
way to rebut that fiction is just to
look at what happened in the wake of the Iraq invasion those of us who question the evidence that if they were a weapons
of mass destruction threat we were totally right and most of us got kicked out of the TV networks the people who
got it wrong have promoted up so this idea of diversity in the mainstream
Media or good journalism will win out certainly hasn't been proven in the last
10 years where the the journalists who got it right have been punished sanctioned or kicked out of the media
and the journalists who got it wrong most of them have more power today to blow smoke in Iran than they had even
when and they were blowing smoke at Iraq those people the people who own
institutions are usually very conscious of their power not just as individuals but it's part of a dominant class says
independent TV producer Brian drulay so there's a lot of talk here about
Democrats and Republicans who revote for the Democrats we both the Republicans there's a lot of talk about you know the
rich versus the 99 percent but it's it's kind of you know the the there's a
certain kind of Amnesia about the structure of our society that at one
point in this country at least had some currency you know in the 30s and even in
the 60s you could talk about the working class nobody talks about the working class it's all about there's a middle
class and then there's the one percent as if there's no and I guess then there's some you know poor blacks and
Latinos or something right and I think that that word has been sanitized and
scrubbed out of the vocabulary of the people of the United States including out of the vocabulary of the left now
that's not the entire left but even the people that use the word class don't
seem to have the ability to to phrase it in a way that actually means something to people
to talk about classes not to talk about a conspiracy but a complex system that's
evolved over the years A system that is stratified and uses campaign contributions and lobbying to ensure
that the politicians do the bidding of the companies
so these are the building blocks of the analysis we'll explore in this series on
who rules America the argument is simple but hard for many
Americans to comprehend because many of us want to believe the myths we learned
in school that make us feel Superior to other countries and other peoples this
has been called American exceptionalism many in America believe that God created
this country as the greatest country on Earth and that's what makes it so special so you really have to start with
that as a basis for how the United States was founded Roxanne Dunbar Ortiz
is one leader of America's indigenous people the first Americans they were the
ones to be eliminated yes because it was their land that was wanted not even
their labor like in Latin America they indigenous people were enslaved and
haven't made it peasants but in North America the Anglo Anglo
colonialism and Australia had the motive of Simply
wiping them out and taking their land so that it's not just that they weren't included they were to be eliminated
and so questions about the custodians of real power and who rules America lead
back to debates on how to remake power how to challenge its distribution and
make it more transparent and accountable these are the issues that the Occupy
Wall Street movement is Raising as it challenges institutional power in an
attempt to revive Grassroots democracy David DeGraw explains occupies Origins
I mean it was there was lots of events you know everything
I was looking at around the world you know it was there's protests happening in Egypt and then it moved to you know
the Arab Spring Tunisia and all throughout Europe came back and it was
just a matter of time before it hit the United States and really if you look the the occupations globally you know they
became like the thing to do so it's just a natural progression for it to show up here I feel like it shows up here
because you know even though wealth is so concentrated you know the people have
a media system where they're so propagandized and they feel isolated but
you know occupy shows that people are you know not suffering alone they're coming out and
raising awareness and we changed the national discourse the movement is up against powerful forces with large
budgets and the backing of police forces and the political establishment
while these activists are on the front lines of the fight for a people ruled America many of its people share the
same hope you have a sense of class being important and it's kind of this country
that they're being like an upper class oh God working class absolutely absolutely
um do it you know I I'm I'm a waitress at a very
nice restaurant and it's very clear to me you know where what my role is and who I am you know
and you can tell just just from the dialogue that I have with people you know um
recently I had I talked to a general manager of a fairly large business in
our town and you know when when I mentioned that I
was going to a public school you know I got kind of an eye roll and oh yeah my
tax dollars pay for that you know and it's you feel like there's all this
resentment working people kind of feeling like they don't deserve what they're what little
they're getting absolutely absolutely and especially you know with with the
recent attacks on public sector employees like on on teachers and you know people are saying you know they
don't deserve those benefits we all don't get those benefits so so they don't deserve them either you know or
like why isn't the conversation maybe we should all work to get those for everyone instead of taking it away from
the few that do have them you know when I hear you talking
uh you know I realized it's a such a bigger picture here that most people
even understand that we have you know a country where
the dream is slipping away for so many people uh and they don't feel
particularly powerful they don't feel like they can do anything they can achieve anything they can make a
difference right well I think the dream is shifted to uh
hopefully I wake up tomorrow and I'll be able to pay my rent and keep a roof over my head you know or it's just like
you know I'll I'll work on achieving my dream tomorrow but today
you know I have to have to go to class you know and I have
to you know I have to get my work done I have to go to work and I have to try to squeeze a couple hours of sleep in and
then you know and it's now you're here at this conference with
all these brilliant theoreticians and analysts and professors and experts and leaders and
feel about this this idea that people have to get together to make a difference
I I'm I feel so blessed to be able to be here
with people like that because I want to learn you know somebody had you know had
said to me well why don't you leave where you are and I don't think that's the answer I think that it's my job
as somebody who cares about these things to learn from these people to learn from
these Brilliant Minds and so I can take this back to people and and and and and show them
and explain to them where we don't have access to this kind of thing every day
you know and so hopefully try to Enlighten them a little bit
Aaron expresses the hopes of many ordinary Americans who want to reshape the nature of power so that the 99 not
just the one percent can rule but as you can see in here it's not a battle she feels she is winning perhaps that's why
she like many want to know who rules America
foreign [Music]
coming up in the next episode of who rules America how the history of conflict between the 99 and the one
percent goes back to the American Revolution the degree of inequality never before
has the very very top the one percent had so much of the national income and
wealth in its own hands next time on who rules America
foreign the question of who rules America has
been debated throughout America's own history it was originally raised and answered to some degree by the American
Revolution in the 1770s that fought for independence from the British crown so
that Americans at least some Americans could rule themselves or at least they hoped they could
we're at Columbia University uh with Dr Eric foner a historian and writer and
teacher here at the University for a long basic period of time to own property I think what is unusual today
is two things one the degree of inequality never before has the very
very top the one percent had so much of the national income and wealth in its
own hands and uh you know so that the Gap is greater than ever before and
secondly um you know Occupy Wall Street is not primarily a movement of farmers of
laborers it doesn't have the same base people need to learn history that's part of our job to know that this issue has
been around for a long time there was nothing Un-American about raising the question of economic plutocracy economic
inequality it's as American as apple pie and um you know I think that the Occupy
Wall Street people are you know legitimate Heirs of a long and
venerable tradition in this country today the activists of Occupy Wall Street are continuing the fight for
independence and economic Justice from Domination by a small Elite in the name
of the majority the 99 of America I do think what's been brilliant about the
Occupy Wall Street movement is the framing of the one percent versus 99 and
I think I think I think what we basically have is an undemocratic power structure that goes
across political economic social and cultural lines what kind of impact has
Occupy Wall Street had in raising basic questions about the nature of power in
America we asked sociologists Stanley aranowitz attackers it has an impact on perception
it has changed the conversation the question is whether or not it will
be able to change policy and the argument that I would make is that it should not worry about changing policy
in the short run the only way to change policy in the long run is going to be to create even a bigger movement and in
order to create that bigger movement what it has to do is has to ask the question what kind of a life do we want
to lead what is the good life what is a vision of the way in which we want to live David DeGraw coined the 99 one
percent phrase and was an early occupy organizer he explained why who rules America
remains an urgent issue so you have big Banks and concentrated
wealth that's just rigged the political process uh you know investigating it we
have a country where U.S millionaire households have 46 trillion dollars of
wealth it's just a mind-boggling number so you know over the past Generation all
the wealth has gone to the top you know really it's one tenth of one percent more than one percent but uh you know
breaking it down even further you have 400 people who have as much wealth as 155 million Americans so that's 400
people have as much wealth as half the population the seeds of a battle that many of the
occupiers see as a new American Revolution is not really new but deeply
rooted in the unresolved history of conflict in the United States between those who own and control its resources
and those who want economic equality
the first thing you have to understand is America is a business venture like
still a land still stolen property capitalism and it's about making money
you know many revolutions start at the top in other words the people who began
the struggle against Great Britain were merchants in Boston and New York plantation owners in Virginia you know
most of the founders of Virginia are slave owners but what happens is as the struggle intensifies they have to
generate support among Ordinary People and when you do that you break open the
political system and you open the door for very very different kinds of Demands slaves start demanding their own Freedom
women and Native Americans start demanding greater equality so what
happens at the beginning when a you know a more privileged class begins the resistance that doesn't necessarily tell
you how the whole process is going to take place this conflict between the one percent
actually the 0.001 and the 99 percent had its Echoes here in the home of
America's anti-colonial Uprising in the back streets of Boston where a freedom
trail today commemorates a massacre by the British and a fight for liberty and
that's where we'll take you next [Music]
[Music] what's the American Revolution really a revolution the British thought it was a
revolution no question about that it was not a social upheaval in the way let us say the French Revolution was but it's
certainly overthrew an entire system of government it replaced the ruling class
with another one so that seems to be What A revolution is about and it raised these questions of equality in the
society not not just equality in terms of one percent and 99 but the role of slavery in American Life the status of
women in American life it Unleashed a kind of um uh struggle for equality
among all sorts of groups which continued long after the Revolution was over listen my children and you shall hear of
the midnight ride of Paul Revere that's one of the most famous poems of the American Revolution and here we are in
front of the Statue of Paul Revere the man who alerted all of Massachusetts to the British troops coming into their
communities we're on the Freedom Trail in Boston where the American Revolution
is remembered well what kind of a Revolution was it what actually happened here in Boston back in the 1700s what
have we learned since then thousands of tourists and students visit
these revolutionary monuments every day but most have only a foggy idea of what
really happened and tend to repeat the mythologies that are taught in their schools here was Paul Revere Paul Revere
was one of the great revolutionary Heroes so you kids here to see the
statue of Paul revereign can I ask you a question about it okay we're doing a little TV program here who was Paul
Revere what was this all about do you know yeah midnight ride to warned about the
British for coming did you know that he was a very rich businessman a silversmith here in Boston and that he
wanted to be in the Continental Army and they wouldn't let him in did you know that he didn't know that I know that did you know that in Boston there was this
Merchant class you know Business Leaders the one percent who were really running the whole show uh in many ways and that
the people were not as involved because back then it was slaves there were indentured servants uh there were a lot
of people who didn't have a say in what was going on did you know about that no idea I didn't know anything about Paul
revereign
my brother Bill here has taught history uh to students in Massachusetts for many
many many years and has followed you know the various debates about our history what was it about this
revolution uh you know was it a popular Uprising or was it sort of led by Elites
here in Boston well both were true there were popular elements uh Ordinary People
did resent the British Ordinary People did participate in riots and boycotts uh but there was a one
percent back then uh the leaders of the revolution both LED it and channeled it they were
certainly not above using words like Liberty and freedom uh to deflect and
distract people from their own discontents in the colonies and their own interests I mean the the business
class of Boston didn't want more taxes on their products they wanted to compete
with the British goods they felt they they shouldn't be taxed and as a result there was a team original tea party here
in Boston and there were uh you know Merchants like John Hancock who was into
smuggling goods and you're right they didn't want to pay British taxes I mean
there were other factors behind the revolution as well but when this Revolution was codified
in 1787 at the Constitutional Convention the people who were invited were the
large landowners the slave owners the merchant class no women no Indians no
blacks no working people actually there were slaves that were inspired by the revolution trying to get their freedom
some actually I think the idea of the Revolution and the idea of democracy uh
were Radical inspiring revolutionary in ways that that actually might have
made the leaders uncomfortable since some of them themselves owned slaves
they they really didn't want this to go viral in the way it it did around the
world so who ruled America then in a way their grandchildren are ruling it today
and sometimes direct descendance of those people so uh you know I mean there
was a certain amount of class Mobility indentured servitude disintegrated due
to the chaos of the Revolution but I don't think the people who led the revolution really intended a social
Revolution that was really not what they were thinking about you know after the revolution people
like Daniel Shays in Western Massachusetts a farmer a captain in the revolution uh did try to
inspire organize another Rebellion against those who he saw as replacing
his British Masters this time they were the colonial leaders
foreign
so here we are 225 years after the Shay's Rebellion
rocked Western Massachusetts in a challenge to the one percent of those
times we have a memorial for Daniel Shays and the men who fought with him
and what's interesting is we have American flags being put in a sense
almost at his Tombstone here marking support for the values and the
aspirations that he fought for foreign [Music]
you're at the stagecoach Tavern in Western Massachusetts town of Sheffield
and this painting is a painting of Daniel Shay's militiamen Daniel Shay's
fault in the revolution they came back from the Revolution and found their Farms being foreclosed and many
put in prison because of the same debt crisis that were
experiencing now there are many similarities but essentially one of the
promises of the Revolution was to annul the foreign debt and the farmers came
home and discovered the debt was even greater and the banks were even tougher
today the Shay's Rebellion is mostly forgotten but it lives on on YouTube
with songs and dramatic Recreations Shays now unsheathed his sword and
ordered the python drum players to strike up a tune the men began Marching In Cadence the irony says historian Eric
foner is that Shays was just a front man for a mass movement
in fact it was the opponents who said it's Jay's rebellion in order to find the kind of Boogeyman you know they
could attack so let's forget about Shay's as a person and think about the mass movement the
farmers the ordinary laborers who took to the streets shut down the courts and
said wait a minute we had a revolution we have installed a government that's supposed to represent the people here in
Massachusetts and yet it's talking you know it's the bankers and the landowners and the merchants who are getting the
benefit of everything it was the first Occupy Wall Street movement
they petitioned the government in Boston for a redress and the government ignored
the petitions and they're having still had their arms they went to these Court
sites and picketed to prevent the courts from sitting succeeded to some extent until private
militias were formed and the Massachusetts militias were formed to suppress it
it was suppressed right near here right last battle was fought in Sheffield it
was led by Brigadier Ashley who's the Ashley house is still here and Colonel
Ashley his parents were one of the heroes of the Revolution so here we have
the same family uh building Independence but then trying to
suppress it if many white Americans were disappointed by the achievements of the American Revolution what about blacks
and Native Americans in 1730 when Sheffield was incorporated
there were 30 black families in Sheffield half were slaves half were free but the famous story is again at
the Ashley House one of the servants Elizabeth Freeman called ma Betts
overheard all the talk about the Massachusetts Declaration of Independence at the dining table
and it occurred to her that may she might qualify and she actually filed in
the court of Great Barrington and won her Freedom so here you have the court giving freedom on one hand and
suppressing freedom on the other years later a small black community in
the area that Daniel Shea is made famous became the home of a young man who had
become a leader of the fight for civil rights he coupled concerns for racial
equality with demands for economic Justice today in the center of his
hometown of Great Barrington Massachusetts there's a warm mural celebrating his political and
intellectual contributions it includes quotes from president Barack Obama and
Martin Luther King Dr W.E.B Du Bois Du Bois was one of the Titan Giants of
the 20th century of course he's born in the 19th century Du Bois put forward the
issues which are still with us the race issue in America you know he said 1903 the problem of the 20th century is the
problem of the color line it's still a problem in this country and around the world Du Bois talked about economic
equality and how to gain that and he grappled with these questions he's a brilliant writer a brilliant thinker and
much of what he said is still relevant I think to thinking about American society
what about Native Americans they were the ones uh to be eliminated yes because
in Dunbar Ortiz as part of America's indigenous movements and says the people
we call Indians were being exterminated we asked her about the American
Revolution it wasn't a revolution it was a war of independence from you know the
colonial over the power but it wasn't an anti-colonial Revolution like the
bolivarian Revolutions in South America or the Haitian revolution so there are many different even
competing narratives about the origins of the United States the United States
of course was founded as a separate State as an imperialist power
and the democracy has always been an oligarchy
you know a capitalist democracy with a rhetoric above
populism which is so strongly based on race that is if you're not if you're not
black if you're not a slave you're not indigenous if you're white and a settler then everyone could be a
king everyone can own land and be a landlord so all these peasants who came
as settlers the dream is to be you know be the King of the Hill and uh so it's a
very um it's very Insidious kind of democracy
because it's a it's a an illusion illusion or not this is a subject that
needs to be examined if we are to understand who rules America the origins
of the one percent and then teach about it so this is all part of the history that
most Americans probably don't know did you find when you were teaching students here that many of them just didn't know
much about their own history I think there are many students that I
taught in one of the towns that fought at Concord who were never even in the spot
we're standing in now I think that that's true that that many kids were not
familiar with that history Beyond local battlefields the other thing about the Revolutionary War which
is relevant to today because we live in a globalized world is that this revolution started locally here in
Boston but soon the British were involved the Dutch the French it became
a war of many different countries all fighting on American soil well very true
and the the French intervention was was very critical to Our Success it wasn't
all through the force and Valor of our eyes uh there were other people involved but
I think the you know the idea itself has played a revolutionary role in history but the idea itself did not create a
deep social revolution in the United States and to this day people are distracted by
um words like Liberty and freedom and Justice uh in the same way that they
were back then ironically the original tea party which inspired the modern right-wing Tea Party
Movement today was actually a protest against an earlier form of corporate
imperialism why was T the issue not corn whiskey or something like that it was
because the East India Company had gone bankrupt in China and the crown the British crown bailed
them out so they wouldn't you know lose their lose their assets but then the crown
looked around said well what does the company have that we can sell well it turned out what they had was T so they
decided to market the T and that's why it was tea that was uh the tax issue
so here you have a big Financial failure and the the it was Global the the uh the
implications trip rippled across the Pacific rippled across the Atlantic and
we have the Boston Tea Party throughout our history there have been sort of conspiracy theories about all of
this I mean today for example both the right and the left seems to see the Federal Reserve Bank as sort of a a
conspiracy concocted in 1913 without any proper process and kind of running the
show yeah well you know conspiracy theories conspiracy thinking is deeply
embedded in our political culture my PhD supervisor my mentor Richard hofstetter
wrote the famous book in the 1960s the paranoid Style in American politics in
which he traced out various kinds of conspiratorial thinking whether it was Catholics or in the before the Civil War
trying to undermine America or uh you know various other groups at various
times immigrants others trying to you know destroy the American culture or the
trilateral commission remember them in the 1970s were supposedly ruling the whole world
now the Federal Reserve right if we only abolish the Federal Reserve Bank everything would go back to some Utopia
of the past throughout US History you see various right-wing movements point out
scapegoats in the society and they're usually the the folks who are already marginalized in some way or another and
and what happens is that there comes a moment when it becomes a really useful
for the elite Powers whether they're in government or corporations to encourage these movements so you get a tea party
or you get a militia movement like in the 90s or you get the Ku Klux Klan in the 1800s and what this is all about is
taking angry mostly white people who are mostly somewhat privileged and
convincing them that they're about to fall down the social economic ladder I guess the basic problem with conspiracy
theories is that no group can fully determine what
happens even people with great power launch things and then they kind of lose control of them and things happen in a
way that is unpredictable when you look back at history and and
you maybe can see because of you know it's a long time ago all of these forces yet today somehow in the news we never
see these forces what we see are politicians spouting various you know
rhetoric and speeches but we don't really know whose interests they're serving who's behind the scenes well
this is why we need research we need uh we need an understanding of who rules
America because the mythology today is that it is the people who rule America
and most folks don't know a great deal
in terms of specifics about the role that corporations play
um the way politicians are tied to corporate interests
change is possible I think when one talks about who rules America and a power elite one should not use that to
Simply fall into a kind of quietism and say well nothing is possible no change is possible everything's under control
many of the major popular movements in our history have been big surprises you know nobody expected them to come and I
think the same thing with Occupy Wall Street nobody expected Occupy Wall Street to come up simply simply out of
nowhere and so I think you know we have seen that over and over again in our history and we will continue to
people say the one percent and you know we are the 99 but you know when I broke down the
numbers it was really it is a couple hundred people in this country that have immense wealth if you look at the if you
look at our election process it's something like uh you know one hundredth or one percent accounts for something
like 80 percent of the campaign Finance I mean that's Insanity I mean it's
completely it's a rigged game and now the ball of History has been passed to a new generation fighting to
transform a large and complex country with many power centers but just as in
the past it has determined minorities who make the difference an elite made the American Revolution and as we will
see a power elite still rules [Music]
coming up in the next episode of who rules America how the military and the
corporations took over the people who rule America are
um a large corporate entities which are supernational they have no loyalty to
the nation state next time on who rules America
time for president I for president and for president I for president you like I
I like everybody when retired World War II General Dwight David Eisenhower ran
for president he was hailed as a military Savior and All-American hero
from The Plains of Kansas [Music]
now is the time for all good Americans to come to the aid of their country vote
for Eisenhower no one expected that in his farewell address he would identify and oppose the emergence of a new power
constellation the military industrial complex in the councils of government we
must guard against the acquisition of unwarranted influence whether sought or
unsought by the military-industrial complex the potential for the disastrous rise of
misplaced power exists and will persist we must never let the weight of this
combination endanger our liberties or Democratic processes this was a prophetic speech especially
for a military leader who saw that a fusion of government and corporate power could lead to what he called unwarranted
influence and misplaced power [Music]
50 years later on the warnings anniversary President Eisenhower's own granddaughter Susan documented how the
military industrial complex had grown she wrote in less than 10 years our
military and security expenditures have increased by a hundred and nineteen
percent this new book on the cloud of the military industrial complex by William
Hartung details the power it wields he told me how it works
military contractors uniform military the Pentagon basically pushing their
interest at the expense of taxpayer National Security in case some cases
their civil liberties is it a description of an actual reality
well the military industrial complex is probably more real now than it was when Eisenhower coined the phrase a company
like Lockheed Martin not only are they building missiles they're building cluster bombs they're building uh you
know submarines at the same time uh they're helping process your taxes they're counting the census they're
running fingerprint databases for the FBI so it's kind of morphed from just the military-industrial complex to sort
of the National Security State so you've got surveillance as well as Weapons building
Hartung says these companies in effect dictate our foreign policy they've sort
of captured our foreign policy and captured our military policy really for
special interest purposes to large degree writer David Swanson believes that this
military-industrial complex relies on Wars or the threat of Wars to stay in
business Eisenhower pushed War propaganda in the
very same speech and throughout his career but he could not have been more right I think he he probably did not
imagine how huge the problem of what he called the military-industrial complex would become it I describe it as a
banker bailout every year it is a trillion dollars over a trillion dollars every year into the Machinery of mass
murder it is over half of federal discretionary spending from the U.S government it is as much and more than
all other nations of the world put into the military each year it is much of it
unaccountable the the Pentagon routinely loses quantities of money that are as
much as most other governmental departments get
it's not just that more money is being spent on arms but the rise of the
military industrial complex has been accompanied by an overall rise in corporate power and not just in the
military sphere military contractors now have
disproportionate influence says Sheila krumholtz of the center for responsive politics
there is a huge sum of money coming from defense contractors in particular and
these range from a t and Boeing the largest multinational kind of Goliath their primary source of Revenue may be
telecommunications or or Transportation but they have huge contracts worth a ton
of money with the dod and and Military there have been a number of uh pieces of
legislation aimed at both making that connection more transparent and trying
to put a lid on the kind of pay to play uh method that has ruled for instance
earmarks have we seen a pattern of military and
Industrial occlusion and and Industrial you know companies that do business with the
Pentagon giving more and more money to politicians many defense contractors were making contributions spending lots
of money to the lobby and and in exchange winning uh contracts that maybe
they weren't the best organizations to uh to benefit from so
there has been a lot of research done about about how money uh greases the
skids for defense contractors I'll also say that the revolving door plays an important role so it's not just money
it's other forms of elite influence where people in in the Department of Defense are kind of lining up their next
their jump to the Private Industry where they can rake in uh huge sums of money
in lucrative posts from in a Private Industry that they used to regulate alongside the military are huge
intelligence agencies with vast budgets to spy run covert action operations
collect personal data and conceal how powerful interests operate today the
former head of CIA runs the Pentagon was replaced by a general the head of the
Navy Seals runs the Central Command secrecy is pervasive in a National
Security State even as groups like Wikileaks try to disseminate hidden
information Wikileaks your baby has um in the last
few years has released more classified documents than the rest of the world's media combined can that possibly be true
yeah can it possibly be true it's a worry isn't it that the rest of the world's media is doing such a bad job
that a little group of activists is able to release more of that type of
information than the rest of the world press combined years earlier an auto executive turned
defense secretary Charles Wilson said what's good for General Motors is good for America he saw no distinction
between an elected government and an unelected Corporation GM was a car company that became a major
defense supplier Boyd my military spending and then years later became a mortgage lender driven by Wall Street
originated and often fraudulent subprime loans until it nearly collapsed and had
to be bailed out by government the United States Supreme Court in its
citizens united decision has decided that corporations like GM have the
rights of ordinary people and can openly and sometimes secretly Lobby Congress
and the public or Finance political campaigns to promote their agendas
there are now many criticisms against citizens united many of the arguments
can be seen in this video by the story of stuff campaign we have a democracy in
crisis 85 percent of Americans feel that corporations have too much power in our
democracy and people have too little 85 percent hey that's a majority
so let's get together and take our democracy back from the corporations it's the first and most important step
in making real progress on all the issues that people care most about there is also a counter campaign
underway against corporate control of politics focusing on two billionaire
political donors Charles and Edward Koch two brothers both industrialists and
both funders of conservative campaigns including one to suppress voting by
democrats filmmaker Robert Greenwald has distributed this video Nationwide
folks like the Koch brothers are attempting to ensure that as few people of color and as few young people show up
as possible we live we've undergone included we live in a corporate state
Chris Hedges is a best-selling author and former reporter for the New York Times the people who rule America are
the large corporate entities which are supernational they have no loyalty to
the nation state they are harvesting the country just like they're harvesting the rest of the globe they're implanting a
global neofutalism where workers around the planet have to be competitive which means being competitive with Sweatshop
workers in Bangladesh who make 22 cents an hour or prison labor in China it's it's a global neofutalism
um it's one that is
unassailable completely Untouchable and more powerful than the host governments
that were there nominally based Hedges is not alone in this view Professor
Michael Claire specializes in studying the country's largest industry oil and
gas I would say that the oil industry or energy writ large coal natural gas
uranium is the most powerful Lobby in America the most powerful economic
interest and it's tied to other powerful interests automobile Highway construction
Suburbia many other Industries tourism are all linked to energy and they work
together to keep America addicted to oil and to avoid the transition to
alternative fuels do they have an influence on our politics do they have an influence on what happens in
Washington what happens in the ballot boxes of America they're the biggest contributors to electoral campaigns in
general to the especially to the Republican party and I think they have a
very powerful influence do you think most Americans know how powerful they are only the people who see this power
in their daily lives have grasped the the strength of it for many Americans
the military industrial complex is seen only as a source of jobs and in fact
military contractors win political support and federal funds by promising
to create jobs there are real jobs people working in the weapons factories and all the
subsidiary subcontractors but it's a fraud because you could take those same dollars and put it into any other
industry into infrastructure green energy education or even into tax cuts for working people and produce more jobs
than you do with the military spending so it's worse than nothing purely on the economic terms for years there have been
protests against America's Wars and the military but most of targeted politicians not necessarily the
corporations who profit for making weapons and other products for the military
one of the groups that's most visible and challenging militarism is a woman's
group code pink media Benjamin is a co-founder I've learned that we don't
rule America I've learned that the Democrats
don't rule America us the corporations rule America I've been doing the work on
the wars and I've just been floored of how powerful these weapons manufacturers
are and how powerful the contractors are and that they have the ability to kind
of keep the words going I mean that's that's pretty amazing when you think about it like I'm just doing a lot of
work around the drones issue do you know there's a drones caucus in Congress I mean instead of having a caucus to feed
preschool children you know they decided it was more important to have a drone caucus and that's because all the
manufacturers in their districts are funding them they are quite open about
it and in fact over 50 members of Congress have created a caucus for drones a call where they openly promote
the use and sale of drones at home and abroad and then they've now authorized the the flight of at least third of up
to 30 000 drones in U.S skies for whatever purpose this is in contrast to
the lack of any caucus for senior citizens for children for health coverage for green energy for for human
beings there's a caucus for robots Eisenhower was so right and he was so
right when he said that it steals money it robs us of food for our children of
health care for our parents who is so right and it's just worse and worse and you get the little puppets in Congress
and I live in Washington now so I see these little puppets and wish that they were like the NASCAR drivers that had to
have their corporations on their suits but they don't rule America the
corporations obviously rule America and when it comes to War and Peace those
corporations are so powerful that they've kept us for the last decade anymore and if we don't do something
about it they'll keep us at War for the next beyond the debates about the role of the
military there may be a deeper challenge because the United States has evolved from a nation into an Empire with a
far-flung system of bases economic interests and intertangled business dealings all around the world
top political leaders interact with corporate leaders at meetings of Elites like the Bilderberg conference the
trilateral commission and the international monetary fund meetings it's all part of a global structure of
corporate culture politics and Power some like the billionaire George Soros
told me a while back that the world economic forum is more like a networking party than a decision-making venue
decisions are often made behind the scenes not at public events
the divorce meeting is a enormous
sort of cocktail party a lot of contacts people meet and so on
a lot of things are discussed it's actually very convenient because you can
meet a lot of people whom you want to meet in in a con confined period of time
it is also a media event is it also a symbol of the growth of sort of economic
power of over political power lack of sovereign loss of sovereignty by some countries
well it is actually symptomatic of the age because you have
presidents and prime ministers courting the the the
financiers and the industrialists only a few Americans seem to understand
how corporatization and globalization go hand in hand Walter Teague was one of
the first activists against the Vietnam War he believes that Americans can't see
the facts because they're trapped in myths I asked them how he would explain the situation to people on Mars
I'd have to explain some very crazy things to them I'd have to explain it in
terms that they would perhaps understand I'd have to not use some of the terms
that Americans commonly use because if you use the language that we're
taught in school about democracy free uh Free Will
um you know all of the how the United States is number one Uber Alice right all those terms lead the person to not
being capable of understanding what you're saying which is that there are really and have been for a long time a
very small percentage one percent or something like that really make most of the decisions but they are smart enough
to make them in a way that keeps most Americans until recently from realizing
that they're being ruled we cannot undo the plutocracy the kleptocracy the lack
of representation without dismantling the military-industrial complex this is
the one percent of the one percent this is where we give a banker bailout every year and we don't get a dime of it back
we borrow it from China we pay it back within keep interest rates ridiculously low we crash Wall Street we bail it out
because we've created a war economy without any need for war well I think if
people had a better sense of how these companies how the uniformed military how
their allies and Congress are basically running the show scaring us into spending on weapons we don't need I
think they'd have the beginnings of a tool to do something about it but I think absent that information there's
sort of nowhere to start there's nowhere to sort of plant your feet and try to fight back against it so I'd have to
tell the Martians it's going to be very hard for you to under understand why Americans don't see how they're
being screwed they don't see it except when it gets so bad or so contradictory
or so blatant or so personal and then they wake up one day and say oh my God
does this mean in a way that business that Wall Street that defends
contractors than others have disproportionate power in other words are they kind of one of the forces
ruling our country that most people don't even know about I think that the money has great
influence across the board particularly where the issues are Arcane and they
seem disassociated with the average Americans where constituents aren't paying attention and they're not being heard by
their representatives in Washington I think where people are paying attention where it becomes a there is a hue and
cry from regular people it's hard for the money to to beat out the marathon
policy politicians usually will not risk the political liability of being seen as
catering to their the interest bankrolling their campaign if the voters
are paying attention they're usually not that that unwise most of the public doesn't interface
with the military-industrial complex because they participate in the economy as consumers
but even there they're being affected by a power shift an economic inequality
that drives them deeper and deeper into debt George Scribner is an executive
with a corporation that advises other corporations today it takes two hundred
thousand dollars a year to feel somewhat affluent I asked George Scribner how he
thinks growing inequality is affecting our politics who's in charge of our country we keep reading more and more
about big money in politics there was a great article of the one percent by the
one percent for the one percent and I think it might have been Vanity Fair but
I'm not positive right now but they made a point that I in politics that I've
been making in terms of business is that for you know since World War II it was
head count that made a difference one person one vote so you go you play to the to the vote you know one person one
dollar you played to as many people as you could to get the dollars now because the assets are concentrated at the high
end in the hands of the few actually money is much more valuable both the politicians and to marketers than the
mass of people that comprise the middle class so it was the mass of people being left out now the massive Americans they
certainly they aren't being left out but they're certainly less important
so I think in a variety of ways you'll see them being less catered to and manipulated more in a sense
and in politics and in terms of marketing there'll be fewer products and
fewer Services that's one view from inside the corporate world essentially
saying that the majority of Americans have less economic power and as a result less political power
people with money rule America because people with money can acquire power
through that but we all have the great thing about America is all we we all
live within the myth that each one of us can make a difference and I think there
are enough opportunities for that to happen that makes me think that the
future will be won't be as Bleak as it seems sometimes let's hope so certainly most Americans
believe their future is bright but given the trends we've explored about who's in power there certainly are doubts
especially because of the danger and threat of new Wars that are being planned secretly according to Professor
Stanley aronowitz w war against Iran there as a matter of
fact unless you refuse to count um embargoes
things like that are going on at this very moment that is to say in March of 2012. that's inactive that is virtually
an act of war that we are saying to the Iranians either you bow to our demand
that you do not develop nuclear weapons and you renounce nuclear weapons or otherwise we will continue to to Bar
your goods from going back and forth I mean after all the market is part of the the system so they're saying you have no
Market rights so there is a war underway right now I think so but most Americans don't really know it do they that's
right they really know about this power elite do they really know about what she Wright Mills talked about so many years
ago why is that and how can that change of course we don't have a left that really continually in an effective way
talks about who has power in America we have the Occupy Movement talked about 99
being deprived of uh economic uh Power and about inequality but it is not even
close to being an analysis that can be uh disseminated throughout the entire
Society we don't have it we don't have a daily news system of daily newspapers we don't have a weekly newspaper we have
Twitter we have you know various other kinds of social media that we have access to but it does not replace the
kind of systematic analysis that could take place as a result of having our own media so Americans in a way are still in
the dark and I think you know the left forum and so many other efforts are attempts to challenge that to change
that well yes that's right even as President Eisenhower exposed the
military-industrial complex he also expressed a very American deeply felt
desire for peace and Justice that history has largely forgotten from the earth and that in the goodness of time
All Peoples will come to live together in a peace guaranteed
by The Binding force of mutual respect and love
[Music] thank you
thank you coming up in the next episode of who
rules America the power of the media Ambassador last thing so if you're
looking at who rules America or who owns America it's the same people that
propagandize to America next time on who rules America
foreign
[Music]
from the earliest days freedom of the press was what defined America Thomas
Jefferson helped write the Declaration of Independence believed a free media
was essential for a free Nation saying where it left to me to decide whether we
should have a government without newspapers or newspapers without a government I should not hesitate a
moment to prefer the latter that was in
1787. today our newspapers seem to be fading in importance in a multimedia
world that is largely owned and controlled by a handful of large media
corporations I think we're probably the most media dominated Society in the
world Jeff Cohn worked in major media now he's one of the industries fiercest critics
half a dozen corporations own and control most of the mainstream
media in our country so if you're looking at who rules America or who owns
America it's the same people that propagandize to America the press and
the outlets that report news or convey information are just a small slice of
vast media Empires producing entertainment products that also sell a
way of life based on consumption when you look at who's on the boards of
media corporations they're also on the boards of U.S oil companies and they're
on the boards of U.S military contractors so trying to study who owns
America you're really also these are the people that own the media we don't have
a state media but in some ways it's very much like a state media it's the
corporate state if this is true and we can say that the American Media doesn't
just report news as we'll see it's not independent of the system but a pillar
of it it reinforces the world view and defends the interests of those who rule
America [Music]
foreign [Music]
years ago 50 companies dominated American Media now it's down to six here
are some charts on media ownership that illustrate this concentration
with new Global digital Enterprises like Google Facebook and Twitter growing in
importance worldwide us-based media became a transnational
Force so U.S media companies are themselves owned in large part by hedge funds
mutual funds and finance companies Barry James Dyke is an asset manager who has
studied media ownership the research which I've done is it's unequivocal and I kind of stumbled into this is that the
the media companies the major media companies I.E the Disney's The cbs's the news corporations
all of them this is all public documents is that they're all owned actually owned by mutual fund companies the majority
shareholders are owned by mutual fund companies so um and also they also get a lot of their
revenue from these companies so you're never going to see any consistent criticism about these fun companies are these companies investigated by the
media no they're not are they responsible to the public in some way
are they accountable to the public really know what they're doing the public really doesn't have a clue
they really don't know what they're doing he has documented his findings with charts in his own book The Pirates
of Manhattan
well people are not going to be not getting the truth but there is a lot of coverage
especially of politics that's often treated as a sporting event with an emphasis on poll numbers and election
results Mary Boyle follows media coverage of Elections for common cause
what about the role of the media is the media helping to strengthen our democracy or do you think it's helping
to divide us well I I think that's a great question I I think that
um you know there are a couple of things going on there obviously you've got kind of cable channels that are you know in
different camps and they are not showing different points of view you've got Fox News showing the right you've got MSNBC
showing the left and so with a setup like that you you have Americans that are just kind of
tuning in to the channel they want to listen to that you know kind of expresses their views and and you're not
seeing kind of a mix of an opinion a debate anything like that you've also got you know the shrinkage of of the
media you've got less coverage of of what's going on and I think this is
particularly concerning more around kind of state based and local politics where
there's even less less coverage of of what's going on in politics but even as the world is known for its
diversity American media is not editorially and ideologically the power
elite tends to reflect the views of the government and the people who shape its views dissenting politicians like
Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr have a hard time getting their views heard who owns
the media how the media has translated some of the Moguls and the titans of media and
Industry are part of the problem they shape a narrative for the American people
a narrative that ultimately leads millions of people to vote for candidates based upon the narrative that
they shape based upon the talking heads that they control and those Americans
tend to vote and tend to engage the system on the basis of that which they hear media is a significant part of this
problem historian Eric foner agrees he says it's not just political bias at work but what
the media as a business feels it's forced to focus on to attract ratings
and revenues somehow that idea of of power uh behind
the people in office is not really in our media very much it's not really in
people's minds very much they personalize politics their personalities combating each other but they don't look
at who's behind the scene well you're quite right that the media focuses on
personalities you know and and and often the quirks of Personality Clinton's uh
sexual escapades or whether Obama was born in the United States or not or Romney and his uh cars and whatever you
know is not paying taxes and many other things those are not totally unimportant issues but maybe it's the nature of the
media today in and of itself in that it it you know it has to go for the quick
news deep investigative reporting is not emphasized as much as perhaps it was in
the past and um you know you got to sell papers and Scandal sales papers
um personality sales papers celebrity sales papers so uh you're right that the
you know the the larger nature of how the system operates tends not to get emphasized as much it's not even
understood by many people well it's hard to understand this is a very large country over 300 million people a very
very complicated economy and political system so it's it's difficult to understand exactly how things operate
but I think but but I think you know in a certain sense the anti-government sentiment
which is Rife in this country which is generally associated with the right wing is also a response to the feeling
it's an incoate feeling it's not an analytical feeling but it's a feeling that government is aloof it is not
responsive it does not really represent the people it represents some very particular interests and that sense is
pretty widespread in this country Media Watch groups are also concerned about the lack of diversity within the
media that makes it unrepresentative of the country it serves in racial ethnic
and gender terms the unwritten Credo of the New York
Times is do not uh alienate those for whom we depend uh on for money and
access Chris Hedges was an award-winning journalist for the New York Times an American Media star
and that means the power elite and the financiers who advertise uh so uh but
but it's it's expandable I mean you have you have at least in the positions that
I was in the possibility uh to do journalism not that there
aren't you know restrictions or constrictions there are um and not that they can't be punishing
hedge's work is still very respected but he believes that much of the press is ultimately a charade that covers up for
power more than covers it especially when reporting on elections
because the political theater I mean the personal narrative of the candidate it's all irrelevant it's meaningless uh and
and people we you know we still play the game look every uh totalitarian country
I covered had elections they all play the charade I mean even East Germany did uh and uh and that's the charade we play
and when we have a compliant corporate media that pretends that that charade is real
um so I think uh the problem is that the illusion Still Remains so powerful but
people are changing but the illusion is still so powerful that people confuse where power actually exists
how does the New York Times cover the power centers that many people say rule
America Chris Spanos edits the New York Times examiner that monitors the
newspaper's content every day he believes the paper has become an accomplice to the power elite
the New York Times as an institution is almost like a mini nation and in the in
the correspondence the the op-ed writers the editors they're almost like diplomats and how they they they carry
themselves and their own self-importance in a way that they communicate with other politicians and diplomats and they
are very influential could you say that they're a disseminator of ideology in America not just of information
absolutely they're they're they disseminate a very particular ideology and that their readership is primarily
managers um and and people who make around over ninety thousand dollars a year and and
so they cater to a managerial perspective and and so they they have a Pro Management when they're discussing
labor relations they often have a Pro Management view a pro-business view
Financial journalists like Stacy Herbert and Max Kaiser found that many pro-business views in some media Outlets
were often uninformed as they told me on a radio show from December 2008 so well after the
collapse of bear Stearns Lehman Brothers the Marcus tumbling a thousand points in
a day and the head of BBC World News business said
and we had a 10 episode contract do you think the financial crisis will last all
the way through these 10 episodes so in other words the people actually in
charge of planning the coverage are are very uninformed themselves well the mainstream media are themselves deeply
in debt you know the the news organizations have become entertainified and and to compete they take on enormous
amounts of debt so the bankers they don't want to uh to to to insult their creditors uh because they might cut off
their lines of credit so they don't have they're not unbiased in this Regard in
any stretch of the imagination you see this most spectacularly with the New York Times They they're their coverage
of the Wall Street is is pitiful it's my world one reason the Press is so
pro-business is that they are themselves businesses the people who run media
companies increasingly pay themselves huge salaries and bonuses the same way
that Bankers do says Barry Dyke they're less moonves I couldn't believe he made
59 million in 2009 and he racked up it was just as close the other day that he
made close to 70 million in uh 2010 and that's the head of CBS that's the head
of CBS but you're saying that all of them are are really running their businesses as if they were Banks I mean
that's pretty good that's Banker pay I mean 70 million dollars a lot of money in anyone's book and that's what they're getting paid
so the the media companies are really part of this whole system of who rules
America they're they're part of these interconnecting interlocking relationships with financial
institutions there's no question but there's no question about you get the the meeting companies which are huge it's part of the Empire get the media
companies you get the bankers of course you have the your massive you know uh
unions okay you have uh other factors as well but those the
media is definitely part of it and the asset managers that's exactly it the corporations that own the U.S media and
own U.S television are very wealthy and very powerful and the people at the top
of the news networks get paid an awful lot of money I have never earned
anything close to the amount of money I earned in the one year I worked where General Electric was my boss at MSNBC so
what I think happens is a self-censorship where the people who rise to the top have learned how not to
rock any boats and they know if they do rock boats they will lose their huge salaries
newspapers like the New York Times The Washington Post and the Wall Street Journal tend to frame a deeper narrative
that tells us what we should believe matters they set the agenda that influences what
TV news programs also cover for example they don't focus on inequality and class
differences as Independent Media executive Brian Drew lay if they don't talk about the working
class and part of it is it's like the the idea that you know they promote this idea that you know if you buy a lottery
ticket you could win right so you're already thinking that maybe you could win so if you're in the if you're in the
working class or you're part of the working class that's unemployed you still have this hope that somehow you're
going to go into the middle class there's been very little attention paid to class I mean you were saying that the
media really doesn't discuss this they don't really uh highlight class differences in America they're much more
comfortable talking about racial differences or ethnic differences at the same time in their business practices
they're very conscious of demographics what class are they attracting upper
class how to cater their advertising how to sell it no they go I mean you know
the internet is a perfect example the only thing where they're constantly slicing and dicing who you are so they
know exactly how much you make so they can pitch what kind of products to you but that's that's this whole sort of
Madness of the consumer Society that's been created by modern capitalism but
the the key thing I think that you're getting at is is that even though there is a reality of Class A working class in
this country and a ruling class or a Boudoir class people have been trained
not to think in those terms so they don't even know who they are
some networks like Fox News owned by Rupert Murdoch seem to be more
comfortable presenting a right-wing political line they have helped shift many media Outlets to the right there is
a school of thought that says we should have given the citizens of Baghdad 48 hours to get out of Dodge and flatten
the place then it would be already over and we could have done that in two days that may be so but old media is being
eclipsed by the new says George Scribner the vice president of digitas a company
that comes up with digital strategies for big companies and studies how affluent consumers now Drive Marketing
in an era of growing economic inequality the one thing that's different now is
that the media is owned by everyone you know there's there the only the thing that's kind of leveling off the
dollars to some extent is that everyone has access to Twitter everyone has
access to blogging and there's this new kind of fast and fluid Coalition
building like Occupy Wall Street what street was one example of that of the Arab Spring wasn't an example of that so
in some ways kind of the the there's the check there's a new check and balance I don't think that's necessarily changing
the restructuring of income and wealth but I do think there's another trip switch that that might help us when
things get too bad so the digital media in a way is where democracy exists today
it's not in politics it's not in big business it's not in big money that's true I think that's well said
there is some debate on how free the internet really is given corporate control and government censorship but it
does make possible more interactivity at the same time media attention still tends to revolve around the political
Elite with authority even if that elite doesn't necessarily have the power to
shape priorities or impose policies but when you talk to ordinary Americans
many of them feel it's totally fair they're seeing different points of view they're seeing people who are critical
from time to time they're you know they see the media as the liberal media in some instances I was in the Soviet Union
and it was we were always raised in this country that that's pure propaganda and frankly it was very ineffective
propaganda because they never pretended to have two points of view they would have some one point of view saying how
great things are but in our country propaganda is really effective because
they have the appearance of debates the United States of America will not permit
the world's most dangerous regimes to threaten us Jeff Cohn says that just as
Americans were misled about Iraq before the war they are being misled today about Iran he pointed to a study about
Iraq before the American Invasion that found that of some 393 people who were
interviewed on all the networks only three were anti-war because almost everything we knew about
Iraq before The Invasion turned out to be false and almost everything we're learning today about Iran
is uh not accurate and we you know we went to the New York Times a couple months ago where they said that the
international atomic energy Association has put out an assessment that the
nuclear program in Iran has a military objective an affair this media criticism
group went to the times and said which report is that we've never heard of it the times knew they'd made a big error
it was a prominent error They removed the sentence from their website but they
refused to correct the error it's not just Wars that get propagandized media
does not often cover the people behind the scenes who run things says William Hartung who has written about the
military industrial complex you would think there would be some Independence
in the journalism on this issue but in some cases reporters have even said to me well you know I can't go after the
Pentagon harder or the company's harder or this Nexus of influence harder because this company is a big Advertiser
in the paper and we'll get pressure you know if we do those kinds of stories so we'll do stories about the more in
Afghanistan we'll repeat what the president has to say on an issue but there's not really a lot of interest or
resources put into investigating these kinds of connections David Swanson who also writes about military policy agrees
well the corporate media in the United States is integrated with the military-industrial complex some of the
same corporations are making profits from both there are two major political
parties that don't have much disagreement on this topic so it's not a topic for debate no matter if ninety
percent of the public is upset about it it's not acceptable news Michael Claire who's investigated the
destructive power of oil and gas companies says the same is true when it comes to that industry the media doesn't
cover this for the most part in fact the media is largely in League because of
the advertising dollars that the oil and gas Lobby provides they're very heavily
dependent on Advertising Revenue so they're very careful in what they say
big business a wealthy and frequent Advertiser in the media is often not
scrutinized by the media that was the case in the financial crisis as Sheila
krumholz of the center for responsive politics so these are complicated issues the
issues are are difficult to understand on a good day and they seem again very Arcane and and unimportant to the
average American so it's possible that that some media were uh
laboring away trying to explain why this was critical information that the voters need I think a lot of blame though can
be laid at the at the feet of the media for the financial collapse ultimately what we do know is that it's critical if
if there if there's any uh perfect scenario that shows why transparency and
paying attention and scrutinizing the the powerful players and what they want and what they're doing to get get their
way the financial crisis is is that perfect example it shows us how important
transparency is because significant wealth demands significant attention
together we can give you and your wealth the wings to soar
[Applause] Goldman Sachs Wealth Management [Music]
at the same time media has become so pervasive online and off on TV and on
our mobile phones that many Americans say they are becoming victims of information overload the more they watch
the less they know [Music] sure information overload is I think a a
a serious threat to democracy because it
doesn't work if people aren't Vigilant nobody's going to hold
members of Congress accountable for you you have to take you have to make sure
that you're heard I think there's also the the sense that because there is this tension and some
would say healthy tension between uh concern about protecting the
process democracy and government from monies undue influence versus protecting
freedom of speech and privacy nobody wants to censor information we want our
representatives to have all the information even if it's coming from Deep pocketed corporations unions or
trade associations very narrow interest just want to make sure that they are doing their job to seek alternative
perspectives even if they're coming from groups that have no power and have no money
media criticism tends to revolve around what's being covered and not covered and
not on the way media narratives shape how we think and what we think about that's the power of media and why it is
now among the forces ruling America
foreign coming up in the next episode of who
rules America money now controls politics and you look at our system as so broken
nobody in their right mind would try to copy our system if they wanted a real democracy
next time on who rules America
[Applause]
hello Chicago every school child learns power in Washington is formally divided
three ways between the executive branch in the white house now occupied by
Barack Obama in the judicial branch topped by the Supreme Court with nine
judges all political appointees and the legislative branch where the
Senate has a hundred members with two from every state and the House of Representatives
435 drawn from districts across America this is the formal system of checks and
balances that is supposed to keep the country on the stable course of democracy
and yet wherever you go in this capital of America and meet the people who are the most informed about how the
government really works you hear that the system isn't working and that the voters are not in charge
you hear it from a member of Congress who controls America
an elite group of people who function in a stratosphere
globally and Beyond the Constitution beyond the reach of government they have
enormous resources you hear it from an expert on our elections our politics are being
hijacked they're being hijacked by anyone by people who are willing to spend millions of dollars to you know
elect or defeat certain candidates you hear it from the head of a public interest group we have a plutocracy we
have a corporate plutocracy and the rules in Washington are written by the corporate lobbyists working on behalf of
the biggest corporate interests in the country and you hear about lobbyists from a veteran former Congressional
staffer who would only talk to us if his face and voice were altered
99 of the people that I see lobbying Congress are white men and women who you
can tell are where very nice expensive suit and ties and dresses
and they are going into the Republican offices I rarely see African Americans here I
rarely see Hispanics I rarely see Asians I rarely see Muslims
um it's like you see these very well-dressed guys who just came off from
their Jets and you can tell they're right out of the country club and they're going to the Republican
offices asking for a tax cut of some kind these are not just opinions this
well-researched book by William domhoff details how the government today is being run by powerful Elite forces
outside the government as we will see his conclusions are supported by experienced insiders here
in Washington D.C all of these insiders say that money and special interests are
now in control they too ask who rules America
[Music] foreign [Music]
in Washington we spoke with leaders of three respected Watchdog organizations that specialize in researching and
analyzing hidden forces operating behind the scenes
public citizen focuses on corruption and accountability issues Robert Weissman is
their president and described how laws get passed how does a piece of legislation emerge
how does it become law how does it get implemented and how does it get enforced at every step of the way you really have
sort of corporations in whatever industry dominating the process why don't congressmen the people we elect
challenge this system well they are products of the system and so they've
got an inherent bias a favorite look they've succeeded in the system one way or another and those who challenge it
are going to have to fight really entrenched power so of course there are many of them who are very good and who
do challenge the system but by and large people got to Washington because they figured out how to make the system work
for them even if they came in as insiders most of them were quickly educated on the ways that things that
really do work in Washington if they hope to get things done or get reelected and basic come to the corporate
interests where does the money come from the top 100 donors have given 77 percent
of the money going to Super Pacs that means one percent of the donors are
giving 64 percent of the money this is a tiny Elite that can afford to make the
contributions uh that are going to be most influential in this election cycle
this website opensecrets.org documents where all the money in politics originate Sheila
krumholz oversees it as the executive director of the center for responsive politics I think many of the people who
are concerned about money's role in in Washington and how it greases the skids
for for uh private narrow interests to kind of Rule
the Day believe that the money is that the members of Congress and policy
makers control the levers of power but that the donors
the kind of patrons of these people are operating the strings the politicians
are kind of the visible locus of power but the but the people behind them really are calling the shots how do we
find out who those people are well we have millions upon millions of
records of donations to Federal candidates political action committees
including leadership Pacs which are their kind of slush funds that they control and the parties we also can see
money going directly to the super Pacs these are the uh political action
committees which are supposedly are only giving contributions uh to groups that
are spending money to run independent expenditures independent of the campaigns and parties the problem is of
course that there's this Secret pot of cash being collected by groups
that do not disclose where the money's coming from and they are running advertising political ads which are
often quite damning and nasty and not sometimes irresponsible but are highly
influential and we have no idea where their money is coming from
she showed us what their data shows a small minority controlling the process
with very few millionaires funding all politics there are 610 registered super Pacs 190
of 95 of them are ponying up the money for the ad so far but this chart really
demonstrates what a dramatic increase we've seen in uh spending on Advertising
by these groups so in 200 2012 uh we're
seeing over 100 million spent that's a hundred percent increase over the amount spent in 2008 and a 400 increase over
last cycle this is a who's who of who's lobbying in
Washington between 1998 and 2012 the U.S Chamber of Commerce spent
831 million dollars the American Medical Association
269 Million Dollars General Electric 268 million dollars
the pharmaceutical research and manufacturers of America admit to
219 million plus for lobbying and there are many many more
2012 could be a turning point in American politics because of all the big money that's literally being invested
Mary Boyle is the vice president of common cause and who is ruling America you certainly
have to look at the people who are giving the most money to political campaigns they are highly influential
people who give a lot of money to political campaigns millions of of dollars you know want something for
return they tend to be really Savvy business people who have made a lot of money because uh you know they know what
they do they're doing and they don't make investments without wanting an investment on their return
it's unfortunate but obviously it buys media time
um it also buys a constant uh male efforts and also obviously you support
uh candidates who will ultimately come to the United States Congress who may vote your way
the largest contributors to political campaigns in America are the financial institutions the second largest
contributors are large real estate developers that means that if you're running for office you have to get
elected by promising to support policies that are supported by the real estate sector and by the financial sector that
lends to the real estate sector and doesn't this really kind of put the Democracy under threat yeah I mean
corporations are free now due to Citizens United and a couple of other
um Court rulings to give more money than they have ever been allowed to be before and that is certainly a threat to our
democracy because what it does is it drowns out the voices of Regular People it's uh you know discouraging in one
sense and that you know the election of 2008 showed a tremendous number of
people who want change and yet there seems to be at every turn change is being resisted by minorities that are
very skillful at undermining change certainly 2008 was the you know change
election and we have been disappointed there there has not been more change
coming from the White House at WWE now that President Obama is running for
reelection he too is spending most of his time raising money two billion dollars for political campaigns that's
why Robert Weissman says this Scandal involves both parties yeah it's a bipartisan problem for sure
the uh the 2 billion is just the presidential race the over the overall national race will probably be around 8
billion Obama is an extremely talented fundraiser so he's going to be able to
raise big money the massive chunks of outside Super Rich money and corporate
money though look like they're going to go overwhelmingly on to the Republicans it is so expensive to run for office
whether it's a presidency or the state legislature that you just have to go out
and start raising money from people who want something in return to run for office
the money in politics just doesn't Finance candidates it pays for lobbying in 2011 there were 12
654 lobbyists spending 3.32 billion dollars on influencing politicians
agencies and regulators I
need us and we met in the cafeteria and we looked all around said all these people are lobbying Congress and they
think they're going to have some influence but the influence doesn't happen here there's a special place in
the capital that special people go to that we can't go to and that's where the people who have money go to do the
lobbying and they also have their special parties where they pay a lot of money to have a face-to-face with their
Congress person that's where things get done the scholar Francis Fox Piven says
that's because of another problem not all Americans can or do vote
uh Zurich developed very twisted and very distorted system of electoral
representation uh it is distorted not only by Big Money although that's
certainly very very important because of the advertising and the campaigning that it makes possible a lot of people do not
in fact have the franchise and even those who vote are not represented
fairly people in a smaller states have more representation and so forth so this
helps explain why small but well-funded groups like The pro-israel Lobby or
pro-military Lobby can have so much impact Joanne Landy has examined who
makes foreign policy it's an informal network
of the people who rule America even though they don't go around wearing signs saying We Rule America that's who
makes the positive whether it's with politicians or whether it's with think tanks or with the military or you know I
mean it's they're all interconnected Landy says these lobbies are more united than divided another disagreements among
them but their disagreements about methods not goals you know so some
people think you should get rid of some nuclear weapons other people think you should hold on to the law but the
differences are really they cover the gamut from A to B as they used to say the sort of day by day run-of-the-mill
reality is that those who have high
positions in politics and strong connections with monied interests and
the moneyed interests themselves run the country we are now on the way to the Congress
which now enjoys less than a 10 approval rating from the public you know how you
know Congress personnel and we have a little pin here but they never carry anything it's always an assistant who's carrying something and all they get is
people who are fawning over them and you know so they're in their bubble and they
don't recognize I think that the country is so cynical about them the congressmen
are cynical too I literally ran into representative John Conyers in a dark
hallway he's the longest serving member he complains that they are being deluged
by lobbyists are you seeing a lot of Wall Street people donating to Congress
trying to stop the reforms I don't you don't see that but you know what's going
on they haven't stopped Congress wanted to reform Financial you
know the financial laws and it seems like they're being stopped at the regulatory level by all
these donations from members of Congress I mean from Big Banks and Wall Street
well it will show up it shows up on the court at least uh but I I have no reason
to believe that there's been any cessation of reduction and so you get
the same results stagnation JPMorgan Chase has shocked the markets by
revealing a trading loss of over two billion dollars two weeks later it was reported that the huge Bank JP Morgan
Chase lost 2 billion dollars gambling on exotic derivative products in what they
called a synthetic credit portfolio if Jamie Diamond makes this mistake because we know he's good what the hell is going
on at Citigroup and a Bank of America thanks for the mistakes by JP Morgan which is the biggest U.S Bank in terms
of assets rippled through the financial world for many it brings back memories of 2008 when big Banks risky bets
threatened to collapse the financial system who was later reported that the bank's lobbyists had fought against the
new rule that if passed would have prevented this giant loss the internet buzzed with the bad news
because this is the derivatives Market this is very important could pan out to
be nothing largest U.S Bank you know best buddies with the FED
um and of course this is a whole lot of debt but none of the commentary I saw
discussed the lobbying by JP Morgan Chase you see Banks time and time again
getting into problems slipping up and you've got America's biggest bank JP
Morgan doing exactly that and frankly um the banks are Their Own Worst Enemy
we know we were sloppy we know we were stupid we know there was bad judgment we don't know if any of that's true yet of
course Regulators should look at something like this that's their job so you know we are totally open component regulators and they will come through on
conclusions but we intend to fix it learn from it and be a better company when it's done one of the amazing
lessons I think of everything that led up to the crash is they can't control themselves even to the extent that they
will destroy their own industry even at the extent they will destroy their own companies the short-term profit motive
seeps in in so many pores of individuals and divisions and offices and whole
companies they will destroy themselves so we definitely can't trust them to figure out how to control themselves
public citizen later played a role outlawing insider trading by members of
Congress on information they obtained in hearings and investigations public
citizen considered it corruption the notion that the powerful shouldn't
get to create one set of rules for themselves and another set of rules for everybody else
and if we expect that to apply to our biggest corporations and to our most
successful citizens it certainly should apply to our elected officials
especially at a time when there's a deficit of trust between this city and
the rest of the country [Applause]
Congressman Jesse Jackson Jr the son of the famous Civil Rights leader has been
representing Chicago's second district to 17 years he's consumed with
investigating and explaining how the system was set up historically to serve
states rights and special interests I filed an amendment to the Constitution
to guarantee us the right to a public education of equal high quality why because every American that's in a
public school ought not be in states rights slavery in other words the lesson of the
African-American overcoming the Constitution with respect to states rights was not heeded Through Time by
the American people and it is the exact same system that they are stuck in today and they just don't know it we asked him
why Congress has become so dysfunctional I've never seen it more polarized I've
never seen it more divided along geographical lines along factional lines along
economic political lines it's not what the democracy was
conceived to be it's not what it has he it was supposed to evolve into and unfortunately the American people
are are the victims of this process how would you answer that question who rules
America there are two types of material power in this country and in the world
one is political and one is economic we the people have the power politically
to control and determine the economic system and there is a constant struggle
between people power and economic power We the People control through the political system are economic Destiny
and the economic Destiny of the nation increasingly the heavy hand of the economic system is controlling the
political system and manipulating the people who controls America
uh an elite group of people who function in a stratosphere
globally and Beyond the Constitution beyond the reach of government they have
enormous resources they own the media the Power to investigate
they get to shape The Narrative of the stories they get to model and position
candidates for public office and shape an image in front of the American people
an image that oftentimes does not jive with reality and yet the American people
see this image of leadership and they vote for it only to find out the human
frailties and the shortcomings of the individual at a later date we met a former Congressional staffer who worked
on the hill for a leading legislator for 12 years he agreed to talk with us only
if we blacked out his face and distorted his voice he was scathing in his
description of how decisions get made this is a great institution but
unfortunately you have uh an Untold amount of members and
Congress that spend 60 percent of their time raising money and then when because they got a run
every two years which makes no sense um they have to raise millions of
dollars just to be competitive to go on television because the CBS ABC and NBC
and CNN charge this outrageous amount of money to get TV commercials it ought to be
free or very low cost so what happens is these members of Congress are relying on
well-intentioned staffers many of them are just out of college many of them were interns to
make major decisions on foreign policy and domestic policy and health care and
employment and jobs and they're not really mature enough he also told us
many of the staffers get bought off by special interests and big donors and a
lot of these um young people are just out of college instead of graduate school they have to
pay back these enormous college loans and graduate school loans they're paying
unbelievable rent in Washington D.C Northern Virginia oftentimes more than a third of their income a lot of them were
taken care of out of work uh family members so there's a pressure for them
I'm sorry on them to go work for the money to interest on K Street a lot of
staffers even Progressive staffers have left the hill and worked for the
large drug companies work for the oil companies well it's usually the biggest industry
it's usually the biggest companies in whatever industry you're looking at if you're looking at overall National Economic Policy Wall Street is the
dominant influence you don't know what's happening in the pharmaceutical industry and you know they're the big big farm has got cause the shots as as you know
within the financial industry which factions are most important it's still really the biggest institutions that set
the agenda has there been polls on where Americans think our money goes in our government and just about nobody has a
clue people wildly overestimate how much goes to Aid and of course part of that
is because we talk about weaponizing foreign Nations as Aid uh and and they're they wildly underestimate how
much goes to the military and yet says our whistle-blowing former Congressional aide the real problem is
not just corporate power the biggest problem in America is not the
corporations it it's not even necessarily the money for campaigns the the biggest problem is
that the American people don't really organize themselves in their congressional districts to
mitigate the power of special interest they're not utilizing their democracy because they don't know how the game works the donors know exactly how the
game works you give a member of Congress the money they're gonna probably do what
they've asked them to do so if you've got millions and millions of people who voted for Obama or vote
for their member of Commerce and then that's the end of their political involvement well that's the end of
democracy [Music]
[Music]
coming up next the roll Wall Street plays Wall Street the banks and the financial
industry writ large is the single largest source of campaign cash in the
United States and it has been for years if not decades next time on who rules America
no serious about who rules America can leave out wall Street's Financial clout
we've left its impact for last secure in the knowledge that in today's America
this financial district is a key Power Center a hub for the financialization of
an economy in which the control of big money is often Central to the control of
politics and Society we have spoken with a respected corporate executive who told us Point
Blank that the rich now rule America my personal opinion is a large part of
what's Happening economically is due to basically globalization and digitization
of business that can't be stopped Professor Stanley aronowitz quotes the
famous sociologist C Wright Mills on the same theme from 50 years ago
it was really the financial sector is the Leading Edge of corporate capital and it was a Leading Edge of corporate
capital in the mid 50s of course today it's much more accentuated because of the relative decline of industrial
corporations I've heard things that will blow your mind and now I think it's time
you get the whole story many Americans see all this as a
conspiracy by an unaccountable secret cabal that operates like a power center
Beyond Democratic control the internet is filled with videos about shadowy
billionaires and their plots that control everything ongoing right now it is a conspiracy of
institutional corruption from the highest level from International Bankers
to the super rich from Washington to Rome they're all in it together is Wall
Street a conspiracy and what role does it play and who rules America is it an
outside job or an inside job it's not a matter of
Elites outside the state although of course they have enormous influence but the reason they have enormous influence
because it's because the state is structured to be reproducing their power and authority in society Trio Panic he's
uh Economist and analyst and I think he offered a perspective that we really
haven't heard before he's sort of fighting against a conspiratorial idea you know that there's a small group of
people in a room somewhere running things he's talking about the structure of the society the values of it who
really runs things [Music] foreign
is not only a place it's an industry with thousands of interconnected firms
that call themselves a financial services industry but they are much more
than that they are deeply involved with how our country is run says Robert Weissman the head of the public interest
group public citizen well you can't understand what's happening in the country in the last 30
years in terms of economic policy and really the way the country's evolved politically without understanding how
Wall Street has grown in power it's grown in economic power and it's grown in political power and that's been
synergistic they use their political power to wipe out a whole range of regulations that control them in the
past investors would buy stocks in real companies and industries that generated jobs provided services or created
products of value those days are gone they became a bigger and bigger portion
of the economy then we went from an economy of production making things to one based on
consumption buying and selling things consumers soon drove 70 percent of the
economy as Banks private Equity companies and hedge funds grew in size
as it became a bigger portion of the economy they were able to leverage more and more political power and a really
horrible cycle for the functioning of democracy and what that led us up to of course was the crash in 2008. so
consumers went deeper and deeper into debt and then Bankers bought and sold
debt while they changed the rules regulating their activities a whole
series of deregulatory moves that had been enabled by the influence the political influence of Wall Street led
to the actual functioning the economy to be a disaster
because as billionaire investor George Soros told me years ago the capitalist
economy is also inherently unstable and prone to Bubbles and crashes I I've
worked with the theory that financial markets are inherently unstable and to
prevent excesses you need some kind of
intervention supervision regulation uh unfortunately the prevailing
idea is that markets tend towards equilibrium and so we work with a false
concept of how financial markets operate we were told by someone for example that
the beauty of globalization is that no one is in control well it there is a great advantage in
that because controls have their own problems in fact
markets are much more efficient than centralized controls but it doesn't mean
that that there should be absolutely no control and in fact if you look at
reality ever since you've had capitalism and
ever since you have had financial markets you have had a crises and each time there was a
crisis there was something done to prevent a recurrence the problem this time is the dramatic
surge in debt look at this these are charts showing the debt of the United States page after page illustrating how
much money is owed it's mind-boggling it gets even more complicated when you
start talking about new financial instruments like derivatives that have turned the industry into a global Casino
derivatives can also be used as insurance betting that a loan will or won't default before a given date they
become the basis of a big betting system like in a casino Financial journalist Max Kaiser says
just a handful of big Financial firms now dominate the industry and the global
economy without a doubt there's JP Morgan which is in bed with the FED into the central banking system
Wall Street bets on future values and the performance of practically everything of value
Southeast Morgan Goldman Sachs are the two primary players in this in this
Global financialized world soon CEOs financiers and Executives of a
small number of investment Banks and hedge funds became rich and Powerful by
controlling specialized high-stakes markets they are connected to the central
banking system which is the fed the ECB the bank of international settlements of Switzerland is kind of the potential
Bank of the central banks and the these are the folks that are keeping their
main purpose at this point is to keep interest rates as close to zero as possible to make it as cheap as possible
for people who are borrowing money to speculate to be able to speculate freely without having to pay for the money that
they're borrowing to speculate even if these financial markets are supposedly open to all a relatively few Traders
investors and asset managers came to structure the markets to increase their
own wealth and power and if they ever make a Bad Bet then they quickly move to cover their bad
Bets with austerity programs or some kind of bailout program or a quantitative easing program
Swiss study by physicists on the ownership and control of stock exchanges in 48 countries examined 24
877 stocks and a hundred and six thousand one hundred and forty one
shareholding entities to their amazement they found that just 10 companies were
dominating all stock ownership here they are
when we talk about money and we talk about Wall Street we have to ask this question where does the money come from
that's used in the speculation in our financial markets this man knows Barry
James Dyke he's an asset manager and he works with clients so where does it come from the money comes from people's
savings regular old savings where people's retirement funds which is saving for retirement but to the people who put
their money into these accounts and know how it's being invested or spent they don't have a clue
it's only now as a result of the financial crisis that the public is learning slowly that the self-styled
Masters of the Universe on Wall Street speculated on risky Investments and
created a crash green Carter the editor of Vanity Fair wrote it can fairly be said that the
chain of catastrophic bets made over the past decade by a few hundred Bankers May
well turn out to be the greatest non-violent crime against humanity in history they brought the world's economy
to its knees lost tens of millions of people their jobs in their homes and
crashed the retirement plans of a generation and they could drive an estimated 200 million people worldwide
into dire poverty in 2010 before Occupy Wall Street labor
unions were marching to protest Wall Street crimes
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on the 29th of April this is a march on Wall Street organized by the AFL-CIO
which says they've organized 200 protests so far but you never know it in
terms of the media coverage well today the media is out and they're marching because of a theft millions of jobs are
missing 11 million jobs according to the AFL CIO they want payback they want Wall
Street to pay they want a new tax on financial transaction
we are trying to recover from a financial crisis that some people say is
even worse than the depression in the 1930s and yet reforms that have been
proposed very modest reforms are being fought tooth and nail at the regulatory level by Wall Street firms and
financiers uh do you think that they have a disproportionate power to
influence Congress there's no doubt about that not just the Congress but State legislatures as well their strength
their power runs the entire Gambit of the of the American political system
I read that the financial services industry had hired 28 lobbyists per
member of Congress to try to influence their decisions to try to inform how
what happens to you when lobbyists come into your office to try to get you to vote their way how does that work that
game well it's very hard to to get a meeting with me I don't think that they spent a lot of money trying to Lobby me
I'm kind of clear on my ideology clear my view of representative government and
very clear on on the Constitution but suffice it to say while my district is
competitive there are many more competitive districts than mine and every member of Congress to that extent
becomes a prisoner to the election process to the fundraising process
Sheila krumholz of the center for responsive politics says wall Street's power is well documented
Wall Street the banks and the financial industry writ large is the single
largest source of campaign cash in the United States and it has been for years if not decades
it is uh kind of following the Willie Sutton rule of politics you go where the
money is that's where the money is they have not just political action committees that componia the maximum
amounts to influential members of Congress who have jurisdiction over their industry but also they can Pony up
pass the hat and pony up hundreds of thousands of dollars just among their partners and vice presidents and
Executives in their companies she says their clout will impact the election in 2012.
so they can muster a ton of money and this is also seen specifically in the
presidential race in 2012 where of course Mitt Romney has hailed from uh the private into private Equity industry
and prior to that Barack Obama had been darling of Wall Street so Wall Street
and and banks in particular are an enormously influential uh part of the
U.S industry that power is being shown as Wall Street
lobbyists try to sabotage Financial reforms passed by Congress
two years after the passage of the legislation and are The Regulators doing the good things that Congress told them
to do and the answer to a considerable extent is no they're way behind on issuing the rules are supposed to issue
where they actually have issued the rules are getting challenged in almost every instance in court by the Chamber
of Commerce or the financial securities Roundtable or other Wall Street interests and they're having a tough
time with the Judiciary that's favorable to big business and maintaining the rules that they Vision so reforms can be
passed but they can also be sabotaged right they get multiple bites at the Apple they get a bite in Congress where
they've got enormous power but at least it's mostly a public fight and then they go to the Regulatory Agencies where they also have enormous power but it's
usually below the radar off the front pages and they don't even have the public scrutiny
recently on a radio show I host I discussed Wall Street power and the financial meltdown with financial
journalist Max Kaiser and Stacy Herbert as well as Andy stephanian an animal
rights activist who led a campaign against the company in the business of painful medical tests on poppies after
his group drove their stock price down the company went broke but then the government labeled him a financial
terrorist and sent him to prison we began by comparing Wall Street to the
Titanic the unsinkable ship that sank if the Titanic were the story today the
difference would be that Goldman Sachs and JP Morgan would have heavy bets that
would pay off when the ship sinks and Hank Paulson would be down there widening the gash it brings me to a new
study out just recently and they looked at hundreds of shipwrecks throughout the
hundreds past few hundred years what they found is that the norm is actually for women and children to die more
frequently than men and that the captain usually didn't go down with the ship
they were usually the the their survival rate was the highest these guys they
they use derivatives as Warren Buffett calls them Weapons of Mass Financial destruction to to make situations worse
because they're bets that they have uh on on these calamities becoming worse pay off enormously and we see that in
the in the numbers in the bonuses it's reflected and you were nodding before when Max was speaking about all of this
is this really true that they're betting against you know us in a sense betting
against uh you know hoping for bad things to happen I don't think that everybody that works on Wall Street has
this mentality but there is a culture that's in place where people have learned to at least accept and and
justify Behavior like looking at these Investments betting Investments against
you know things to fail whether it be a government whether it be a country or whether it be a company to fail and and
say oh well I can justify this and you look at it like it's numbers you don't look at the people behind it you don't look at the families that suffer you
don't look at the country that suffers as a result well here's what what you know is is mind-boggling to me is you
are presenting a picture of intentionality that people did things to further their own interests they knew
what they were doing it was calculated and yet in most of the media
uh it seems as if it's presented as some sort of mistake as miscalculation uh G
we wanted housing to go up but it went down you can't blame us everybody was doing it there therefore nobody was
doing it therefore nobody can be prosecuted well it's assume that there was intention uh is that a good thing or
a bad thing some would argue that it's it's a good thing to have people who are who are parasites in an economy because
parasites are useful I have parasites and my intestines they perform a useful function the problem is the parasites
don't run my hard lungs and brain in in America the parasites write the
regulatory framework that's supposed to be governing them so the parasites run the show is Wall Street affecting you
know capitalists is Wall Street affecting our policy making well they're becoming our policy makers at least for
a short period of time and then returning back to the banks um so it's an evolving door kind of thing essentially I mean they're in and
out of whether it be the Bush Administration or the Obama Administration the different positions within the cabinet
that are you know governing Finance our individuals that are former CEOs of banks where they might go back to being
an honorary chair on the board of directors it's it's this incestuous relationship between Wall Street and
policy sounds so corrupt Danny you asked who runs America and I say it's
ignorance and you know Thomas Jefferson warned of this and that we needed
a media who would inform the population otherwise we would lose our democracy so
this is ignorance that is being forced upon a criminalizing knowledge this is
something that I was startled by when NASDAQ opened up you know on in Times
Square a big Studio out front with a big window and you know and then I I said
I'd love to tour the exchange and uh you know this was the time that Bernie Madoff was running NASDAQ you know and
they said you can't tour The Exchange there is no exchange it looks like in exchange there's a building that says
NASDAQ but the actual operations are computers algorithmic trading goes well
beyond that as you're alluding to it's not about individuals who are taking any risks personally to make a market as
part of a capitalist system these are computers that have virtually unlimited credit because the cost of credit is now
zero and the ability for a bank like JP Morgan with a 90 trillion dollar balance sheet of derivatives they can land a
trillion dollars to a computer program to make a bet if the BET doesn't work then they get a federal bailout if the
BET works then they get a bonus so it's heads they win tells we lose and this has been going on now for a number of
years but it's gotten shockingly more disproportionate and asymmetric this shift towards super fast computers
is just another example of the deeper shift we've seen in power as Finance in
effect takes over with politicians courting Wall Street at Global conferences and in private meetings as
George Soros explains it is actually symptomatic of the age
because you have uh presidents and prime ministers courting the the the
financiers and the industrialists uh so it does show a shift in in the
relative power but I I don't want to convey
see I don't believe that that business can in any way replace
the power of the state because it's different kind of power so the the sovereignty is still in the hands of the
state Wall Street you know it sounds like a conspiracy theory but Wall Street controls everything you know I mean
they're the major shareholders of all the major companies look at the BP oil spill who is who is the owner of BP oil
spill the biggest shareholders J.P Morgan there's so much happening now you know
there's no stopping what's happening now the system everyone knows the system's broken whether you're a you know a one
percenter or 99 or a republican a Democrat Anarchist communist capitalist
everyone knows the system is broken so now we need to fix it
we'll give the last word to a scholar with a longer view American historian
Eric foner I think what we face is a serious democracy deficit not only in
the United States but in many other countries as well I'm not quite ready to say a plutocracy determines everything
that happens in the United States but I think the Democracy deficit arises from the fact that
fundamental issues are now just off limits from democracy it doesn't matter
who is elected the basic issues about Finance about de-industrialization
things like that are about globalization about the loss of power of ordinary
people over their own lives that's not open to discussion I don't care if it's Democrat Republican Obama
Romney that's not part of what their debate is you their debate is at the margins so
that the fundamental issues facing Ordinary People are not subject to democratic consideration government does
not represent the ordinary people even though people elect the government the government does not respond at all to
the needs and aspirations of Ordinary People in this series we've investigated who
rules America examining the history of deep conflicts in this country going back to the American Revolution we've
dissected the power of the military corporations the media and Wall Street we have shown that these powerful forces
often undermine democracy rather than strengthen it
there is a battle on the way for the soul of America for whom rules America that has put these deeper issues on the
agenda the question is a fundamental transformation possible or will special
interests in the wealthiest Americans continue to dominate in a country that says it's the most dynamic democracy on
Earth the belief in our democracy is almost an article of religious Faith even though
there's a separation of church and state perhaps that's why the views you've heard in this series are rejected by The
Establishment rejected by Academia rejected by the Press they believe only
the people have power if anyone does but opinion leaders don't look into it they
don't focus on interests they focus on ideologies on personalities not
institutions the idea of a power elite is an anathema to them because if people
believed it that might spur dissatisfaction and dissent
the age of the internet and global television you can't stop people from being exposed to counter narratives to
official myths these issues are debatable of course but most political
coverage doesn't debate other ways of looking at the world it relies on the
usual pundits recycling conventional wisdom
they don't ask who rules America
members of Congress I have the high privilege and the distinct honor of presenting to you the president of the
United States foreign
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