The Glass Houses print seems fairly
self-explanatory, but l should explain some of the ideas
and motivation behind it. A basic idea is that we, meaning
we as a society, are familiar with the cautionary anecdotes
about “glass houses” and “houses of
cards”, yet despite warning signs we allow dangerous
practices to go unchecked. People with money have the
power to change many things in the world. Unfortunately
money and power are often used to prevent change, no matter
how broken the current system may be, especially when
their wealth is a direct result of that system. Over the
past couple years, the U.S. has seen several chronically
toxic systems—healthcare, energy, finance, auto
manufacturing—melt down into large-scale catastrophes,
causing widespread suffering. The administrators of these
systems, from Wall Street to big oil, haven’t been
spared from suffering, but instead of letting the perpetrators
bear the brunt of their disastrous judgment, our political
leaders have done what they usually do: whatever their
financial (read: corporate) backers want them to.
I don’t want to diminish some
of the positive reforms that have been passed by our Congress,
because I think that things like making it illegal for
health insurers to deny coverage to people with preexisting
conditions or mandating an audit of the Federal Reserve
are better than nothing. What saddens and angers me is
that all these systems have proven themselves unsustainable
and in need of massive change, yet the only changes made
have been minor and mostly cosmetic.
Matt Taibbi’s recent article
on the Senate’s attempts at financial reform described
a lot of the mechanics behind the political castration
of reform efforts. I highly recommend reading the article
if you’re interested in all the gory details. One
thing in particular stood out to me: when it came down
to crunch time in the debate, the financial-services industry
sent over 2,000 paid lobbyists to Washington; the only
counterpart on the progressive side, Americans for Financial
Reform, had 60 unpaid volunteers lobbying on their behalf.
The result of the lobbyist blitz was a bill with giant
loopholes that will essentially let Wall Street go back
to business as usual, free to pull the same stunts that
led to the global economic crisis.
I have a feeling we can expect similar
results when it comes time for an energy and environmental
policy bill in the wake of BP’s disaster in the
Gulf. You would think it’s easy to find a common-sense
solution in the wake of a meltdown, but recent history
says otherwise. The health-care and financial reform debates
have demonstrated that money still trumps both logic and
public sentiment, or at least has a way of watering legislation
down to the point of toothlessness.
I don’t believe that money is
the root of all evil, but I do think that many of the
world’s major man-made problems have been the result
of ignoring social and ecological currency in favor of
economic currency. For the individuals and corporations
lobbying Congress, the dollars they spend in Washington
constitute a sound economic investment. But in social
and ecological terms, maintaining the status quo will
only lead to our collective bankruptcy.
-Shepard