> Whether or not we agree that the government should be interfering for the benefit of the consumer, we definitely agree that it shouldn't be interfering for the benefit of big business.
But government is largely bought and paid for by special interests. Given that, it seems there's very little point in asking what the gov't should do.
What it will do, is quite obvious: it will serve the interests of the highest bidder.
Not necessarily. Right now our system has a policy of mandatory bribery built into the system by way of campaign finance rules. It's relatively easy to go from "mandatory bribery" to "optional bribery" through public campaign funding, which I think is a step in the right direction.
Campaign finance reform is a boring but necessary first step towards fixing this mess.
I agree, that's the real world result, but we can't win that argument easily. Instead we can point out each instance of it happening and hopefully the more pragmatic liberals will come around eventually.
But government is largely bought and paid for by special interests. Given that, it seems there's very little point in asking what the gov't should do.
What it will do, is quite obvious: it will serve the interests of the highest bidder.