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LINCOLN WEEPS
By Bill Moyers
tompaine.com
October 3, 2006
http://www.tompaine.com/articles/2006/10/03/lincoln_weeps.php
Back in 1954, when I was a summer employee on Capitol Hill, I
made my first
visit to the Lincoln Memorial. I have returned many times since,
most
recently while I was in Washington filming for a documentary
about how Tom
DeLay, Jack Abramoff, Ralph Reed and Grover Norquist, among
others, turned
the conservative revolution into a racket -- the biggest
political scandal
since Watergate.
If democracy can be said to have temples, the Lincoln Memorial
is our most
sacred. You stand there silently contemplating the words that
gave voice to
Lincoln's fierce determination to save the union -- his resolve
that
"government of, by, and for the people shall not perish from the
earth." On
this latest visit, I was overcome by a sense of melancholy.
Lincoln looks
out now on a city where those words are daily mocked. This is no
longer his
city. And those people from all walks of life making their way
up the steps
to pay their respect to the martyred president -- it's not their
city,
either. Or their government. This is an occupied city, a company
town, and
government is a subservient subsidiary of richly endowed
patrons.
Once upon a time the House of Representatives was known as "the
people's
house." No more. It belongs to K Street now. That's the address
of the
lobbyists who swarm all over Capitol Hill. There are 65
lobbyists for every
member of Congress. They spend $200 million per month wining,
dining and
seducing federal officials. Per month!
Of course they're just doing their job. It's impossible to
commit bribery,
legal or otherwise, unless someone's on the take, and with
campaign costs
soaring, our politicians always have their hands out. One
representative
confessed that members of Congress are the only people in the
world expected
to take large amounts of money from strangers and then act as if
it has no
effect on their behavior. This explains why Democrats are having
a hard time
exploiting the culture of corruption embodied in the scandalous
behavior of
DeLay and Abramoff. Democrats are themselves up to their necks
in the
sludge. Just the other day one of the most powerful Democrats in
the House
bragged to reporters about tapping "uncharted donor fields in
the financial
industry" -- reminding them, not so subtlely, of the possibility
that after
November the majority leader just might be a Democrat.
When it comes to selling influence, both parties have defined
deviancy up,
and Tony Soprano himself couldn't get away with some of the
things that pass
for business as usual in Washington. We have now learned that
Jack Abramoff
had almost 500 contacts with the Bush White House over the three
years
before his fall, and that Karl Rove and other presidential staff
were
treated to his favors and often intervened on his behalf. So
brazen a pirate
would have been forced to walk the plank long ago if Washington
had not
thrown its moral compass overboard.
Alas, despite all these disclosures, nothing is happening to
clean up the
place. Just as the Republicans in charge of the House kept
secret those
dirty emails sent to young pages by Rep. Mark Foley -- a
cover-up aimed at
getting them past the election and holding his seat for the
party -- they
are now trying to sweep the DeLay-Abramoff-Reed-and-Norquist
scandals under
the rug until after Nov. 7, hoping the public at large doesn't
notice that
the House is being run by Tom DeLay's team, minus DeLay. All the
talk about
reform is placebo.
The only way to counter the power of organized money is with
organized and
outraged people. Believe me, what members of Congress fear most
is a
grassroots movement that demands clean elections and an end to
the buying
and selling of influence -- or else! If we leave it to the
powers that be
to clean up the mess that greed and chicanery have given us, we
will wake up
one day with a real Frankenstein of a system -- a monster worse
than the one
created by Abramoff, DeLay and their cronies. By then it will be
too late to
save Lincoln's hope for "government of, by, and for the people."
..........
Bill Moyers is a veteran television journalist for PBS and the
president of
the Schumann Center for Media and Democracy. "Capitol Crimes,"
the first
episode of Bill Moyers' latest series of documentary specials ,
airs
Wednesday on PBS.
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