The rise of the Regressive Right and the reawakening of Democracy

ROBERT REICH:   …The re­gres­sive right has slowly con­sol­i­dated power over the last three decades as in­come and wealth have con­cen­trated at the top. In the late 1970s the rich­est 1 per­cent of Amer­i­cans re­ceived 9 per­cent of total in­come and held 18 per­cent of the na­tion’s wealth; by 2007, they had more than 23 per­cent of total in­come and 35 per­cent of Amer­ica’s wealth. CEOs of the 1970s were paid 40 times the av­er­age worker’s wage; now CEOs re­ceive 300 times the typ­i­cal work­ers’ wage.

This con­cen­tra­tion of in­come and wealth has gen­er­ated the po­lit­i­cal heft to dereg­u­late Wall Street and halve top tax rates. It has bankrolled the so-called Tea Party move­ment, and cap­tured the House of Rep­re­sen­ta­tives and many state gov­ern­ments. Through a se­quence of pres­i­den­tial ap­point­ments it has also over­taken the Supreme Court. 

Scalia, Alito, Thomas, and Roberts (and, all too often, Kennedy) claim they’re con­ser­v­a­tive ju­rists. But they’re ju­di­cial ac­tivists bent on over­turn­ing sev­enty-five years of ju­rispru­dence by res­ur­rect­ing states’ rights, treat­ing the 2nd Amend­ment as if Amer­ica still re­lied on local mili­tias, nar­row­ing the Com­merce Clause, and call­ing money speech and cor­po­ra­tions peo­ple. …  (more)

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