This is a great interview. How I wish there were hundreds more journalists like Bill Moyers.
Here Peter Dreier of Occidental College interviews Bill Moyers, who is our greatest living journalist.
Here is a small sample of a fascinating exchange:
“Q: We’ve always had an upper class in America. What’s different now?
“Moyers: The rich today are richer, there are more of them, they have round-the-clock propaganda factories in Rupert Murdoch’s empire and rightwing talk radio, and corporate media have their back. The massive upward distribution of wealth engineered by our political class over the last few decades has solidified the plutocratic control of the rule-making machinery in Washington and state capitals. The Supreme Court consistently favors organized money and the political privileges of the corporate class. We have a Senate that is more responsive to affluent constituents than to middle-class constituents, while the opinions of constituents in the bottom third of income distribution have no apparent effect at all on the Senate’s roll call votes.
“One of our two major parties is dominated by extremists dedicated to destroying the social contract, and the other party has been so enfeebled by two decades of collaboration with the donor class it can offer only feeble resistance to the forces that are devastating everyday people. Our economy is a plantation run for the aristocrats—the CEOs, hedge funds, private equity firms—while the field hands are left with the scraps. Go see Robert Reich’s documentary Inequality for All. It’s all right there.”

Reblogged this on David R. Taylor-Thoughts on Texas Education.
LikeLike
Yes, great analysis of the favoritism, bias and partiality of today’s politics; a favoritism shown to the rich by the “Right” and a favortism shown to the lazy and entitlement-wanters (handout-types) by the “Left”.
As a moral and economic conservative, yet as centrist as I can be, I am waiting for someone on the Right to quote James 5: 1-7, which condemns greed, wealth hoarding (the 1%) and unjust/oppressive wages to the worker.
Until I hear Rush L, Laura C, Fox, etc. quote this I view them as hypocrites, for they use their “faith” to bash moral liberalism, but deny it when it comes to socio-economic justice to the worker (as if their “faith” taught them to that 5% of a corporation’s employees have the right to keep 95% of the profits).
LikeLike
Rick,
Religious universities, espousing social justice, don’t turn down Koch money.
Find the number of religious colleges listed when you do an internet search of “Koch Colleges”.
The Chairs of their Economics Departments will tell you they teach an “economic system that serves all.”
The U.S., with, likely the most economists, per capita didn’t, produce Piketty’s research.
Money is a powerful inducement to universities, politicians, judges and “hypocrites”.
Comments at Diane’s blog give me hope that Americans are better than those establishing policy, those talking in main stream media, those giving lip service to Christian values, and researchers, suffering from self-induced blindness.
LikeLike
If Mr. Moyers does not believe that this is happening on both sides of the aisle, then his head is in the sand. The major problem with American politics is that money talks- on BOTH sides, the republican and the democrat side of the aisle.
LikeLike
“…the other party has been so enfeebled by two decades of collaboration with the donor class it can offer only feeble resistance to the forces that are devastating everyday people.”
I think he covered your concern.
LikeLike
Some of these oligarchs aren’t even bothering to hide their disdain for the “unwashed masses.” Here’s a quote from Bruce Reed, the new president of the Broad Foundation. In regard to elected school boards, Mr. Reed has this to say in today’s Los Angeles Times:
“My general experience with political elected bodies is that the odds of them being thoughtful and well informed are never very good.”
I suppose we’re just supposed to hand over governance of our schools and everything else to the wise 1%. Well, I’m betting on the American people to deliver a resounding No Way.
LikeLike
“the odds of them being thoughtful and well informed …”
My state representative described ALEC as a federal agency and my state senator (Ohio) described ALEC as similar to NCSL and CSG.
LikeLike
We have become the country our Founders warned us about.
LikeLike
I have followed Bill Moyers for decades. The first program of his that I remember was “on evil”. His ” World of Ideas” was sensational. He has followed those ideals, search for truth, for decades.
\ A favorite story told to me, it may be apocryphal but sounds like him was that when he was working for President Johnson, Moyers had studied for the ministry, Johnson asked him to say grace. As he began, evidently not speaking that loudly, Johnson told him to speak up, he couldn’t hear him. Moyers famous reply: “I wasn’t speaking to you”.
Besides that, Bill Moyers has been one of the most respected journalists on our time – by those who seek honesty, integrity, and concern for our American ideals.
LikeLike
Great story. I hope it’s true.
LikeLike
That was wonderful. Thanks for posting.
LikeLike
And it’s also played out in on a small scale in local districts loaded with nepotism and cronyism. I wonder if any school district can be a great one.
LikeLike