Unaccountable: How Elite Power Brokers Corrupt Our Finances, Freedom, and Security
Description
From the Tea Party to Occupy Wall Street, however divergent their political views, these groups seem united by one thing: outrage over a system of power and influence that they feel has stolen their livelihoods and liberties. Increasingly, protesters on both ends of the political spectrum and the media are using the word "corrupt" to describe an elusory system of power that has shed any accountability to those it was meant to help and govern.
But what does corruption and unaccountability mean in today's world? It is far more toxic and deeply rooted than bribery. Advisors, strategists and other private contractors, which make up an ever-increasing share of the government, act in the best interests of their company, versus beholden to the tax payer. Foreign governments with a history of human rights violations, military coups, and more, hire American public relation firms to suppress reports and search results for their crimes. Investigative journalism has been replaced by "truthiness." From Super PACs pouring secret money into our election system, to companies buying better ratings from Standard & Poors, or the extreme influence of lobbyists in congress, all are embody a "new corruption" and remain unaccountable to our society's supposed watchdogs, which sit idly alongside the same groups that have brought the government, business and much of the military in to their pocket.
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About the Author
Reviews
A clarion call against some insidious threats to a healthy democracy.
Of huge value. Wedel has reinvented the study of public administration for an era of blurred roles and secret networks. A must-read for the age of flexians and truthiness.--James K. Galbraith, author of The Predator State
Slow but steady cultural shifts often go unremarked until we suddenly realize that we are in a place we really do not want to be. This book draws attention to one such shift. Wedel documents an alarming increase in the number of individuals and associations who, while purportedly acting in the public's interest, seem actually to be pursuing their own objectives.
For political junkies and those in the Left and Right tails, there will be plenty to like in this book that will confirm their worst fears. The book is engaging--and frightening.