Before
leaving the house early one morning in 63 BC, an anxious Julius Caesar
told his mother, “Today thou shalt see thy son either pontifex maximus…
or an exile.”
Caesar
was running for his first BIG elected office- pontifex maximus, the
high priest of Rome. And he was a young upstart at the time.
His opponents were all older, more reputable men. And his chances were low.
But
Caesar had an ace up his toga. Since he couldn’t win on merit, he
planned to buy the election, blowing ridiculous sums of money to butter
up the voters.
He spent lavishly on games, gifts, and feasts. And he borrowed nearly all of the funds to do it.
This
was an enormous risk for him; if Caesar lost the election, he wouldn’t
have been able to repay his financiers, and likely would have fled the
city.
Caesar had
borrowed so much money, in fact, that he single-handedly depleted cash
reserves among Rome’s major lenders, causing a significant bump in
interest rates.
Cicero remarks on this in a letter to a friend, writing: “Bribery’s thriving… the interest rate has doubled.”
Of course, it wasn’t technically ‘bribery’.
Ancient
Rome had a very fine line between bribing voters (known as ‘ambitus’),
and simply being a generous guy (‘benignitas’). Caesar insisted he was
the latter.
When
the votes were finally counted (or not counted), Caesar was declared
the winner, thus continuing the long-standing tradition of buying your
way into office and rewarding your benefactors with political favor.
* * *
He wasn’t the first to do this. And he certainly wouldn’t be the last.
In the Land of the Free today, the modern scion of the Republic, very little has changed from Ancient Rome.
One
primary difference is that rather than spending campaign money on gifts
and games to entertain voters, the election itself has become the
entertainment.
Presidential races today are nothing more than a two-year, multi-billion dollar circus performance.
Mainstream
election coverage already ranks among the most banal reality
television, focusing on scandal, conflict, one-liner zingers, and
hairstyle choices.
And now that Donald Trump has entered the race, the 2016 Presidential election will assuredly become the Greatest Show on Earth.
I
can just imagine the media eating up his witty use of the phrase
“You’re Fired” in campaign speeches that refer to his opponents.
But perhaps it’s America that’s fired.
Sure,
you get to engage in the most demeaning exercise of casting a ballot so
that one of these people can steal half of your money and use it to
make you less free.
They call that ‘voting,’ and we’re told it’s our civic duty. But it’s just an illusion.
Just like in Caesar’s time, the election will go to the people who spend the most money.
But I’m not talking about the candidates. They’re just puppets. Entertainers.
I’m talking about the people who bankroll them.
These financiers have learned some valuable lessons since 63 BC: you never back just one horse.
Instead, they hedge their bets by heavily funding multiple candidates and buying influence over all of them.
One only need look at Hillary Clinton’s top donors to get a sense of who they are: Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan, etc.
Anyone
who strays from their interests has his/her funding cut and is
pronounced ‘unelectable’ and ‘unpresidential’ early in the circus by the
media ringmasters.
This
makes voting nothing more than a pointless, demeaning illusion of
choice between candidates who have already been preselected by their
financial backers.
It reminds me of what it used to be like wandering down the grocery store’s cereal aisle when I was a kid.
Sure it seemed like there were a ton of options.
But
when you really looked closely, you could see that all the products
were all packed full of the same unhealthy chemical ingredients and GMO
grains.
And only about three companies produced all of them– Kellogg’s, Post, and General Mills. Not much of a choice after all.
Yet
people fall for this scam every single election cycle. They think that
their vote matters, and then they go to the polls and ‘choose’ whoever
has the best jump shot, or whoever promises them the most free stuff.
(Remember, it’s not bribery if a candidate is just being generous!)
Curiously the country always ends up worse than before– less free, and more broke.
If you really want to vote in a way that counts, you have two far more powerful ballots you can cast.
They’re called your feet.
1 comment:
Donald Drumf (Nazi) is the one who is fired! No one wants to see his B.S. except Melania the Slovenian with the critical eyes!
Suppose Drumf wants to run with ole Jeb Bush? Nobody wants the Bush evil Nazis in the White House. (Good luck getting the smell out after you know who leaves) The Nazis alway change their name to pretend their something other than what they really are. F U Nazis - you are NOT taking over America!
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