In a
financial democracy, where bilking billionaires should be no more acceptable
than preying on the poor, Karl Rove has a lot to answer for, starting with his
Election Night outburst on Fox over Ohio vote counting.
Was
he reacting as a political commentator or proprietor of Crossroads America,
that murky funnel of Citizens United cash to pay for TV ads targeted at the
President? With no accountability, can the likes of casino owner Marvin Adelson
and the Koch brothers be sure all their money was actually spent? Is there a
chance they were victimized by Double-Crossroads America?
Post-election
the fat cat victims are philosophical about the estimated billion dollars they wasted
in the effort to unseat Obama.
But the costly lessons of their failure are unclear. Is it that getting out voters is more crucial than trying to drown them in commercials? Or hopefully that most people can’t always be suckered into acting against their self-interest by slick words and images?
As they consoled one another Wednesday, there was
pathos in their sorrow. Before they dispersed in their private jets, one
offered a pitiful suggestion, “Aw, group hug?”
But the costly lessons of their failure are unclear. Is it that getting out voters is more crucial than trying to drown them in commercials? Or hopefully that most people can’t always be suckered into acting against their self-interest by slick words and images?
Unlikely
as it is that Rove and his ilk will be out of our faces on Fox and the Wall
Street Journal any time soon, there is the consolation that while money talks
it doesn’t always have the last word.
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