Book Review, by Peter McKenzie-Brown
While this book is primarily about current American politics, a key subtheme is climate change and the efforts of the super-rich in America to downplay its importance. The book is about 500 pages in length, including references and the index – long, but a terrific read. Jane Mayer is a thoughtful journalist, and has researched her topic well.
She focuses on a group of fabulously wealthy
industrialists led by Charles and David Koch. Her general theme is that they
took over the Republican Party and corrupted US politics for the benefit of the
super-rich and to the detriment of the rest of the world. Put another way, US
democracy has been systematically undermined by a small group of extremely
wealthy people driven by greed and self-interest. In effect, they have
subjected US politics to corporate capture.
She published the first edition in 2016. My
copy, which I bought last winter, is the fourteenth paperback printing.
One of the most startling statistics from the
2016 US presidential election was campaign spending of some $6.8 billion –
double the spending in 2012. An estimated $1 billion of this amount came from a
few shadowy billionaires backing the Republican Party, equalling the total
raised by the millions of individual donations from private citizens.
Central to her examination are the lives and
careers of Charles and David Koch, commonly known as the Koch brothers, who expanded
their father’s primary businesses of oil pipelines and refineries by
diversifying into lumber and paper, coal, chemicals, commodities and futures
trading, turning Koch Industries into the second-largest private company in
America.
As
a matter of interest, Donald Trump gets few mentions, and actually comes out
well. As candidate wannabees were vying for their party’s approval, he tweeted,
“I wish good luck to all of the Republican candidates that travelled to
California to beg for money from the Koch brothers. Puppets?”
The
ultimate goal of these people, Mayer argues, is to remake America along the
lines of their radical free-market beliefs. The Kochs and their allies have
bankrolled myriad political vehicles to achieve their objectives, often giving
them innocent-sounding names like ‘Citizens for a Sound Economy’ and ‘Americans
for Prosperity.’ The organizations – which appear to be mere public relations
outfits masquerading as think-tanks or civil action groups – have developed
seemingly common-sense rationales to entrench their anti-tax, anti-government
and anti-regulation message into the public consciousness.
Their ultimate goal, Mayer argues, is to
remake America along the lines of their radical free-market beliefs. The Kochs
and their allies have bankrolled myriad political vehicles to achieve their
objectives, often giving them innocent-sounding names like ‘Citizens for a
Sound Economy’ and ‘Americans for Prosperity.’ The organizations – which appear
to be mere public relations outfits masquerading as think-tanks or civil action
groups – have developed seemingly common-sense rationales to entrench their
anti-tax, anti-government and anti-regulation message into the public
consciousness.
In US tax law, ‘philanthropic’ activity is a
tax-deductible expense. If a US citizen wants to donate $1 million to a
‘charity’ of their choosing, they can then deduct the entire amount from their
tax bill. The definition of philanthropic activity is so broad that in effect
it becomes a choice between paying taxes or donating to a cause, creating what
Mayer describes as ‘weaponized philanthropy’.
Over the past century these groups, run with
little transparency or accountability, have multiplied almost beyond belief. By
2013, there were over 100,000 private foundations in the USA with assets of
over $800 billion. The 2010 Supreme Court’s ‘Citizens United’ decision to
remove restrictions on political spending by private individuals sent the
amount of money being pumped into US politics into the stratosphere.
Mayer’s achievement: a thorough and compelling
case study of how US democratic life is being delegitimized and undermined by
the ideology of a tiny proportion of its society, and their wanton disregard
for the environment. While the book is primarily political, Mayer often returns
to the issue of climate change. Her main section on the topic, which is about
40 pages long, includes ten pages on corporate denunciation of climate change
science – notwithstanding the fact that 97 percent or more of actively
publishing climate scientists agree that climate-warming trends over the past
century are extremely likely due to human activities.
The Koch brothers are fabulously wealthy
(about $43bn each, according to a Forbes list of the world’s billionaires). They
have long used part of their wealth to support think-tanks. They have close connections
with like-minded billionaires. Memorably, Mayer dubs this network the
“Kochtopus.”
When I discussed this book with a book club, one of the members took exception with my statement that there is a scientific consensus about the risks of climate change, and actually suggested that such an idea had been "invented by a schoolboy in Australia." Where that idea came from I don't know, but here are the facts.
When I discussed this book with a book club, one of the members took exception with my statement that there is a scientific consensus about the risks of climate change, and actually suggested that such an idea had been "invented by a schoolboy in Australia." Where that idea came from I don't know, but here are the facts.
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