If the rich people control everything then it would be normal to put the spotlight on each one of them once in a while just for society to know who holds the power.
Ain’t no “If”. There is no need for the people to know who holds the power if they are perfectly capable of maintaining power without the spotlight, which they are. Being in ‘the spotlight’ would only hurt them because then people would know who to blame.
It’s only the ignorant jackasses like Trump and Musk who gained their power by luck who brag about their power, the rest are cunning enough to know better.
In the U.S. we supposedly have a ‘Representative Democracy’, yet the ‘representatives’ that keep getting elected are more concerned with what the corporations that ‘lobby’ them want. I agree, the population does want to know who to blame, but like I said the people in charge (the rich) are cunning enough to let idiot politicians be the scapegoats. Even the politicians are rarely face any consequences. If they happen to represent a constituency that is actually paying attention, they might not get reelected, but that is the exception not the rule here.
Even in some cases where people pay attention, a lot of people have been brainwashed by centuries of propaganda that the mega-rich are good and healthy for a society, and that business interests are more important than human interest, so people commonly vote against their own best interest.
Ain’t no “If”. There is no need for the people to know who holds the power if they are perfectly capable of maintaining power without the spotlight, which they are. Being in ‘the spotlight’ would only hurt them because then people would know who to blame.
It’s only the ignorant jackasses like Trump and Musk who gained their power by luck who brag about their power, the rest are cunning enough to know better.
I meant it differently. In a democracy, the entire population holds the power. Usually the population would want to know who to blame.
The beliefs of the poorest 90% of the population have zero impact on the outcome of public policy debates. We do not live in a democracy.
In the U.S. we supposedly have a ‘Representative Democracy’, yet the ‘representatives’ that keep getting elected are more concerned with what the corporations that ‘lobby’ them want. I agree, the population does want to know who to blame, but like I said the people in charge (the rich) are cunning enough to let idiot politicians be the scapegoats. Even the politicians are rarely face any consequences. If they happen to represent a constituency that is actually paying attention, they might not get reelected, but that is the exception not the rule here.
Even in some cases where people pay attention, a lot of people have been brainwashed by centuries of propaganda that the mega-rich are good and healthy for a society, and that business interests are more important than human interest, so people commonly vote against their own best interest.