Norman
Solomon
Too Big
to Fail and Too Small to Matter
By
Norman Solomon
These times provide a crash course
on the corporate state:
If a company like AIG is too big to
fail, the government will rescue it. Mere people - too small to matter - are
expendable.
The insurance industry is too big to
fail. A person's health is too small to matter, so - when it fails due to the
absence or loopholes of insurance coverage - that's tough luck.
The Defense Department is too big to
fail. The people it's killing in
The
Overall, the warfare state is too
big to fail.
The virtues of peace are too small to
matter.
Agribusiness is too big to fail.
Family farmers are too dirt-small to matter.
The leverage for the U.S. Treasury
to subsidize Wall Street is too big to fail.
The leverage to subsidize mothers
and children kicked off welfare is too small to matter.
The political momentum for bailing
out corporate
The political momentum for funding
adequate payment rates from Medicaid to reimburse healthcare providers is too
small to matter.
The oil conglomerates are too big to
fail.
Global warming is too small to
matter.
The prison industry is too big to
fail.
The need for preschool is too small
to matter.
Corporate power is too big to fail.
The ordeals of working people and
want-to-be-working people are too small to matter.
Human worth as maximized by dollars:
too big to fail. Human worth as affirmed by humanistic values: too small to
matter.
The current odds of pumping at least
several hundred billion taxpayer dollars into corporate
The current odds of launching a
massive federal jobs program: too small to matter.
Such priorities and mindsets are in
overdrive at the intersection of
After campaigning in 1932 on a
middle-of-the-road Democratic platform, Franklin Roosevelt went on to become a
president who denounced the "economic royalists" and made common
cause with working people and the unemployed. People across the country organized
for social change. In the process, you might say, the power of progressive
movements became too big to fail.
Something like that could happen
again.