It's The Elite Who Are Corrupt

Charley Reese

Most Americans are so steeped in egalitarian thinking that they like to
delude themselves that they share in running the country. We ordinary
folks, in fact, don't run the country and have a slim-to-none chance of
even influencing its direction.

Thomas R. Dye, a professor at Florida State University, has made a study
of power. Since power in our country resides in institutions, he defines
individuals with power as those who occupy the top positions in the
government and in corporate, legal, educational, civic and cultural
institutions.

He found that there are only about 7,000 of these positions in the
entire United States, and some individuals occupy more than one of them.
It might sound unbelievable at first, but if you think about it, you
will see that it is true.

In a newspaper, for example, there is one position of power: the
publisher. Now, he delegates some of his power to other people, but
everyone knows that all decisions are ultimately his and his alone.

In the federal government there are only 546 positions of power. These
include the president, the vice president, members of the House and
Senate and the nine members of the Supreme Court. One hundred percent of
the power of the federal government resides in these individuals who
occupy the 546 positions. Everybody below them operates with delegated
power. That is so because all power of the federal government comes from
the Constitution, and these are the only constitutional offices. I don't
include federal-, district- and appellate-court judges because any
decision they make can be overturned by the Supreme Court.

So the individuals who occupy these 7,000 positions of power are the
elite who run the country. Therefore, it is the character of these
members of the elite that will determine the character of the country.
What you see in government policies, in cultural products and in
education policies are the direct result of the decisions made by this
relatively small elite.

History affirms this. The reason America did not follow the usual path
of revolution to dictatorship was solely the result of the character of
one man, George Washington. Washington could have easily made himself
dictator, and many of the officers in his army wanted him to do just
that. But Washington's character would not allow it.

When the elite who run a country have good morals and high standards,
then you have a good country. If the elite become corrupt, you have a
corrupt country. The vulgarity, profanity and violence you see in
entertainment are there only because those individuals occupying the
positions of power in the entertainment industry said "Yes." If they
said "No," those things would disappear from the screens and the
magazine racks.

Our problem is that most of our elite have become corrupted. Many are
nihilistic and hedonistic. The leadership of a country always leads the
masses, and they can lead them to high ground or into the swamps. And
there's not much I can see that ordinary people can do about it.

I have to confess that I have lost my Jeffersonian faith in the people.
All I have ever seen them do, save for a few individuals, is follow like
dogs whoever happened to be in leadership positions at the time.

Given the moral and intellectual climate at most of the elite
universities our future leaders will attend, I don't have an optimistic
outlook for the future of the country.
 
  
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Charley Reese can be contacted at [EMAIL PROTECTED]
C 2002 by King Features Syndicate, Inc.  
http://reese.king-online.com/Reese_20020610/index.php

THE END

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