Re: The Masters of Corruption

Originally Posted by
C. Flower
I see that Ireland is in the "No Enforcement" category.
The idea has been put about that gross robbery of public funds by politicians is something that happens only in poor countries.
In the UK Peter Mandelson said, in the Blair Government days, that "there is no reason why a Labour politician should not get very rich." Blair went on to demonstrate he was correct.
There were senior members of the US government who took the country to war in Iraq and were selling arms to themselves from the companies they owned.
Obama and his wife are thought virtuous as they are "only" multi millionaires, not billionaires.
In Ireland, uncounted amounts of public resources have been poured from the public purse into private pockets, particularly in the landowner, construction and construction materials sector. Policy was skewed to minimise public housing and push everyone into overpriced mortgage-funded houses. Housing and health policy is still being run to make tax-free presents of wealth to wealthy and powerful individuals. The same with drug prices and purchase by the HSE.
We have had tribunals that produced evidence of corruption in the sales of state assets, with no serious action taken after them.
This money doesn't come from nowhere - it is stolen from public taxes, or loaded onto prices.
Between this kind of corruption, and the thousands of trillions of international tax evasion going on along side it, it is not surprising that we are reverting to a medieval scale of social inequality.
Until Ireland introduces hard sentences for corruption, it will remain a failed state.
Man kann gar nicht soviel fressen wie man kötzen möchte!
Max Liebermann, Deutsche Maler.
Bookmarks