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Opinion: America’s moral crisis lies in boardrooms, not bedrooms


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By Robert Reich

Republicans have morality upside down. Santorum, Gingrich, and even Romney are barnstorming across the land condemning gay marriage, abortion, out-of-wedlock births, access to contraception, and the wall separating church and state.

But America’s problem isn’t a breakdown in private morality. It’s a breakdown in public morality. What Americans do in their bedrooms is their own business. What corporate executives and Wall Street financiers do in boardrooms and executive suites affects all of us.

Robert Reich

There is moral rot in America but it’s not found in the private behavior of ordinary people. It’s located in the public behavior of people who control our economy and are turning our democracy into a financial slush pump. It’s found in Wall Street fraud, exorbitant pay of top executives, financial conflicts of interest, insider trading, and the outright bribery of public officials through unlimited campaign “donations.”

Political scientist James Q. Wilson, who died last week, noted that a broken window left unattended signals that no one cares if windows are broken. It becomes an ongoing invitation to throw more stones at more windows, ultimately undermining moral standards of the entire community

The windows Wall Street broke in the years leading up to the crash of 2008 remain broken. Despite financial fraud on a scale not seen in this country for more than eighty years, not a single executive of a major Wall Street bank has been charged with a crime.

Since 2009, the Securities and Exchange Commission has filed 25 cases against mortgage originators and securities firms. A few are still being litigated but most have been settled. They’ve generated almost $2 billion in penalties and other forms of monetary relief, according to the Commission. But almost none of this money has come out of the pockets of CEOs or other company officials; it has come out of the companies — or, more accurately, their shareholders. Federal prosecutors are now signaling they won’t even bring charges in the brazen case of MF Global, which lost billions of dollars that were supposed to be kept safe.

Nor have any of the lawyers, accountants, auditors, or top executives of credit-rating agencies who aided and abetted Wall Street financiers been charged with doing anything wrong.

And the new Dodd-Frank law that was supposed to prevent this from happening again is now so riddled with loopholes, courtesy of Wall Street lobbyists, that it’s almost a sham. The Street prevented the Glass-Steagall Act from being resurrected, and successfully fought against limits on the size of the largest banks.

Windows started breaking years ago. Enron’s court-appointed trustee reported that bankers from Citigroup and JP Morgan Chase didn’t merely look the other way; they dreamed up and sold Enron financial schemes specifically designed to allow Enron to commit fraud. Arthur Andersen, Enron’s auditor, was convicted of obstructing justice by shredding Enron documents, yet most of the Andersen partners who aided and abetted Enron were never punished.

Americans are entitled to their own religious views about gay marriage, contraception, out-of-wedlock births, abortion, and God. We can be truly free only if we’re confident we can go about our private lives without being monitored or intruded upon by government, and can practice whatever faith (or lack of faith) we wish regardless of the religious beliefs of others. A society where one set of religious views is imposed on a large number of citizens who disagree with them is not a democracy. It’s a theocracy.

But abuses of public trust such as we’ve witnessed for years on the Street and in the executive suites of our largest corporations are not matters of private morality. They’re violations of public morality. They undermine the integrity of our economy and democracy. They’ve led millions of Americans to conclude the game is rigged.

Regressive Republicans have no problem hurling the epithets “shameful,” “disgraceful,” and “contemptible” at private moral decisions they disagree with. Rush Limbaugh calls a young woman a “****” just for standing up for her beliefs about private morality.

Republicans have staked out the moral low ground. It’s time for Democrats and progressives to stake out the moral high ground, condemning the abuses of economic power and privilege that characterize this new Gilded Age – business deals that are technically legal but wrong because they exploit the trust that investors or employees have place in those businesses, pay packages that are ludicrously high compared with the pay of average workers, political donations so large as to breed cynicism about the ability of their recipients to represent the public as a whole.

An economy is built on a foundation of shared morality. Adam Smith never called himself an economist. The separate field of economics didn’t exist in the eighteenth century. He called himself a moral philosopher. And the book he was proudest of wasn’t “The Wealth of Nations,” but his “Theory of Moral Sentiments” – about the ties that bind people together into societies.

Twice before progressive have saved capitalism from its own excesses by appealing to public morality and common sense. First in the early 1900s, when the captains for American industry had monopolized the economy into giant trusts, American politics had sunk into a swamp of patronage and corruption, and many factory jobs were unsafe – entailing long hours of work at meager pay and often exploiting children. In response, we enacted antitrust, civil service reforms, and labor protections.

And then again in 1930s after the stock market collapsed and a large portion of American workforce was unemployed. Then we regulated banks and insured deposits, cleaned up stock market, and provided social insurance to the destitute.

It’s time once again to save capitalism from its own excesses — and to base a new era of reform on public morality and common sense.

Robert Reich is chancellor’s professor of public policy at UC Berkeley. He has served in three national administrations, most recently as secretary of Labor under President Bill Clinton. He has written 13 books.

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Comments

Comments (8)
  1. Hangs Ups From Way Back says - Posted: March 28, 2012

    HELL Bob,
    THERE NO DOUBT ABOUT MORALS,IT JUST DEPENDS WHICH SIDE THE 8 BALL YOU WANT BE ON.
    Truth BRING NO WEALTH,BUT DECIEVING STEALS TRUTHS FOR GREED.

    WHEN GOD DIED ,WALL STREET TOOK OVER, IT’S NEVER BEEN THE SAME SINCE!

    PEOPLE TEND TO BELIEVE WHAT’S ON PAPER, NOT WHAT’S IN THEIR TRUE HEARTS ,WHAT THEIR EYES REALLY SEE.

    MORALS HAVE CHANGED, BUT PEOPLE WITH ANY RESPECT KNOW WHAT THINGS REALLY ARE, RIGHT,POSTIVE,PLAN STEALING, LIES SEEMS TO BE WHERE MANY PUT THEIR FAITH.

    THE CON GAME OF WEALTH WAS GONG BEFORE CHRIST WALKED THROUGH THE TEMPLE, BECAME PISSED CAUSE THE TRADE,SCALES, WAS IN THE HOUSE OF THE FAITHFUL HOLY .

    BLIND FAITH DESRTOYS TEMPLES OF GOOD.IT’S BEEN THAT WAY SINCE FIRST SIN.

    Such a old story,so we all just live the way we live,put up with corruption.There’s not much you can do about it.

  2. Gus says - Posted: March 28, 2012

    “Americans are entitled to their own views about abortion?” True, unless you were unlucky enouph to be killed in an abortion. If you were born after 1973, one third of your classmates had their lives taken. Hey, I have an idea, maybe Mr. Reich should give up his cushy tax payer supported government job and mind HIS own business.

  3. Tom Wendell says - Posted: March 28, 2012

    This otherwise brilliant piece misses at least one salient point when the author states:

    “Republicans have staked out the moral low ground. It’s time for Democrats and progressives to stake out the moral high ground, condemning the abuses of economic power and privilege that characterize this new Gilded Age – business deals that are technically legal but wrong because they exploit the trust that investors or employees have place in those businesses, pay packages that are ludicrously high compared with the pay of average workers, political donations so large as to breed cynicism about the ability of their recipients to represent the public as a whole.”

    Problem is that Republicans are not alone in these abuses. The Dems share in that…possibly as equal ‘partners in crime’. A viable, incorruptable (does that exist? me thinks not) 3rd party needs to emerge if we ever hope to extricate ourselves from this moral/political/economic/envronmental quagmire.

  4. Dogula says - Posted: March 28, 2012

    Mr. Reich condemns our traditional sense of morality while elevating his own “progressive” morality. He claims the Republicans occupy the moral low ground. How many Democrats have become rich while in Congress? Why does our president encourage division rather than unity? There is plenty of blame to go around, Mr. Reich. And much of it can be laid at the feet of the academic effete like you.

  5. earl zitts says - Posted: March 29, 2012

    Written like a loyal soldier of the duck-stepping high minded devil democrats who wear a halo.
    Did loyal minion Reich forget Barney the Frank, Chris the Doud, and George the Bush who almost destroyed the American economy and caused untolded misery by giving big, big money to anyone that wanted to buy a house?
    The political class makes the rules and enforces them, and of course they are influenced by corporate, union, and special interest money.
    So Mr. Reich where does the blame lay?
    And Tom, it’s the demos, not repubs who push, push pregnancy termination. If that is not immoral to you what is?

    The bottom line is they are all scoundrels. Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely. It effects everybody.

  6. Atomic says - Posted: March 29, 2012

    I’m an independent voter, meaning I don’t vote on party lines, EVER. Somehow the message needs to be finally told that the current corporate tax rate is at historic lows while profits are at all time highs. Is this view anti- business?, of course not, it’s simple math. This simple fact is at the heart of this whole issue. Grover Norquist and his nutball blackamail notion of never raising taxes is also at the heart of the issue. Low taxes on corporations/investors obviously doesn’t create jobs, you can’t have it both ways in a real world, only in a sound bite world. Get the tax rates to the hisorical norm, and forget the hysterical voices out there, they simply don’t know the facts. Then get these public programs reformed so people can’t just sit on their a– and get checks in the mail. How about some personal responsibility, that’s a true conservative idea. How about requiring everybody to have health insurance, because YOUR decision to not have coverage costs ME. Stop the freeloading and all this freedom crap. Anybody without insurance can simply sign off on a ‘no care clause’. You get hurt, no care, that’s true freedom. OR, get everybody in the system and behave like a civilized society. The Supreme Court will show it’s real colors soon, let’s hope they aren’t bought off as well.

  7. Garry Bowen says - Posted: March 29, 2012

    Generally, I agree with Mr. Wendell, but I think elsewhere Mr. Reich lumps Democrats as well into the moral morass.

    My own Political Science professor once summed up moral debate in this simple way: Ethics is about what you SHOULD do, and morals is about what you DO do. . . that seems to cover it, albeit simplistically, as it the difference between what you say and what you actually do that determines integrity.

    Creating stories that the great “unwashed” are supposed to believe is the overall source for our need for transparency, which of course some think that we can’t or don’t need to know. . . to keep our nose to the grindstone. . .

  8. Juanita says - Posted: March 30, 2012

    I agree with Tom, Garry, and ATOMIC> Also, I am a Registered Independent(Wish we had an open Primary in Nevada, so I could vote in it as my ex mother in law did, so she could influence the DEM results there)For God’s sake, please do whatever you can to keep up the good work, progressives, and that means driving people without transportation to the polls, making sure employers give adequate time off to their employees to vote,etc. Politics and religion should not be mixed, and we need an intelligent president who is not a demagogue. I pray for all of our leaders at my church, and I try very hard not to break any commandments, but the GREATEST LAW IS LOVE. I sometimes think I missed my calling to be a lawyer. I hope those who love JESUAH will keep that inmind.