Corporate America

Money Talks

While contemporary threats to American democracy stem directly from religious belief, the political threat stem less from abstract ideology alone than from greed disguised and enabled by ideology. The conservative movement—heavily influenced by corporations and wealthy elites—uses money as a weapon to consolidate power, undermine democratic institutions, and reshape society into a corporatocracy. While profit is the true motivation, ideology is the mechanism that makes this pursuit politically viable and publicly acceptable.

There are two forms of monetary power: implicit and explicit. Implicit power operates through cultural, religious, and moral ideologies—particularly Christian fundamentalism, the Protestant work ethic, manifest destiny, patriotism, and nationalism—which justify inequality, blame the poor for their circumstances, and rationalize wealth as moral superiority. These beliefs shape policy indirectly by influencing lawmakers and public opinion while masking greed as virtue. Explicit power, by contrast, involves direct economic coercion: defunding social programs, education, healthcare, and states or institutions that oppose conservative agendas; privatizing public goods; and using the military, police, and legal mechanisms to enforce compliance.

The role of money in politics after Citizens United effectively allows corporations and billionaires to buy government influence, hollow out democratic accountability, and marginalize ordinary citizens. The Trump administration is a culmination of these trends—enabled by corporate wealth, driven by ideology rather than policy, and sustained through nationalism, religious fervor, and the creation of internal enemies.

The defunding public institutions serves a strategic purpose: an uneducated, indebted, and economically insecure population is easier to manipulate and more profitable as consumers. Debt, especially consumer credit, becomes a key tool for maintaining control, allowing corporations to extract wealth while preserving the illusion of prosperity and opportunity. Tax cuts and “trickle-down economics” are portrayed as smokescreens for corporate subsidies that exacerbate inequality while shifting blame onto government inefficiency.

The conservative movement represents a legal but deeply corrosive takeover of democratic governance. By using money to shape laws, ideology to shape belief, and power to suppress dissent, corporations and their political allies undermine the foundational ideals of liberty, equality, and self-governance. The result is a society governed not for the public good, but for profit—where pointing out this reality is increasingly marginalized or criminalized.