The American spirit of innovation was fueled by several factors, but key among them were our strong higher educational system that was open to people of all economic and social backgrounds (even if at the community college level.) The universities and colleges were backed by state and federal funding. Across the UnitedStates now, most recently in NewJersey this past week, higher educational funding is being dramatically cut, amputating our ability to prepare innovators for the future.
Much of the for-profit corporate innovation in America has come as a result of federal government investment in research and programs that are then applied in the for-profit sector, but really paid for by the taxpayer.
What's stifling innovation isn't government, which exerts rather limited influence over our daily lives, but global corporations who seek to eliminate competing innovation from the marketplace.
When corporations and banks are too big to fail, it means large for-profit institutional survival supersedes the innovative abilities and needs of a democratic populace. Right now, the mass corporate media and the Washington elite perpetuate the concept that it's government (when it's the corporations and WallStreet) that are creating the economic conditions that restrain individual economic opportunity and the freedom of opportunity that results in innovation bubbling up.
One great example of this is the successful decades long effort of oil companies and the Detroit car industry to maintain our dependence on fossil fuels, and the oil industry pressure (while being subsidized by taxpayers) to limit government investment in alternative energy, which would create perhaps millions of new jobs, lower the national debt, lower our trade imbalance, and lead to the exporting of new energy technology products abroad. Even more importantly, it would allow us a more independent foreign and military policy that doesn't cost hundreds of billions of dollars to "control" oil producing nations in the MiddleEast.
Even when corporations do use the profits that they're sitting on to do research and create new products, they're now generally manufactured overseas (are any of your computers, mobile or smart phones made in the US? -- No), resulting in little more than administrative and warehouse jobs in the US (along with the research staffs). Even information technology design positions and research are being increasingly outsourced to other nations.
Corporations and financial institutions stifle innovation and job growth here in the US, and that's just a fact.
About 112th Congress
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