Harvard University professor Michael Sandel on Monday lamented that almost every aspect of life in the United States was being “sold off to the highest bidder.”
“A market economy is a tool, a valuable and effective tool, for organizing productive activity,” he said on PBS Newshour. “But a market society is a place where almost everything is up for sale. It’s a way of life where market values seep into almost every sphere of life, and sometimes crowd out or corrode important values, non-market values.”
In particular, Sandel condemned D.C.’s line-standing companies, which pay homeless people to stand in very long lines so that lobbyists and others can obtain seats at congressional hearings. The hearings are supposed to be open to the public, but the line-standing companies make is so that citizens have to pay for access to government.
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