привет, мне нужно сделать видео по такому тексту
In 2024, lobbyists spent $4.5 billion. Not on hospitals. On deciding what gets into our laws — and what doesn’t. If that’s democracy, it sure comes with a delivery fee.
Big Pharma? They’re the VIP customers. Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk started throwing money at Congress the moment someone said 'insulin price cap'.
Insulin prices have jumped 1,200% since the '90s. Same drug. New price tag. Because when you fund the rulebook, you don’t play by it.
Big Tech’s not far behind. Meta’s been cozying up to Congress like your uncle after two bourbons at Thanksgiving — overly friendly, suspiciously generous."
"They’re not there to shake hands — they’re there to make sure no one ever dares regulate their algorithmic empire."
视频信息
答案文本
视频字幕
In 2024, lobbyists spent 4.5 billion dollars. Not on hospitals. On deciding what gets into our laws — and what doesn't. If that's democracy, it sure comes with a delivery fee.
Big Pharma? They're the VIP customers. Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk started throwing money at Congress the moment someone said 'insulin price cap'. Insulin prices have jumped 1,200% since the 90s. Same drug. New price tag. Because when you fund the rulebook, you don't play by it.
Big Tech's not far behind. Meta's been cozying up to Congress like your uncle after two bourbons at Thanksgiving — overly friendly, suspiciously generous. They're not there to shake hands — they're there to make sure no one ever dares regulate their algorithmic empire.
If that's democracy, it sure comes with a delivery fee. When you fund the rulebook, you don't play by it. In 2024 alone, lobbyists spent 4.5 billion dollars not on improving public services, but on ensuring laws favor their interests. This imbalance tilts the scales of democracy away from the people and toward those with the deepest pockets.
To summarize what we've learned: In 2024, lobbyists spent 4.5 billion dollars influencing legislation, not improving public services. Big Pharma companies like Eli Lilly and Novo Nordisk actively lobby against insulin price caps, which explains why insulin prices have skyrocketed 1,200% since the 1990s despite being the same drug. Tech giants like Meta invest heavily in lobbying to prevent regulation of their platforms and algorithms. This corporate influence fundamentally tilts democracy toward those with the deepest pockets, creating a system where money, not public interest, shapes our laws.