The news has been dominated by the Supreme Court, whose term began last week; the Federal Reserve, and whether it will start responding to inflation by raising interest rates; and Facebook, which a whistleblower claimed intentionally seeks to enrage and divide Americans in order to generate ad revenue.

What’s the common thread here? The growing influence of these three power centers over our lives, even as they become less accountable to us. As such, they present a fundamental challenge to democracy.

Start with the Supreme Court. What’s the underlying issue?

Don’t for a moment believe the Supreme Court bases its decisions on neutral and objective criteria. I’ve argued before it and seen up close that the justices have particular and differing ideas about what’s good for the country. So, it matters who they are and how they got there.

A majority of the current nine justices — all appointed for life — were put there by George W. Bush and Donald Trump, presidents who lost the popular vote. Three were installed by Trump, a president who instigated a coup. Yet they are about to revolutionize American life in ways most Americans don’t want.

This new court seems ready to overrule Roe v. Wade, the 1973 ruling that anchored reproductive rights in the 14th Amendment; declare a 108-year-old New York law unconstitutional, thereby allowing anyone to carry a firearm; and strip federal agencies such as the Environmental Protection Agency of the power to regulate private businesses. And much more.

Only 40% of the public approves of its performance, a new low. If the justices rule in ways anticipated, that number will drop further. If so, expect renewed efforts to expand its size and limit the terms of its members.

What about the Fed?

Behind the stories about whether the Fed should act to time inflation is the reality that its power to set short-term interest rates and regulate the financial sector is virtually unchecked. And here too there are no neutral, objective criteria. Some believe the Fed’s priority should be fighting inflation. Others believe it should be full employment. So, like the Supreme Court, it matters who runs it.

Presidents appoint Fed chairs for four-year terms but tend to stick with them longer for fear of rattling Wall Street. The term of Jerome Powell, the Fed chair, appointed by Trump, is up in February. Biden will probably renominate him to appease the Street. Powell has kept interest rates near zero, appropriate for an economy still suffering pandemic fallout.

And Powell has also allowed the Street to resume several risky practices, prompting Massachusetts Democratic senator Elizabeth Warren to tell him at a recent hearing that “renominating you means gambling that, for the next five years, a Republican majority at the Federal Reserve, with a Republican chair who has regularly voted to deregulate Wall Street, won’t drive this economy over a financial cliff again.”

Finally, what’s behind the controversy over Facebook?

Facebook and three other hi-tech behemoths — Amazon, Google, and Apple — are taking on roles that once belonged to governments, from cybersecurity to exploring outer space, yet they too are unaccountable.

Their decisions about which demagogues are allowed to communicate with the public and what lies they’re allowed to spew have profound consequences for whether democracy or authoritarianism prevails. In January, Mark Zuckerberg apparently deferred to Nick Clegg, former British deputy prime minister, now vice president of Facebook, on whether to allow Trump back on the platform.

Worst of all, they’re sowing hate and division. As Frances Haugen, a former data scientist at Facebook revealed last week, Facebook’s algorithm is designed to choose content that will make users angry, because anger generates most engagement — and engagement turns into ad dollars. The same is likely true of the algorithms used by Google, Amazon, and Apple. Such anger has been ricocheting through our society, generating resentment and division.

Yet these firms have so much power that the government has no idea how to control them. Nor are they accountable to the market. They now make the market. These three power centers — the Supreme Court, the Fed, and the biggest tech firms — have huge and increasing effects on our lives, yet they are less and less answerable to us.

Beware. Democracy depends on accountability. Accountability provides checks on power. If abuses of power go unchallenged, those who wield it will only consolidate their power further. It’s a vicious cycle that erodes faith in democracy itself.

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