This issue came up in another thread. I thought it would be interesting to see where most tdubbers stand.
10/15/2010 6:03:43 PM
allow me to be the first, lol.The provision regarding private establishments is unConstitutional. The parts that directly affect the federal government, probably Constitutional[Edited on October 15, 2010 at 6:04 PM. Reason : ]
10/15/2010 6:04:05 PM
What he said, though you can strike the "probably" part. ^[Edited on October 15, 2010 at 7:11 PM. Reason : probably]
10/15/2010 7:10:46 PM
It is 100% Constitutional (note that it deals with places of public accommodation and not private entities wholly closed off to the public)
10/15/2010 8:12:51 PM
It hasn't been successfully challenged in court so far. So, so far it's still constitutional.Even if it isn't, it's the right thing to do.
10/15/2010 8:53:10 PM
You are correct; expansive interpretations of its provisions have been held up though, with the exception of Ledbetter v. Goodyear, which restricted the interpretation of Title VII (and the Ledbetter Act in 2009 rectified that): http://www.reclaimcivilrights.org/background/faqs.html[Edited on October 15, 2010 at 9:20 PM. Reason : ie the Court has ruled on validity of interpretations rather than Constitutionality of the law
10/15/2010 9:19:21 PM
I mean, I'll go through and say what I think based on each part of it (based on a cursory Wikipedia search, lol). I'll even go so far as to say whether I support the part of or not, as well.Title I: Constitutional, Absolutely SupportTitle II: UnConstitutional, OpposeTitle III: Constitutional, SupportTitle IV: Constitutional, kinda SupportTitle V: Dependent upon Constitutionality of CRC, so I puntTitle VI: Constitutional, Absolutely SupportTitle VII: Possibly UnConstitutional, Generally oppose. If it were contingent upon receipt of federal or state funds, then absolutely Constitutional and Absolutely Support. I understand it, but I think that employers should have the right to be a bigoted asshole as long as they don't directly receive gov't money of any sortTitle VIII: Constitutional, don't really care at this point.Title IX: Constitutional, SupportTitle X: Probably Constitutional, Generally Support
10/15/2010 9:44:43 PM
10/15/2010 10:54:20 PM
and this is why we need an amendment making clear that corporations have few of the human rights of natural persons
10/15/2010 11:25:13 PM
the fuck?
10/15/2010 11:45:17 PM
you know, so real campaign-finance reform can workright now the extension of First Amendment rights to Korporate Amerika is letting the moneyed interests launder their money through the Chamber of Commerce and a variety of other front groups to air malicious lies about candidates without being able to be traced to the propaganda they paid for
10/16/2010 12:03:44 AM
Not just corporate America. Foreign corporations can contribute, too.
10/16/2010 12:08:55 AM
so as long as it can be traced, it's OK? It was absolutely OK for George Soros to try to affect elections through MoveOn.org, because he at least said "hey, I'm George Soros, a giant greek douchebag, and I approved this douchebag message"? What if we just reduced the power of government to the point where corporate purchasing of elections wouldn't fucking matter in the first place, and then we wouldn't have to worry about a new amendment with unforeseen consequences? You know, kind of like what the Constitution proscribes?and "the fuck?" was asked because what the fuck is the relevance of that to this thread?]
10/16/2010 12:14:17 AM
*prescribesalso yes the public should know who's paying for the barrage of right-wing lies^^it has been illegal for more than 100 years, and organizations receiving public money must have some system of accounting in place to show that foreign monies were not used to influence American electionsI had a sad when I saw the left-wing media and blogosphere take that tack, because the truth is damning enough
10/16/2010 1:43:01 AM
II and VII are flat out wrong.Restaurants with smoking, women's-only gyms, bars with big-titted waitresses, family-operated businesses...These are America. (The land of the free.) [Edited on October 16, 2010 at 7:47 AM. Reason : I know not all of those are affected the same or at all by the CRA....]
10/16/2010 7:36:34 AM
10/16/2010 11:18:49 AM
I'd just like to point out how obnoxious capitalizing the C in "unConstitutional" is.[Edited on October 16, 2010 at 11:26 AM. Reason : ]
10/16/2010 11:26:10 AM
10/16/2010 4:45:27 PM
And I take issue with their understanding of the facts. I don't recall ever seeing a corporation exercise a right before. To you, what does a corporation look like that makes such make since? When GE holds a press conference, what you see are human beings giving speeches, nothing more. It is my position that corporations do not exist outside their employees and shareholders, all of which have more than enough rights to justify whatever power you want to object to.
10/17/2010 11:26:05 AM
Are nearly all the posts in this thread about corporate personhood for a reason?Did someone make a point about the Civil Rights Act and corporate personhood?Just asking. (I missed it.)
10/17/2010 3:31:43 PM
Look at lewisje's response to theduke. Duke said if you want something to be a certain way, change the Constitution, and then lewisje mentioned one thing he wanted changed, basically in response to the Supreme Court's Citizens United decision saying corporations are people.
10/17/2010 3:55:32 PM
The constitutionality of the CRA is considered settled, so we changed the subject.
10/17/2010 7:24:04 PM
10/17/2010 9:24:40 PM
^ ...I can't find a wrongly spelled word in my post. Rewrite: A corporation is a group of people. It does not make sense for an individual to have more rights than a group of individuals. Such would mean an individual looses some of their rights once they decide to associate with others, which would invalidate the freedom of association implied in the first amendment ("right of the people peaceably to assemble") and codified by the 1958 United States Supreme Court decision NAACP v. Alabama and ultimately in 2010's Citizens United decision.
10/18/2010 5:47:42 AM
10/18/2010 9:35:48 AM
before Citizens United they didn't have the same rights to free speech other groups enjoyed.
10/18/2010 9:36:55 AM
I know, and I agree with that position. I just want to help LoneSnark communicate.
10/18/2010 9:59:38 AM
Something a fellow libertarian brought up to me recently, which I really should have recognized before, is that corporations are already afforded rights not given to regular people. The entire concept of an LLC (limited liability) is complete bullshit. If your corporation causes fifty billion worth of damages, and you're only required to pay twenty five billion, how is that fair? Certainly, people should be able to associate and do what they please, but the government shouldn't cap liabilities like that.
10/18/2010 10:32:16 AM
yea. liability caps sorta make sense for small buisinesses just starting out, but caps on liabilities for big corps are just stupid. ex: the caps on liability for gulf oil platform owners.or bank execs.[Edited on October 18, 2010 at 10:54 AM. Reason : a]
10/18/2010 10:52:56 AM
^^ Absolutely. Limited liability violates our right to contract, although this right is not explicit in the Constitution anywhere. That said, there would be nothing to stop a corporation (or an individual) from imposing limited liability upon itself in all its contracts. That would just leave tort liability. Similarly, I'm sure arrangements could be made to isolate shareholders from being jointly and severally liable, the proverbial Bill Gates owning one share of stock getting sued for all the companies debts. After-all, individuals are allowed to declare bankruptcy, so all we would need to be able to do is get one or a group of the individuals running the company to assume the liability.
10/18/2010 11:09:30 AM
require partial ownership to be eligible for any related tax breaks and/or increase the tax rate for non-owners with large income from the company.
10/18/2010 11:30:55 AM
10/18/2010 10:54:27 PM
And here we have the point of argument. You care about power, and only power. The Democratic Party has far more power than it has members. The libertarian party has lots of members, and no power. You are upset that a world of associations unequally distributes power. I am upset that a handful of people were fined for protesting because their signs were provided by an organization whose paperwork wasn't in order. You are outraged that the outcome was unequal while I am outraged that the rules were unjust. Whatever it is, it is not a bad thing that 100 people deciding to associate are more powerful than 100 people that did not. To be upset at this is naive. Political power has never been equitably shared, George Bush always had more power than I. Retarding freedom of speech will not fix inequitable distribution of political power. What it will do is prevent Citizens United from distributing a movie critical of a politician, cause the police to show up for a meeting of the college democrats and fine the organizers, and get people fined based on where their protest sign supplies came from. How did any of these actions by the police more equitably distribute political power? If anything, they serve to suppress small organizations in favor of big organizations that can afford attorneys to make sure their paperwork is in order. You did not bother to defend the law on its results. I doubt even you believe the usage of the law I mention was just. All you have is the hope that if we have enough of these unjust laws, we can achieve democratic utopia. Well, the law was not challenged because it took money out of politics, it was challenged for harassing dissenters. How can a democracy function is its dissenters are being dragged before the FEC and fined? [Edited on October 19, 2010 at 1:55 AM. Reason : .,.]
10/19/2010 1:51:28 AM
I'm hardly in support of suppressing the speech and free protest of collaborating individuals, and I don't know why you seem to assume that I am. That attorneys are needed in order to work out the paperwork of a protest is an entirely separate injustice that also needs to be fixed. It's nothing to do with outcomes, the rules as they stand are unjust in both of our arguments. I'm not even saying that people shouldn't associate, or agree, or form organizations. Some people can still make a group and hire lawyers and whatever else... but for the government to formalize those associations into something that gives them additional political power recognized by law seems, to me, completely absurd. You're making arguments about small groups standing up to protest, but to me, PACs seem to be little more than a way for the rich to ally with elected officials. It serves to keep the control in the hands of those that already have it, not to uplift the 'little guy' or give a voice to those who normally aren't heard.
10/19/2010 3:41:23 AM
10/19/2010 11:49:31 AM
10/19/2010 11:56:56 AM
10/19/2010 1:15:42 PM
So the solution is to ditch caps altogether and let people buy elections outright
10/19/2010 4:13:49 PM
No, the solution lies at the root of the problem. It's worth it, to some people, to spend 50 mil on an election. Why? What is their incentive? Are they simply power hungry, or is there something to gain?
10/19/2010 4:38:49 PM
^^ But they are buying it anyway. The difference is, instead of laundering the money through various political foundations, they get the money directly and are forced to disclose the contribution, allowing their opponent to portray them as "bought and paid for". To put it another way, a republican which would happily publicize the money he got from some religious foundation is forced to instead launder the money along side his other financiers which he would prefer to keep secret. As such, the contributors that politicians would rather keep secret are easily obscured by other contributions. A good metaphor would be the U.S. Mexican border. If all immigration was legal, then anyone crossing the border was either a terrorist or a drug smuggler. However, because much immigration is illegal, the true criminals get to disappear into a larger flood of non-criminal immigrants.
10/19/2010 5:33:53 PM
Awww, goodness, LoneSnark has written so many, many words...it's troubling.BTW, it was "since" and "sense." That's why I italicized the word in my post when I criticized your spelling, bro.[Edited on October 21, 2010 at 3:15 AM. Reason : "^ ...I can't find a wrongly spelled word in my post. " Adorable!]
10/21/2010 3:15:00 AM