Are corporations people? The Citizens United vs Federal Election Commission Supreme Court decision seemed to say yes, at least in so far as free speech rights go, where money is equated with speech. And the McCutcheon vs Federal Election Commission Supreme Court case that will be decided next year might open those doors even wider.It looks like the Supreme Court is now also taking up a case where they will decide if corporate persons have religious liberties too. If that is what is decided, how far could it go? Could you not cover vaccines on religious grounds? Could you not hire women on the corporation's religious beliefs? Could you not serve African American customers based on religious grounds?Could you pick and choose which laws to follow based on religious grounds? Could you decide that religiously your organization won't pay taxes because some of those will be used for national defense and war efforts and that goes against thou shalt not kill? Could your organization religiously believe that animals were made to serve humans and thus humane treatment standards don't apply?I heard that in the lower court decisions leading up to this Supreme Court case that part of the arguments for allowing corporations to have religious liberties was using the Citizens United precedent of corporate personhood.What do you think? Are corporations people? Or does incorporating, with the tax, legal, and public interaction implications mean it's okay to have the organization subject to a different set of rules that you accept when asking for government-recognized corporate status than the rules for individuals?If corporate personhood is a reality, what other rights do individuals have that corporate people are being denied that might end up at the Supreme Court down the road?
11/26/2013 8:58:00 PM
Citizens united did not establish that corporations are people no matter how many times you fucking morons want to blatantly ignore the ruling and make up whatever stupid shit fits your talking points.Corporations aren't people, they are groups of people. Any rights a person retains as a member of a group can be extended to corporations. Freedom of speech is a good example of this. Group speech is protected and up until citizens united, this freedom was arbitrarily denied to corporations and unions for no real reason other than political parties didn't want competition. Now with the new healthcare law we see a for-profit company wanting to exempt itself from having to cover birth control on religious grounds. So lets look at it both ways. First, lets take the retarded fucking morons point of view and incorrectly assume that corporations are people: Do people have the right to exempt themselves from the law for religious reasons? Well obviously fucking not. If that were the case I'd start the Church of We Aint Payin Taxes Oh And Also Hookers and Blow tomorrow. So even if we were idiots that assumed that corporations were people, they cant be exempt. It would break the system. Now, lets take the non-idiotic point of view that corporations are groups of people. Do any GROUPS of people have any right to be exempt from laws for religious reasons? Well, yes actually. Non-profits are ALREADY allowed to claim the very exemption from this very law for the very reasons in this case! This is actually what the case is about. We already grant special privilege to established religious organizations and now this for-profit corporation wants the same treatment on the same grounds. The real question is: "Why the fuck do established religious organizations get exemptions from the law?" I don't think they should get exemptions to any law, but if they are going to get them than it must be for all organizations, not just those with certain tax filing designations. Really the problem is that the established tradition is flawed. Established religious groups have more freedom than individuals and this is wrong. Either those freedoms must be granted to all groups and all individuals, or they should be eliminated. Personally I vote for elimination of those special freedoms.[Edited on November 26, 2013 at 10:13 PM. Reason : r]
11/26/2013 10:12:20 PM
I concur with everything Shaggy said here. Bravo.
11/26/2013 10:14:53 PM
11/27/2013 10:01:03 AM
I think we should put BP in jail.
11/27/2013 10:22:20 AM
11/27/2013 12:32:23 PM
11/27/2013 1:41:33 PM
11/27/2013 1:42:42 PM
11/27/2013 2:14:34 PM
...so how does Hobby Lobby fit in the confessional?
11/28/2013 10:21:22 PM
Regardless, we now live in a Plutocracy.
11/29/2013 8:13:04 AM
12/1/2013 1:04:44 AM
I for one hope The Kroger Company runs against Steve Chabot in 2014; everybody loves Kroger in this area, and it's headquartered in Cincinnati, so it only makes sense for them to represent us in the House.
12/1/2013 5:07:07 PM