Here is a pretty even handed evaluation by the Economist:
1/22/2010 1:28:59 AM
1/22/2010 2:36:41 AM
The end of this CNN article entitled "Analysis: High court ruling a game-changer for campaign spending" made me lol a little:http://www.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/01/21/supreme.court.analysis/index.html
1/22/2010 7:46:18 AM
1/22/2010 8:51:17 AM
NEWS ALERT: Supreme Court Justices are nominated, confirmed, and known to vote along ideological lines.
1/22/2010 9:15:24 AM
"Colorado GOP to sue to lift campaign money limits"http://www.denverpost.com/ci_14243394And the GOP is wasting no time making use of the new corporate money allowed by their conservative counterparts in SCOTUS.
1/22/2010 9:36:35 AM
1/22/2010 9:59:42 AM
1/22/2010 10:27:35 AM
The initial couple million helps tremendously, there's no doubt. There are diminishing returns, though. For instance, some people (like Dole) managed to hurt their chances by spending/advertising more.
1/22/2010 10:35:56 AM
1/22/2010 10:57:24 AM
The Incumbent Protection Act (McCain-Feingold) was successfully weakened..but must be eliminated completely.
1/22/2010 11:14:28 AM
1/22/2010 11:27:31 AM
Ah, ok that's true, but that doesn't really refute the point that corporations can buy votes. Corporations can make that initial investment. It's still a large enough amount to grant businesses a distinct advantage.In any case, 2% is a game-changing portion of votes. Two of the last 3 presidential elections came down to that much.
1/22/2010 11:38:40 AM
1/22/2010 11:49:36 AM
I think this sums it up:
1/22/2010 11:55:33 AM
I don't remember exactly, I read the book quite awhile ago, but being passably handsome gains you ten times more votes than spending twice as much as your opponent. Should we ban televised debates? People running for office don't have a right to not be outspent by their opponents. I was merely pointing out that money rarely turns elections (the two presidential elections you refer too, both sides spent shockingly similar amounts of money, and such close elections, while common in the 2000s, are rare in U.S. history). But even if they did completely dictate election outcomes, I would still be against revoking the right of others to assemble and petition the government for redress. If you don't like the outcome of elections, then get involved in whatever means is effective, even if the only effective means is to start a corporation to lobby politicians for good laws. You are missing the problem. The problem is not that politicians are beholden to corporations, there are big corporations on both sides of any debate. The problem is power. Politicians are free to accept the corporation's money and then ignore them once in office, just as they are free to ignore you and the promise they made once in office. The problem is self-selection and the type of person that runs and keeps office, not who bought their dinner. And it seems to me that the best way to fix that problem is to reduce incumbency. Remember what I said, the first few million makes a huge difference to an election, but many candidates for office cannot even make that hurdle. It is no accident that re-election rates have reached new heights of 98% now that we had a regime of restrictive campaign finance.[Edited on January 22, 2010 at 12:20 PM. Reason : .,.]
1/22/2010 12:01:08 PM
1/22/2010 12:05:35 PM
1/22/2010 12:09:19 PM
1/22/2010 12:17:35 PM
1/22/2010 12:22:29 PM
1/22/2010 12:38:12 PM
1/22/2010 2:01:44 PM
1/22/2010 2:44:39 PM
Can we stop this silly back and forth? Businesses are not people. They don't deserve rights beyond their owner's vague right to non-interference. Businesses are not capable of philanthropy or common good, except through the actions of the individuals within the business. There is no justification for giving a "company" its own say in government; no more than any other non-living entity that is subjected to laws, like my car, or my guns.No, banning corporate contributions will not solve everything, but it doesn't hurt one bit.
1/22/2010 2:52:34 PM
1/22/2010 2:59:49 PM
1/22/2010 3:02:06 PM
^^All committed with the following intentions:1. fostering admiration among their customers and business-partners (for every self-less act, there is an advertisement to tell about it)2. qualifying for industry awards or recognition3. public service in compensation for closed-door civil litigation4. becoming eligible for government subsidies and tax breaks5. getting a marginal return out of an other-wise useless resource (for example, food shelter donations from restaraunts) see 16. individual initiatives from employees that use little or no corporate resources (for example, HanesBrands often sponsers the MS Walk, but all of the contributions are donations from individual employees. Hanes simply puts their name on the envelope)
1/22/2010 3:15:09 PM
Unions exist to increase the wealth and wellbeing of the union members, often at the expense of anyone else.Organized religion is just as much a self serving scam to create personal power and wealth. non-profit is a terrible term because all it means is you dont payout profits to external places. Non-profits can still bring in a shitload of revenue and give it out to whoever they want as long as its counted as salaries or some other semantec garbage. Non-profits are probably worse than corporations in that they get money for idelogical purposes, rather than a straight forward business reason. Thing is, limiting any group participation is next to impossible. Even when we put limits on corporate spending, they found other ways to get passed the limits (dontating to non-profit shells, hiring lobbiests, etc...). Again, this ruling isn't going to change their impact. Its going to change the direction you see it coming from. Which, ironicly, should make it easier to target. If walmart outright buys a campaign, the politician is going to come under direct fire from anti-walmart folks. Before the ruling, walmart would just diseminate the same funds through non-profits or other organizations or individuals.You could go so far as to limit monetary contributions to $5 per person per candidate, but then how would you limit non-monetary contributions? How would you make sure person A only contributed one time while maintaining privacy? Would you be able to make anonymous donations at all?Putting an arbitrary limit on corporate spending is feelgood crap that doesn't actually change anything. The problem is the politicians and the government.
1/22/2010 3:39:07 PM
^
1/22/2010 5:57:10 PM
1/22/2010 6:20:48 PM
1/22/2010 7:49:41 PM
when a corporation makes a bad decision, you can take your business elsewhere. when the government does, you can't. what happens when the corporation makes a bad decision for the government?
1/22/2010 8:37:07 PM
1/22/2010 9:58:03 PM
au contraire, ive said before that i'd prefer a voucher system to purchase insurancebut carry on
1/22/2010 10:00:28 PM
1/22/2010 10:28:58 PM
From today's best of the web:
1/22/2010 10:35:19 PM
^^Repost, because everyone (liberal and conservative) can agree that Rehnquist >>>> Scalia
1/22/2010 10:37:26 PM
1/22/2010 10:39:53 PM
The 1st Amendment explicitly protects the freedom of the press, irregardless of its business model. This is only difficult to understand if you're a WSJ editorialist (how ironic).It's pretty humorous to see that this guy spent a significant amount of time to write an article that was so fundamentally flawed. And then it was published by the conservative media's most "respectable" outlet. [Edited on January 22, 2010 at 10:47 PM. Reason : ]
1/22/2010 10:44:15 PM
if it is so flawed, then why did mccain feingold have to explicitly go out of its way to exempt media companies from its restrictions?
1/22/2010 10:49:24 PM
Because if they hadn't, their bill would've been in direct violation of the 1st Amendment.
1/22/2010 10:52:33 PM
1/22/2010 10:53:25 PM
1/22/2010 11:01:14 PM
As it happens, the scotus agreed that the distinction was arbitrary and in fact ruled that the law was largely in direct violation of the first amendment.... Bogus exemptions for politically popular media industries notwithstanding.
1/22/2010 11:05:43 PM
1/22/2010 11:07:02 PM
1/22/2010 11:15:47 PM
Oh I get it. You're trying to protect Americans from themselves because you know better what's good for them.Well, that's always constitutional.
1/22/2010 11:19:12 PM
Whoa, someone just got on their soapbox.So I guess it's intentional, then?
1/22/2010 11:22:48 PM
1/23/2010 12:01:18 AM
modern liberalism is all about emotional reactions
1/23/2010 12:09:05 AM