"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press;"This seems to be a fairly blanket law. Congress shall make no law....abridging the freedom of speech. No exceptions are given or implied. It seems to me any entity, even foreigners, would be protected here. I guess the authors figured freedom was sometimes the best policy.
1/23/2010 2:16:04 AM
1/23/2010 8:44:20 AM
oh noes! he dodges with an ad hominem!
1/23/2010 8:53:29 AM
What does one say to "modern liberalism is all about emotional reactions"?"nuh-uh"?Especially when it was used to deflect very rational criticism of your argument.
1/23/2010 9:04:31 AM
I wasn't even talking to you when I said that... I was explaining to leet baka why the liberal positions seemed so arbitrary.My response to you is requoted below, because you conveniently ignored it (strange how that works, isn't it?):===========
1/23/2010 9:09:15 AM
The Supreme Court wiped out 100 years of distinctions with their ruling. And this entire thread is about arguing whether they were right or not.Citing the ruling as proof that you're right is circular reasoning; come up with your own argument to defend the WSJ article. This is where we left off:The 1st Amendment explicitly grants the freedom of the press irregardless of business model. It does not explicitly grant the freedom of speech to corporations. There's a distinct difference. Your WSJ article is silly.[Edited on January 23, 2010 at 9:19 AM. Reason : ]
1/23/2010 9:17:37 AM
wtf, you're still not addressing my point. You claimed that scotus did not address the distinction. I reminded you that in effect they did address the distinction, by wiping it out. Or alternatively, in order to remain consistent with their own reasoning, they could not address the distinction because their premise was that there was none.Where in that do you get circular reasoning? This particular statement of mine makes no claim as to whether their decision was correct (although that is my position).p.s. irregardless is not the proper word.[Edited on January 23, 2010 at 9:24 AM. Reason : s]
1/23/2010 9:21:13 AM
Let's remember that we're discussing the WSJ article. WSJ: according to the NYT, they shouldn't have the right to write editorials, given that they're a corporation.Me: The NYT is the press before it's a corporation. There's nothing inconsistent about their position.You: The SC ruled that there's no distinction between press and corporations.You're right-- now that I spell it out for myself, it's not circular reasoning; it's a non sequitor. The Times' position is consistent. Explain why it isn't in the space provided below:
1/23/2010 9:27:27 AM
You said,
1/23/2010 9:29:34 AM
...by arguing that the SC's ruling made the Times' rationale moot. You've not explained how their rationale is inconsistent.
1/23/2010 9:42:40 AM
1/23/2010 9:52:34 AM
No, I did not respond to this:
1/23/2010 9:59:36 AM
1/23/2010 10:50:11 AM
I didn't see liberals crying when the SCOTUS overturned a hundred years of case law and legislation when it ruled on Roe v. Wade.Just sayin.
1/23/2010 11:04:41 AM
1/23/2010 11:27:33 AM
1/23/2010 11:38:02 AM
^ well it just doesn't feel right, so I'm going to have to oppose it./modern liberal
1/23/2010 11:53:38 AM
1/23/2010 12:10:26 PM
1/23/2010 12:13:24 PM
What of the power of voting when it is illegal to speak to the voters?
1/23/2010 12:15:27 PM
It doesn’t make sense for corporations to be granted first amendment privileges in the way the court has ruled, even though corporations are treated as entities in certain situations. If the CEO wants to use his own salary to promote a candidate, then fine. But a corporation shouldn’t be able to use their money to put out commercials saying “vote for candidate X” because democracy is about people, not corporations. If you want me to get all tea-bagger on you, the Founding Fathers™ never intended for things to be this way, and this is not how the constitution is written.
1/23/2010 12:22:32 PM
^The left is wasting no time seizing on that idea. Maddow is saying that it could bring some libertarians, some independents, and maybe some tea party folk over if the left keeps fighting this and the GOP leadership keeps cheering it on.Petition supporting Dem legislative attempts to fight this: http://www.savedemocracy.netPresident Obama/OFA link to contact your representatives: http://my.barackobama.com/page/content/fairelections/MoveOn.org: http://pol.moveon.org/fairelectionsnow/?r_by=18673-9072683-wvUiPcx&rc=confemailNot that e-mail campaigns & online petitions are the most effective way of doing campaigns for a cause, and I'm sure they aren't all there is too this, but all 3 of these ended up in my inbox within 24 hours of the SCOTUS decision.
1/23/2010 12:36:17 PM
Again though, do people have a right to pool their money together to promote a single political message? Why is it Trader Joe's can't publish commercials against corn subsidies, but NC Policy Watch gets a 5 minute segment on air every day for a "commentary"? I mean if we want to go with the founding fathers, the first amendment also says they can't restrict freedom of assembly. Is a corporation not an assembly?
1/23/2010 12:39:38 PM
doesn't matter. the issue is settled and there's no way to reverse it for years to come.
1/23/2010 12:47:45 PM
^^^ can MSNBC not find a more charismatic commentator than Maddow, with competent writers?It’s no wonder they are taking a beating from Fox. Maddow has a fairly shrill talking style, and her diatribes are too long winded. She needs to be more succinct, and use more on-screen graphics that exaggerate her points in order to drive them home.[Edited on January 23, 2010 at 12:53 PM. Reason : ]
1/23/2010 12:53:47 PM
"Until today, we had the right to free speech, and the right to assembly, but not the right to free speech when we were assembled. The Supreme Court has thankfully corrected that absurdity."moron, I posted the text, that does indeed seem to be exactly how the constitution is written. If you find the text explaining that "people assembled in large numbers here-by revoke their rights" let us know. And why should a CEO spend his own money defending the interests of shareholders? It seems to me such a requirement would naturally under-provide such speech, just as a requirement for individuals to own a printing press before they can legally speak to fellow voters would do so. But, just as the text I quoted said, many companies went ahead and bought a printing press. GE owns MSNBC, so GE is free to speak to the electorate at large using shareholder dollars. GE's competitor Siemens does not own a TV network, so they cannot speak to voters on matters of policy without their CEO spending his own money. Does anyone believe this is just? GE has used this monopoly on speech to great effect, as "GE Capital was bailed out by the taxpayers. GE CEO Jeff Immelt is a close adviser to President Obama, and GE would profit from Obama policies such as cap-and-trade." Try to remember what we are talking about here: there was no law restricting the right of corporations to spend money on candidates or lobbying politicians. All the law that was struck down did was restrict the right of corporations to spend money appealing to voters. If anything, this ruling will divert money from the Washington political machine and into the nations media outlets, in effect diverting corporate efforts from politicians and toward voters. Sounds like a good thing to me. "But what about BB&T buying an ad in the Washington Post pleading to the American People against being forced to take Tarp money? How can anyone argue that this speech should not be legal?"[Edited on January 23, 2010 at 12:59 PM. Reason : .,.]
1/23/2010 12:54:14 PM
exactly. the political machine is freaking out over this, because money will be diverted from them and to the people.god forbid.
1/23/2010 12:59:26 PM
why did they ban businesses from having free speech like that in the first place?
1/23/2010 1:24:57 PM
to consolidate power
1/23/2010 1:27:11 PM
^ lol?Power has greatly shifted more in the directions of the great and benevolent corporations.
1/23/2010 1:48:34 PM
yea, instead of allowing it to make its case publically, force it to funnel its resources privately to the people who actually pass laws.[Edited on January 23, 2010 at 1:57 PM. Reason : s]
1/23/2010 1:57:02 PM
1/23/2010 1:59:06 PM
sometimes when you've reached a dead-end, you have to backtrack a little
1/23/2010 2:04:21 PM
hahayou’re saying we reached a dead end in terms of finance reform?That is a very unimaginative view, but conservatives aren’t really known for thinking outside the box.
1/23/2010 2:14:50 PM
well I guess I don't see a place for "creative thinking" or "outside the box" solutions when it comes to following the constitution.nevertheless, that you can't conceive of a solution that is compatible with the first amendment and also strengthens our democracy, in light of this ruling, perhaps may also betray a lack of imagination on your part.then again, liberals aren't really known for imagining any solution that did not involve massive government regulation and intervention.[Edited on January 23, 2010 at 2:25 PM. Reason : s]
1/23/2010 2:19:25 PM
^ you’re wrong that this is what is prescribed in the constitution. Corporations aren’t people under the constitution."If you want me to get all tea-bagger on you, the Founding Fathers™ never intended for things to be this way, and this is not how the constitution is written.”and how is this not compatible with the first amendment:"Why would anyone spend any money to defend anyone else’s interest? Shareholders can spend their own money defending their own interests. A CEO can spend his money defending his own interests.”
1/23/2010 2:25:11 PM
if only people are afforded the right to free speech, then why did mccain feingold make an attempt to comply with the constitution when they explicitly exempted major media corporations from their law?
1/23/2010 2:26:43 PM
1/23/2010 2:44:00 PM
1/23/2010 2:46:53 PM
1/23/2010 6:07:46 PM
1/23/2010 6:56:43 PM
http://www.slate.com/id/2242210Slate has a good article on this issue
1/23/2010 8:34:29 PM
^ there is so much fucked up shit in that article it makes me want to cry.Example:
1/23/2010 8:42:03 PM
^ you're reading it with the lens of a Palin supporter instead of the lens of legal comprehension. They are referring to specific legal precedences there.
1/23/2010 8:54:56 PM
I like how the recent well reasoned decision of the supreme court of the united states of america is now getting the "OMG SARAH PALIN ITT" treatment.Also, since you care so much about precedence. How about the precedent the court just set?
1/23/2010 8:56:56 PM
like with Plessy vs. Ferguson, we'll realize our folly one day, hopefully soon.
1/23/2010 8:58:19 PM
all it takes is the death of a conservative justice
1/23/2010 8:58:58 PM
is that a threat?
1/23/2010 9:02:26 PM
1/23/2010 9:30:35 PM
1/23/2010 9:33:36 PM