page 4 of people who think "people" should have rights to free speech
1/23/2010 9:55:30 PM
So is there any evidence that the law that was struck down actually stopped any sort of corporate influence within the government? I mean, this was passed in 2002, does anyone think that the amount of corporate influence in the government decreased between 2002 and now?
1/23/2010 10:22:04 PM
http://www.unbossed.com/index.php?itemid=2797
1/23/2010 10:24:24 PM
1/23/2010 10:27:43 PM
1/23/2010 11:03:50 PM
^ you did have that right.Corporations weren't outright banned from stating their views.They were just capped in certain circumstances.
1/23/2010 11:06:13 PM
And you agreed with that? I should be free to listen to what others would like to say, but not during election season? It would seem to me that during political elections would be the most important time to exercise the marketplace of ideas.
1/23/2010 11:19:49 PM
1/24/2010 1:19:18 AM
And again, try to remember what you are justifying here, moron. While GE was free to speak, you were frying the small fish:
1/24/2010 1:25:10 AM
1/24/2010 2:55:18 AM
^ that's an enumerated vs implied debate.Ironically, the dissenting opinion is saying that stuffing corporations under the first amendment is too broad of an interpretation of what the first amendment applies to. When you consider who we already limit free speech to, and on the basis of what, it's bizarre to say that corporations are absolutely exempt from similar reasonable limits, that don't remotely ban their ability to exercise free speech.
1/24/2010 3:25:45 AM
1/24/2010 5:44:32 AM
1/24/2010 10:15:44 AM
1/24/2010 10:56:10 AM
1/24/2010 12:29:13 PM
1/24/2010 12:35:46 PM
Which is seriously the stupidest reasoning in the world.
1/24/2010 12:47:21 PM
It’s seems pretty dumb reasoning that corporations should be treated as persons when it comes to free speech.I do like one side effect though from this whole thing, it shows where the Libertarians are: nowhere.
1/24/2010 12:50:32 PM
1/24/2010 2:09:01 PM
It's pretty awesome that this isn't all over the news...oh wait, large corporations. What happens when foreign companies own our presidents? ....facepalm
1/24/2010 9:20:56 PM
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/congress/jan-june98/china_5-19.htmlsimpsons clintons did it.
1/24/2010 9:42:05 PM
1/24/2010 10:27:04 PM
If the point is that this is not being covered because large corporations own media companies, and if that point is being used to illustrate why media companies large corporations should not be able to engage in free speech, then... *facepalm*[Edited on January 24, 2010 at 10:54 PM. Reason : s]
1/24/2010 10:54:07 PM
I, for one, welcome our new corporate overlords. We can replace the 50 stars on the flag with 50 different corporate logos.
1/24/2010 11:42:53 PM
OK, I've read through most of this thread so far but not all, so if I'm repeating things excessively please forgive me.Here is the problem:We all seem to agree that nobody should give money to campaigns with the expectation of special favors. That's good, but there's now way to enforce that. I suspect that many times it's not even that straightforward. A candidate gets a bunch of money from a certain camp; legislation affecting that camp comes up; the politician says, without even necessarily needing any lobbying or prompting, "Well shit, they gave me money last time, but I bet they won't give me money if I fuck them now," and so he doesn't fuck them, regardless of whether or not they need a deep political dicking.Many of us seem to agree that donations from corporations are bad. What else could a corporation want besides special favors? But of course it's impossible to differentiate corporations from other organizations. If a corporation can't give money directly, it'll give to a PAC. If it can't give to a PAC, its major shareholders will. And if you take away all of management's ability to give to a campaign, you pretty much have to do that to unions...but how do you do that?Campaign finance reform is one of the biggest and most important clusterfucks in politics today. I personally would be in favor of each side drawing from an equal set of public funds, although that would, of course, bring up a whole new issue regarding third parties.
1/25/2010 12:51:24 AM
I'm more concerned about local anti-business candidates getting silenced/swift-boated than main-stream state/national candidates getting their pockets filled - that's going to happen regardless of the law.
1/25/2010 1:31:54 AM
This ruling in no way alters the campaign donation restrictions. Corporations can give no more money to a politician today than they could last year. All that has changed is their ability to spend money independently of any politicians in question, such as issue ads: "on tuesday, send a message to Congress that America doesn't/does need more bailouts!"
1/25/2010 2:56:25 AM
Please let my last post be amended to include what you just said. How do you separate "issue ads" from "ads in favor of a candidate"? You can't, realistically. Meaning that this ruling does affect things, in a potentially big way.
1/25/2010 3:19:23 AM
^^You think the corporation's who care enough to throw around the big bucks are going to be on the side against bailouts? Really?
1/25/2010 3:42:35 AM
1/25/2010 5:05:31 AM
historically, corporations have wanted special treatment and to fuck others. Why should we expect them to do differently now?
1/25/2010 7:07:38 AM
Yes, historically I have also wanted special favors and at times I have wanted to F some people.At the same time, I also wouldn't want to be unfairly targeted by legislation. I would hope that I could protest against that legislation if it were ever introduced.
1/25/2010 7:55:36 AM
Laws such as McCain/Feingold try to equalize Free Speech, that is not let one party have more speech than someone else. The Supreme Court ruling simply said that the First Amendment is there to protect Free Speech, not decide how much Free Speech competing people can have.A key point is ..who gets to decide how much Free Speech one may have during an election? It doesn't make sense to let the people in power decide how much you can say against them during their re-election efforts. It seems like it should be up to us, not incumbent politicians, to decide how much we want to spend on political Free Speech.
1/25/2010 10:35:06 AM
it only seems that way to you because you are not in power at the moment
1/25/2010 10:40:16 AM
1/25/2010 12:26:23 PM
1/25/2010 12:29:04 PM
^Not bad ideas IMO, except for the tax deduction.
1/25/2010 12:44:02 PM
Agreed, all of those seem reasonable. My only caveat would be ensuring that no one is allowed to deduct political ads from their taxes, corporation or otherwise.[Edited on January 25, 2010 at 12:50 PM. Reason : fdasf]
1/25/2010 12:49:32 PM
I think all of those things are fine... As long as they don't mean that the shareholders have to approve every single ad... If the shareholders can just vote, "yes engage politically" I think that's a fantastic idea....Wonder if the liberals would so happily agree to forcing the unions to allow a vote on whether or not they engage politically or not. Somehow I think not.
1/25/2010 4:20:08 PM
1/25/2010 5:00:05 PM
I can agree with that, up/down shareholder votes to enable political action. Shit, such a law would be less about speech and more about disclosure, so I see no possible constitutional challenges. It would be a tolerable law, but it would not seriously help anything, seeing as it has not been demonstrated that corporate public speech has been harmful.
1/25/2010 5:16:57 PM
Attaching an actual person to the ad/contribution, like the CEO, might put this in the realm of protected speech.[Edited on January 25, 2010 at 5:52 PM. Reason : .]
1/25/2010 5:51:36 PM
1/26/2010 5:15:19 PM
1/27/2010 12:37:31 AM
Interesting theory:
1/29/2010 5:53:57 PM
1/29/2010 6:18:06 PM
haha, I almost repsonded to "while it's untrue." Then I read the rest and saw you posted it. ehe
1/29/2010 6:58:43 PM
For the record, I think intelligent extraterrestrials residing in the United States would be covered by the First Amendment. I am less sure about self-aware robots. But since the corporations at issue in this case are created and run by human beings, the Court did not need to address those issues. As Justice Antonin Scalia noted in his concurring opinion, "the individual person's right to speak includes the right to speak in association with other individual persons."http://reason.com/archives/2010/01/27/cover-your-ears
2/1/2010 10:04:59 AM
2/1/2010 4:22:09 PM
^Both sides are claiming to be on the side of free speech.There are those that are saying easy and direct corporate spending in elections drowns out the speech of citizens, and there are those that say wait a minute, corporations are people too.There are some legislative attempts to deal with this such as having shareholders vote on political involvement if they really want it to be the people that make up the corporation speaking, or having the CEO get on any ads they make and say "and I approved this message" and other attempts.There is also an effort to do a constitutional amendment, a bill was filed today towards that goal:
2/3/2010 3:43:52 AM