2/3/2010 10:03:25 AM
^then you agree, more or less, with Representative Price (who represents part of Wake, Durham, & Orange & a small piece of Chatham county):
2/4/2010 4:20:58 PM
Yea i think thats fine. I think any kind of political advertisment should have a clear message of where it came from. The only change I'd make is to outright ban robocalls of any type.
2/4/2010 4:44:16 PM
2/4/2010 4:57:20 PM
Maybe because it looks good to fight corporate influence, I mean it is being done as a bipartisan bill with one Dem & 1 Rep introducing it together. And it looks good to be bipartisan. They could be doing the right thing somewhat for the right reasons but also because it makes them look shiny.[Edited on February 4, 2010 at 5:50 PM. Reason : .]
2/4/2010 5:49:16 PM
2/4/2010 11:23:39 PM
http://economix.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/02/02/corporation-says-it-will-run-for-congress/
2/9/2010 7:07:46 PM
^ Exactly. Eric Hensal is running for Congress. Should it be illegal for Eric Hensal to run for Congress based solely upon his association with other fellow citizens? Just because that association is named Murray Hill Inc.? How the fuck can these people not understand this simple concept? Murray Hill Inc is not running for Congress, because a corporation is an intangible idea and therefore cannot do anything, only Eric Hensal exists to run for Congress. Well, Murray Hill Inc does not engage in speech either, being an intangible idea. Only Eric Hensal can speak. Well, should Eric Hensal be fined and imprisoned for engaging in free speech based solely upon his association with Murray Hill Inc. owners and employees?
2/9/2010 10:39:22 PM
2/15/2010 10:48:20 AM
If Eric Hensal dies then in accordance with the state laws there will either be a special election or an appointment by the governor. More importantly: Eric Hensal once elected will be a congressmen, he can do whatever he wants. He can pass laws against Murray Hill's interests all day long and all they can do is stop paying him. They cannot replace him, because Eric Hensal would have won the friggin' election, not them. So, once again, why should Eric Hensal be prevented from running for office? Or, more to the point, why would Eric Hensal lose his right to free speech just because some corporate execs pay him a salary? The 1st Amendment guarantees Eric Hensal the right to freedom of speech, it does not provide for any exceptions, especially something as irrelevant as who signs his paycheck.
2/15/2010 2:17:19 PM
Are you refusing to acknowledge that the corporation is running, and not the CEO, for rhetorical purposes? I don't get it.
2/15/2010 5:33:22 PM
We all get the point. People have rights, groups of people have rights, therefore people and groups of people are the same thing. Unfortunately, that argument is fucking retarded. A corporation is a concept. A corporation cannot collectively sit in a congressional seat. Only an individual can do that.
2/15/2010 5:40:00 PM
2/15/2010 5:44:54 PM
If you cant fathom the difference between a group of people campaigning for an individual vs. a group of people trying to get collectively elected to office, you're either a goddamned moron or being intentionally obtuse.Either way its fucking retarded. We get it. You dont like the idea of big evil corporations spending money on campaigns. We get that you're ok with them laundering the money through non-profits to do the same. We get that you're ok with unions spending freely. We get that as long as the money is coming from a source that you peronally approve of its a-ok.This bullshit about "OH< HEH I KNOW LETS DO SOMETHING REALLY FUCKING STUPID TO DRAMATIZE OUR RETARDED POINT!!" is seriously awful and you need to some up with some actual rational behind your opinions.A group of people of like mind pooling their resources to support a candidate is nothing at all like that group of people running for a single office.
2/15/2010 5:51:11 PM
2/15/2010 6:18:32 PM
2/15/2010 6:51:07 PM
2/15/2010 6:55:46 PM
Boone, do you find it an equal tragedy of justice that the government can't reject a contractor because they hire and employ minorities? If not, why do you feel the case is different? In both instances, an action is being taken against a corporation, which we all know can't have civil rights. The only way this could be a problem is if the action in question against the corporation infringes upon the civil rights of the individuals that make up the corporation.
2/15/2010 7:53:34 PM
2/16/2010 11:02:36 AM
2/16/2010 11:36:22 AM
1) My point stands.2) Sure, an individual ultimately must sign off on an expenditure, but how many degrees of separation separate the stock holders from that person? There's no way that regulating what an executive can use shareholder money on is perfectly equivalent to regulating what an executive can spend his or her own money on.
2/16/2010 12:35:22 PM
It's not perfectly equivalent, nor has anyone suggested it is. In fact, if you read the thread (I know, reading instead of assuming, not something TSB is known for) you will find that a number of people who agree with the decision in question (myself included) have suggested if the concern is shareholder interests not being represented, that such actions should be subject to a shareholder vote.
2/16/2010 12:39:40 PM
2/16/2010 4:05:13 PM
5/1/2010 4:24:01 PM
http://www.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/07/13/bp.release.connection/index.html
7/13/2010 1:58:18 PM
actually, this is more a matter of what happens when you have a massive federal gov't to which massive corporations can send armies of lobbyists...
7/13/2010 8:15:08 PM
if it was smaller the lobbying would be... more difficult?
7/13/2010 8:22:10 PM
no. if the federal gov't didn't have such the massive scope that it does today, there would be no point in lobbying it as hard.
7/13/2010 8:26:53 PM
^ ... because then it'd be easier to "lobby" directly to the people...
7/13/2010 8:27:55 PM
when you consider the purpose of lobbying, which is to gain special favours for your company or industry at the expense of others, it hardly seems likely that there would be any "lobbying" of the people.[Edited on July 13, 2010 at 8:30 PM. Reason : ]
7/13/2010 8:29:40 PM
there's a ken burns documentary on pbs-ex right now (twc 173) about the history of congressDAMN YOU BIG RAILROAD, WE'RE GONNA TAKE OUR COUNTRY BACK TO THE PEOPLE[Edited on July 13, 2010 at 8:49 PM. Reason : DOWN WITH THE BOSSES]
7/13/2010 8:48:51 PM
http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2010/07/27/campaign-finance-disclosure-legislation-stalls-in-senate/?fbid=CeukDESvFZn
7/27/2010 6:04:59 PM
No one would pay attention if they did report their contributors.
7/27/2010 6:08:04 PM
^Some of the ad designers might. Currently an ad from Energy Citizens sounds nice and grassrootsy in their opposition to oil regulation, but if the add had to end with brought to you by Haliburton or BP then maybe they'd forgo the add altogether, or at least strive for accuracy a little harder.
7/27/2010 6:59:57 PM
If the ad was funded by the oil industry, why don't you go on TV and tell everyone? I'm sure it'd be news. You could get on TV for free!
7/27/2010 7:12:12 PM
I posted a thread on this earlier: message_topic.aspx?topic=597730This bill was pretty much rotten from the start. Any time congress starts to legislate how to pay for elections it is time to pay excruciatingly close attention. Sadly, since DISCLOSE couldn't be boiled down into a 60s segment so not many major news outlets said anything about it. That being said, fuck this bill, there is a reason the ACLU opposed it and, only through some creative lobbying and legislative language did the NRA and AARP decide to stay out of the fight.
7/28/2010 6:22:45 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2011/POLITICS/01/20/scotus.conflict.allegation/index.html"Group says 2 justices may have conflict of interest in election case"
1/20/2011 4:26:15 PM
http://www.voterrollcall.com/client/PollReport.aspx?g=ce694372-aa8e-48c2-83c1-e093151c0906
1/27/2011 3:16:55 AM
1/27/2011 9:21:33 AM
1/28/2011 3:46:27 PM
Very interesting insight into campaign finance imo - http://www.thisamericanlife.org/radio-archives/episode/591/get-your-moneys-worth
8/1/2016 12:28:48 PM
How about instead of worrying about who is buying the politicians, we change the government such that there's no incentive to buy the politicians? Quit letting them pick the winners and losers.
8/1/2016 1:53:45 PM