1/21/2010 10:22:21 AM
More speech instead of less. Take that.. McCain-FeinGold!
1/21/2010 10:44:13 AM
Corporate personhood is ridiculous.
1/21/2010 11:25:10 AM
You missed the best part:
1/21/2010 11:26:57 AM
Yes, well, Boone personhood is rediculous! j/k, corporate personhood is as natural as Power of Attorney.
1/21/2010 12:06:15 PM
1/21/2010 1:36:42 PM
1/21/2010 2:17:59 PM
I don't agree with the implications of this decision.Therefore, ACTIVIST JUDGES!!
1/21/2010 2:24:31 PM
I don't like how much leverage lobbyists/corporate donors have, but I don't think McCain-Feingold was the right solution. The problem isn't that corporations donate a ton of money, but that the politicians then feel beholden to those corporations, and vote or write legislation in such a way.
1/21/2010 2:24:52 PM
I support this ruling. That being said, shouldn't corporations only gain limited liability through actual flesh-and-blood private money, rather than by government fiat? That way, they'd just be [fully] private groups with the same rights of the individuals that make them up -- and that would silence much of the corporate personhood debate, right?^Well put. But how do we fix that?
1/21/2010 2:44:15 PM
there's no way to fix that.it's a scratch my back i'll scratch yours mentality. if corporations spend a shitton of money for you for your campaign - they're going to expect something in return.
1/21/2010 2:45:44 PM
1/21/2010 2:54:47 PM
1/21/2010 2:58:47 PM
1/21/2010 3:00:14 PM
I think the solution is to entirely ban non-private donations and severely limit private donations. Only individuals should have the right to leverage their government representatives, and that leverage should remain relatively equal among all individuals.
1/21/2010 3:04:11 PM
^ obviously, given the SCOTUS ruling, that'd be an infringement of freedom of speech
1/21/2010 3:12:18 PM
If an individual is donating money to a politician because they want special favors, that's just as bad as the corporation doing it. You should be donating money because you support the candidate, and believe that person will make good decisions for the country as a whole. When you donate money, you should not expect anything in return. We have corrupt politicians that do reward large donations, and those people should be exposed and not re-elected.
1/21/2010 3:30:23 PM
while i agree with you in theory - why do you think that labor unions bank roll democratic campaigns? it's because the democrats usually will vote in their favor when push comes to shove. or when CEO of major corporations bundle funds for republicans and hand it over.it's really the same thing as giving money to a candidate because you expect something in return.
1/21/2010 3:32:59 PM
1/21/2010 3:58:49 PM
"With its ruling today, the Supreme Court has given a green light to a new stampede of special interest money in our politics."He left out labor unions...oh....wait...
1/21/2010 4:01:33 PM
Business as usual in Washington; claim the moral high ground no matter what.
1/21/2010 4:19:48 PM
1/21/2010 4:21:38 PM
I don't really see how the SC had any claim to decide this in the first place. What exactly does the Constitution say about corporations? Hell, let's have them decide whether college football should have a tournament, too. They're both equally related to the Constitution.Given that, the question is: "is corporate personhood a good idea?"And the answer is no. My retirement money -> mutual fund -> Corporation X -> Sarah Palin 2012. Screw that.
1/21/2010 4:31:09 PM
I'd like to see it go back to when legislators wrote laws rather than letting lobbyists for various groups and corporations write our laws. Legislation and regulation are a great way to kill smaller competitors, probably wouldn't happen as much if, for example, Mattell hadn't written the bill mandating how toys are tested.
1/21/2010 4:31:23 PM
1/21/2010 4:32:51 PM
Those of you who are advocating corporate personhood are failing to acknowledge multinational corporations and the influence they can now wield freely. China won't need to wage war when they can officially sponsor all of our politicians.
1/21/2010 4:41:18 PM
1/21/2010 4:47:20 PM
1/21/2010 4:50:12 PM
Here are a few more articles on the topic:http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=122805666
1/21/2010 4:52:42 PM
1/21/2010 4:55:18 PM
And so the calls for a constitutional amendment to stop this begins:
1/21/2010 4:58:04 PM
1/21/2010 4:59:57 PM
Air America just announced their closing shop at the start of next week.The left can't do anything in the legislature because of the threat of filibuster, and now that republicans are salivating over this increased corporate influence, combined with one of the leading progressive media voices collapsing, I think in this one week the 2010 elections just went from democrats losing a few seats, to republicans getting majorities.
1/21/2010 7:01:46 PM
The issue is not "is it bad that corporations can give alot of money to politicians?" its "do groups of people have the same rights as the individuals that compose them?"I dont understand why people are getting their panties in a twist over this since it just changes the funneling mechanism from individuals to corporations. I mean do you honestly think that before this corps and unions weren't sending the same money through their members? We've already bailed the shit out of some of the worst companies and their unions. They got rid of provisions in the healthcare bill that affected unions bottom lines. Is this ruling going to make the fed even more beholden to these groups? I dont think thats possible.If you want to decrease the ammount of power these groups have over the american people you need to decrease the power the fed has over the american people.
1/21/2010 7:23:29 PM
I'm still mulling this one over. On one hand, I understand the Corporate personhood argument, and this ruling makes sense in that respect. On the other, I don't like the notion that a corporation has any say in elections. If a corporation is a person, why doesn't it get an actual vote?This rubs me the wrong way. I am of the opinion that corporations should have no direct influence in elections at all, as they are not citizens. I don't even really like the notion that they are considered "people." But, I see the arguments to the other direction.Like I said, I still have to mull this thing over.
1/21/2010 8:02:34 PM
1/21/2010 8:10:58 PM
^^ This.The real sticking point here (and for Boone, the constitutional argument) is whether groups of people have the right to pool their money for political campaigns? I mean, if the local pot smokers all get together and form People Opposed to Oppressive Politicians, do they have a right to take the money their pool and raise and donate to a politician they support? What about PETA? If these do, what makes a corporation fundamentally different?[Edited on January 21, 2010 at 8:16 PM. Reason : refgs]
1/21/2010 8:15:27 PM
I guess the fact that one is specifically formed for the purpose of making money and the other is not is what makes the difference to me. That and the fact that one was expressly formed for a political purpose and the other was not[Edited on January 21, 2010 at 8:20 PM. Reason : ]
1/21/2010 8:19:15 PM
1/21/2010 8:36:38 PM
This is just the free market at work, isn’t it?I mean, anyone can amass millions or billions of dollars to influence the political process in their favor, if they just worked hard enough.This would encourage all those lazy assholes to make something of their lives.[Edited on January 21, 2010 at 8:39 PM. Reason : ]
1/21/2010 8:38:35 PM
Boone, I believe this is the first time you and I have ever agreed on something
1/21/2010 8:41:00 PM
I have very mixed feelings on this issue. On one hand you have people like Soros and the unions funding the crap out of campaigns while corporations hands are tied.On the other hand, corporations are far more powerful than citizens and could completely overwhelm the discourse.I like the idea of complete disclosure of all political contributions and expenditures.
1/21/2010 8:44:39 PM
1/21/2010 9:35:28 PM
1/21/2010 10:04:42 PM
1/21/2010 10:17:07 PM
1/21/2010 10:21:23 PM
1/21/2010 11:22:57 PM
1/21/2010 11:45:36 PM
^ hahaa okay, that made me laughbut i was trying to show that they are disclosed - if they weren't you wouldn't have ever heard about his haircut
1/21/2010 11:52:04 PM
Here is the petition for the democratic legislative challenge to this:http://www.savedemocracy.net
1/22/2010 1:26:52 AM