nick1985
Lifer
- Dec 29, 2002
- 27,153
- 6
- 81
4 Justices who would ban books if they had just one more to side with them.
pretty much
4 Justices who would ban books if they had just one more to side with them.
Explain your reasoning behind limiting free speech? What if I'm a small S-corp roofing business and want to voice my concerns? You're telling me I can't and shouldn't. Just admit it, you don't like the bill of rights. Fuck you communist. Thankfully the 2nd most important amendment protects us from people like you.
"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; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."
Explain your reasoning behind limiting free speech? What if I'm a small S-corp roofing business and want to voice my concerns? You're telling me I can't and shouldn't. Just admit it, you don't like the bill of rights. Just where do you stand on The Bill of Rights? Thankfully the 2nd most important amendment protects us from people like you.
"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; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."
Right and if you as a person voice your opinion it is protected, a corporation is not a person and should not have the same protections. Notice how the founders use the words citizens or people or persons and not corporations?
See the links in my post (#149) as to how the corporations became 'persons' under the Supreme Court.
Sadly corporations have been given the same basic rights as citizens. So now the free speech rights apply to them as well.
While I do support limits on contributions, I didn't think it was fair that corporations had a limit while entities such as unions did not. My union gives tons of my money to political things that have nothing to do with my job and things which I may not support.
Right and if you as a person voice your opinion it is protected, a corporation is not a person and should not have the same protections. Notice how the founders use the words citizens or people or persons and not corporations?
While I do support limits on contributions, I didn't think it was fair that corporations had a limit while entities such as unions did not. My union gives tons of my money to political things that have nothing to do with my job and things which I may not support.
What you fail to understand is that corporations are PEOPLE! Collective interests. But you're falling for the "evil corporations are being all corporationy" mantra.
Answer again how an S-corp founded to provide protection from the government with 3 employees cannot exercise free speech?
If you disagree with this ruling you are against free speech, plain and simple. it really is that simple. How this was not 9-0 is beyond me.
Are you sure that isn't a PAC? I give freely to my company's PAC as it is in my best interest. Same as I personally give to candidates that I support.
Anybody against this ruling is against free speech. Period.
Are you sure that isn't a PAC? I give freely to my company's PAC as it is in my best interest. Same as I personally give to candidates that I support.
Anybody against this ruling is against free speech. Period.
Interesting to note the top-10 list of biggest money in politics:
http://www.opensecrets.org/orgs/index.php
Seven of the ten are Unions (who give pretty much 99%+ to dems, I know, shocking after the GM/Chrysler 55% giveaway and proposed exemption to private health insurance taxes), one is a far left leaning investment bank who's identity after the secret 100% payout debacle should be no surprise, the remaining two are a professional association and a telecom who have pretty balanced Dem/GOP giving.
Are you sure that isn't a PAC? I give freely to my company's PAC as it is in my best interest. Same as I personally give to candidates that I support.
Anybody against this ruling is against free speech. Period.
I'm against free speech. I think people should spend more time listening.
Also, I'm a little drunk right now. God I love rum and coke...
I love how everybody loves saying that when they're drinking, lol.
"I'M SO WASTEDDDD AHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!"
I love how everybody loves saying that when they're drinking, lol.
"I'M SO WASTEDDDD AHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!"
What you fail to understand is that corporations are PEOPLE!
So how come when a decision is made by the CONSERVATIVE wing of the SCOTUS that invalidates a law passed by congress, all the righties on ATPN hail it as a blow for freedom, but when a decision is made by the LIBERAL wing of the SCOTUS that invalidates a law passed by congress, all the righties accuse the liberals of engaging in judicial activism.
Please, righties, tell me what principle you're invoking in these two situations. I really, really want to know how you keep it all straight.
I actually am saddened by the ruling.
While it was indeed the people who spoke up in Massachusetts on Tuesday, I firmly believe that once our representatives are in office, they listen to everyone BUT the people. This latest ruling will only enforce the fact that our elected representatives will listen to corporate interests ($$$) first, lobbyists second ($$/more of the former), and the People last.
I notived all it takes to turn righties into passionate defenders of books, when they don't read any and attack them every time they're mentioned as proving them wrong, is a liberal Supreme Court decision.
They are for books, defending the rights they never use the way a pimply faced geek who won't get laid for years insists on carrying a condom in his wallet. It's the principle.
Just be nice if they actually used the right a little more. (I don't have a position on the book issue, I'd have to look at this a bit more, it's the political motives of the people protesting I'm discussing).
These people regularly trample on rights as or more important all the time when it's in their interests - see my ACORN post, where the poor voting is not any concern to them.
What you fail to understand is that corporations are PEOPLE! Collective interests. But you're falling for the "evil corporations are being all corporationy" mantra.
Answer again how an S-corp founded to provide protection from the government with 3 employees cannot exercise free speech?
If you disagree with this ruling you are against free speech, plain and simple. it really is that simple. How this was not 9-0 is beyond me.
This law apparently let George Soros advertise for a book against George Bush in Oct of 2004. But did not allow a group of citizens to advertise for a movie against Hillary Clinton in 2008. Do you believe that a law should allow one millionaire more of a voice than a group of people, just because those people needed corporate money to match the millionaires money?
We need to get rid of the 19th-centuryt legal error saying corporations are persons.
