PrinceofWands
Lifer
- May 16, 2000
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Originally posted by: jdjbuffalo
I don't like this. I can't imagine it being better than what we've got.
What reforms we really need:
- Campaign Finance Reform - All public funding. Max $2000 to any candidate. No corporate money allowed in ANY form (direct/indirect money, gifts etc.)
- No lobbying in ANY form. If we want corporations input then we'll ask for it. This also leads into corporations shouldn't be considered people (see below)
- Term Limits - No more lifetime politicians. Term should be max of 12 years as a senator, 8 years as a rep. and 12 years max in the Congress.
- Eliminate parties. I would prefer everyone to be voted in on their own merits and not because they are "the 'best' we can find for your party".
- I would accept keeping parties if we can make some reasonable changes to the current system.
---Presidents should not be affiliated with a party. Since the each branch is supposed to be fairly independent, so as to allow proper checks and balances, the Executive branch should not be aligned with anyone in Congress.
---In the Congress we need more than 2 parties. We need at least 3 but 4-5 would be preferable.
Corporations shouldn't be considered people for a number of reasons. Corporations should be considered their own separate legal entity with their own set of laws governing them. I know that the mantra of people who support the current setup will argue that corporations are merely collections of people and it's convenient for legal reasons to consider them people. The problem is corporations have huge disproportionate amount of power and say in our government than any one person (not including the few people who own massive corporations). They don't have a direct vote for a representative but can be instrumental in getting "their guy" elected.
I could go into further details about corporations but I won't so as to try and keep this reply short(ish).
100% agree with everything you said. I would actually prefer 5-8 parties in order to cover all the major political philosophies.