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#51
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#52
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So to put it more simply then:
Do you believe that there should be any campaign finance laws? If so, then we're just haggling about the price. I believe campaign finance laws strengthen democratic processes. Hence, passing a campaign finance law has the ability to expand democracy (and by extension, freedom). If you believe that all campaign finance laws are antithetical to the First Amendment, then our point of departure is there. I think, though, that it would be fairly easy to construct a range of scenarios in which democracy is subverted by the absence of such laws. Last edited by Rhythmdvl; 04-15-2012 at 02:35 PM. |
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#53
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The purpose of free speech, then, is that all voices be heard, so far as it is practicable. It is founded upon the principle of equality, that my civil rights and the Koch Brothers civil rights are precisely identical. If we permit them the privilege to speak louder, longer, and pervasively, due only to their possession of greater wealth, then that principle of equality is buggered. How to implement that principle is clearly a thorny question, it must be done with the same exceeding caution that guides sex amongst porcupines, gingerly, very gingerly. But saying it is difficult is much different than saying it must not be done. |
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#54
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Let the people know who is paying for what, and then let them decide what they want to do. Technology makes it easier and cheaper not only to get your message out there, but to disseminate the information the people need to know about the source. |
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#55
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First off, trying to frame it in terms of "I guess I just trust the people more than you do. I don't feel any need to protect them from any amount of political speech, not matter what its content." is just another appeal to emotion and similarly empty. Things like that and generic flag-wrapping don't advance any sort of argument.
You cannot say that on the one hand I am free to anonymously give unlimited amounts to the person of my choice if that person must turn around and disclose the donation. You can't have it both ways: mandated disclosure negates anonymity. Either you believe that any and all campaign finance laws are per se wrong, or you must confront the notion that much of your arguments fall away at your acceptance that some degree of regulation regarding monies spent and transferred to influence an election is acceptable. As far as an imbalance between parties, first, an imbalance doesn't have to exist to claim that unlimited spending subverts democracy. It's basic two wrongs don't make a right. Second, you seem to suggest that if there was an imbalance, that would carry some import. Were it shown that tens of millions flowed from an extraordinarily small percentage of the population to one party, that just compounds the overall problem. |
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#56
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#57
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Sorry, there are a lot of related issues--you'd said "Besides, do you have any evidence that the CU decision is going to skew the money more towards one party than the other?" I was responding to that.
Again, you cannot have it both ways. Disclosure laws negate anonymity. Full stop. If a corporation or private individual is free to pay any amount they desire to a candidate anonymously, then end-running around that anonymity by requiring a candidate to disclose negates that so-called freedom. |
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#58
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#59
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Can I, within your definition of free speech, anonymously donate unlimited amounts of money to a candidate? (Either for the case that anonymity extends only to the general public or to the candidate as well.)
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#60
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I think I've made my position crystal clear, and I don't understand why you think that question needs to be asked.
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#61
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An abridge too far, was it?
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#62
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This isn't about "speech", it's about money. Money makes voting irrelevant. If 200 million people vote for X and the money demands Y, then Y is what happens. America is pretty much at this point a plutocracy with a "democratic" facade to make it look semi-legitimate & placate the populace.
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#63
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#64
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Der, you exaggerate. I've told you a million times, don't exaggerate. There's a major chunk of truth to what you say. But you exaggerate.
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#65
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Would you put similar "money does not equal the right" limitations on the other rights in the first ten amendments? Can I go to church so long as I don't buy gas, pay a bus fare, or put a donation in the collection plate? Can I keep and bear arms, so long as they are given to me for free? Is my property secure from unreasonable searches and seizures provided I didn't pay anything for it? Can I be represented by an attorney, but I can't pay out of pocket for one? So wealthy people can afford better speech. They can also afford nicer homes, better cars, better health care, and nicer vacations. What a surprise. I'm failing to see the outrage. |
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#66
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#67
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Last edited by elucidator; 04-15-2012 at 08:05 PM. |
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#68
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I got a "D" in outrage, myself. Barely passed.
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#69
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I refused to have my outrage judged and graded by bourgeois lackeys of the ruling class.
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#70
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#71
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Can you explain? I honestly don't understand what you mean by the grumbling about how the money is collected.
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#72
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There seems to be two issues here, one it the ideals of Democracy and the other is the ideals of the constitution. The problem is that there is no guarantee that the the two are necessarily compatible. It is entirely possible that the constitution as it is written and the world as it stands lead inevitably to the failure of democracy. In the same way that if concealable nuclear weapons were available we would have to choose between 2nd amendment rights and survival as a nation.
The procedure of constitutional amendment was designed to take care of such circumstances. Certainly there should be a way to write such an amendment that fixes what needs to be fixed without throwing out the good parts. On another note Would it be constitutional to have a graduated tax on campaign contributions such that extremely large donations become prohibitively expensive? Say a marginal tax rate of (1-0.5^(N/50000)) where N is the amount of the donation. |
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#73
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From my perspective, I wouldn't like your proposal. Forbidding a person to do something and making it impossibly expensive to do something are the same thing. Last edited by John Mace; 04-16-2012 at 01:35 PM. |
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