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#51
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I've given the hypothetical of a computer that generates political speech (and I've left it open whether it has genuine AI or not). You've jumped from saying the source doesn't matter (so the computer can generate constitutionally protected speech), to saying a computer is just a conduit for human speech and explicitly saying they aren't in themselves protected by FoS, to going on about the government not being able to shut down a computer that belongs to me (which is beside the point) to now saying being human is irrelevant to rights -- which confuses me even more about where you're at. Quote:
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#52
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Cecil seems to think that the idea of corporate personhood is some bizarre and unfathomable invention of a rogue court. My main point was that corporate personhood is a centuries-old bedrock principle of commercial and business law. I assume that your enthusiasm about this topic comes from the recent USSupCt campaign-finance decision. If that's your real complaint, then state it directly. My view is that if an individual has a right to buy speech, then a group of people should also have the right to pool their money and buy speech. And there's no reason to punish that group for organizing as a corporation rather than in some other form. If you disagree, then please clarify whether you're objecting to group speech, or corporations per se. Please avoid sarcasm, because I honestly have no idea what proposition you're trying to argue for. Example: Suppose that Bob spends $2000 of his own money to rent a billboard supporting the re-election of the local mayor. Now suppose that Jane and Sally want to oppose the mayor's re-election, but they only have $1000 each. So they combine their cash and rent a billboard across the street from Bob's. 2.1) Is Bob's rental of a billboard protected first-amendment speech? (I'm assuming yes.) 2.2) Is Jane and Sally's rental of a billboard somehow NOT also protected first-amendment speech, because they pooled their money? 2.3) Suppose that Jane and Sally form a corporation and contribute their $1000 to it. Then the corporation rents the same billboard. Is that billboard rental protected speech? Would it make a difference if they rented the billboard through a trust, or a limited partnership, or a limited liability company? |
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#53
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But this logic simply doesn't work. It's trivial to find examples of rights that individuals have, but corporations do not. Duh. |
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#54
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#55
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#56
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This website is not a person, therefore it has no speech rights, therefore the government can shut it down if it wants to.
Make sense? |
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#57
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I'll clarify my position for you, perhaps if you do the same? My position is: Freedom of speech is a right that at this time implicitly applies to humans. ...I've illustrated this with the example of an AI generating speech; at this time such speech is either not constitutionally-protected, or it is protected only because it is considered the speech of the human programmer by proxy. (And if you take umbrage with the "implicit" nature of this rule, note that several things have been taken to be implicit within the wording and are now legally binding; such as that freedom of speech protects political speech and not, say, your right to tell state secrets). Given this, it is not entailed that corporations must have freedom of speech, because corporations are not humans. |
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#58
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Yes, that's the point I'm trying to put to MikeBB
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#59
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The interesting case that I'm trying to put to you, is if we had an AI that generated unique statements. I think what you're saying in this latter case is that the speech would be considered the speech of the programmer, and so would be protected for that reason. But you're being quite evasive and inconsistent over this point. Last edited by Mijin; 06-21-2012 at 07:25 AM. |
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#60
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#61
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Corporations are fictional entities on paper. They can't speak. If you hear speech, it came from a human. Quote:
Speech cannot be regulated. The status of the speaker, or source, is irrelevant to that. |
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#62
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So you're admitting that non-humans can have rights?
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#63
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Do you not see why this is incoherent? Quote:
Former state secrets aren't state secrets. I was talking about state secrets. Quote:
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But now you ask, sure, non-humans can have rights. |
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#64
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Speech is free, the source doesn't matter. Quote:
The crime in that case is not really a speech issue, even though it involves conveying information. Quote:
So can non-human entities have speech rights? Yes or no? Quote:
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So let's not hear any more about corporations not having rights simply because they aren't human. |
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#65
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Life's too short for me to get you to take one position or the other, so fine: I accept that you don't believe that source matters and that the speech is free because the source is a human. Quote:
Genuine secrets however are explicitly not protected speech as described in the Espionage Act. Quote:
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Last edited by Mijin; 06-21-2012 at 03:17 PM. |
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#66
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We know that there are some narrow, logical exception to free speech - mostly because they involve ACTS that happen to involve speech. Nobody disputes this fact or the exceptions. The fact that they exist, however, don't justify any and all exceptions. I could drive a truck through your exception. Quote:
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#67
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And "the existence of an exception justifies all exceptions" is a straw man and has nothing to do with what I was talking about. Quote:
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#68
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You said in post 57: Quote:
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#69
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And I'll ask again: Do you believe that groups of people should have lesser speech rights than individuals? |
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#70
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Do you know what entailed means? Because I might understand why you think there is an inconsistency in my position if you are misinterpreting that word. Last edited by Mijin; 06-22-2012 at 03:58 AM. |
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#71
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Whether a corporation inherits all the individual rights of its members and whether it inherits just the collective group rights of its member set has very different implications. Anyway, if you're asking me about the general case of whether corporations necessarily inherit the collective group rights of its member set, the answer is still "no". I can think of examples of things a group of people are allowed to do that their corporation would not. If you're simply asking me whether corporations should have free speech, my answer is "yes, with a caveat". My own position is that the current interpretation of the first amendment is flawed, and as it's pretty arbitrary which rights we pass on to corporations, there is leeway there for reconsidering the issue. Quote:
But my answer to your leading question is that I don't believe that groups should necessarily have less speech rights than individuals, nor do I believe they should necessarily have more speech rights, nor do I believe that they necessarily should have the same rights. |
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#72
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Basically, regulating Commerce between the states. As it happens, democracy may not be synonymous with liberty. Bribery laws are a restriction on speech (a corporation cannot appoint a Congress member as a spokesperson), but they are in the interests of a functioning democratic state. As it happens, campaign contributions and donations to candidates are functionally equivalent (as you argue spending money on speech is the same as speech) to bribery. As it happens, direct corporate contributions ought to help Democrats. Quote:
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#73
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Our Bill of Rights was written directly in response to abuses by the government back in England. Quote:
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#74
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#75
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If you want me to explain why Buckley was right - and give you examples that will force you to agree - let me know. |
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#76
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#77
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To compare an outright ban on any spending on speech by an entire class to a restriction on (all, not just some) people mounting protests for security reasons is just a fucking joke. It would be laughed out of court. I shouldn't have to explain why. |
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#78
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#79
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This post has no meaning in this debate. You seem to be applying the language of discrimination law. I'm simply using class in the general sense.
All classes are legally protected by the First Amendment, meaning that the government may not create any particular class to remove protection from based simply on whether the government thinks that class's speech is somehow illegitimate or the people can't handle the influence. Last edited by lance strongarm; 06-25-2012 at 09:58 AM. |
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#80
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#81
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I like this recent line: I'll believe corporations are people just as soon as Texas executes one.
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#82
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Funny; but have any states actually revoked a corporation's charter, effectively "executing" it?
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#83
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It really doesn't matter. If you believe corporations have speech rights, we're done. |
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#84
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No court has ever said corporations are people. |
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#85
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I was referring to class in the general sense. Words can have more than one meaning, you know. Don't get caught up in technicalities.
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#86
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Where? I like to correct my typos.
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In terms of whether I believe corporations have speech rights though, there are multiple ways to parse that: whether I think it is the case, whether I think it should be the case, whether we're talking all speech-rights or just some etc. |
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#87
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I don't know if I misunderstood you, or why. But I just don't have time to go over it.
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#88
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#89
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Do you believe that corporations have a right to engage in political speech, such as the kind at issue in Citizens United?
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#90
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I don't actually have a problem with the kind of speech at issue here, but "right" here implies unlimited spending, at any point in the election cycle, etc. I personally have no issue with common-sense restrictions to ensure elections are carried out sensibly, and nor do most Western democracies. |
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#91
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Okay, then. So we're back to square one.
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You can't limit speech. You can't declare that common sense overrules the First Amendment. |
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#92
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But the Supreme Court has already ruled that common sense trumps the First Amendment. You can't yell "Fire" in a crowded theater willy nilly without facing the consequences. Safety overrules freedom.
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#93
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Indeed we seem to be because:
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#94
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It says specific things, but not "common sense" which is an incredibly vague and therefore useless term here. It could justify just about anything you want it to. |
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#95
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There's no basis for an exception based on the speaker or source of the speech. There have been many times when this reason has been explicitly rejected. |
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#96
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Whenever this is pointed out to you, you repeat the straw man that we are suggesting that we can add any old exception, whether it makes sense or not and whether it is in the spirit of the constitution or not. Quote:
So it's down to the legislature to decide what "freedom of speech" means in the context of a corporation. |
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#97
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Yes, there are a few very specific and very limited, logical exceptions. Those don't justify any other exceptions though. Each must stand on their own. Quote:
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The First Amendment simply says Congress may not limit speech. Nothing about where the speech comes from. Quote:
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#98
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It can and is limited in a number of ways, like in any country. Completely unlimited speech is unworkable. Quote:
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But I would see a rule of "No private political adds within X days of the polls opening" in the same sphere as "Stand by your ad". It's a common sense practical rule that doesn't affect the political debate at all and gags absolutely no-one. |
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#99
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As it stands, I think the "fire in a crowded theatre" hypothetical is a bad example. However, I'd have no problem with dictating that broadcasters cannot profit from electioneering communications, or can only accept public money for electioneering communications. The real issue at stake for the broadcaster is funding, which is a commercial and not a political concern. |
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#100
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