1) Campaign donations create access and favorable legislation to specific industries and companies regardless of whether or not the legislation is beneficial to its constituentsGannonFan wrote:Please, that piece was junk. I automatically discount any essay talking about Citizens United when they bring up the Dred Scott decision as a reference point. Your link went out of its way to say that this wasn't as bad as Dred Scott, and then in the next paragraph talked about how it was similar.kalm wrote:
The system was bad, CU made it worse.
http://www.aei.org/article/politics-and ... ars-later/" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
All that piece did was say that money is run amok in elections. Gee, who would've thunk that. Good thing we didn't have excessive spending in campaigns (and outside of campaigns) before. If only we could find a time when money didn't matter in elections then we could go back to that Utopia that people seem to think existed before this ruling. Problem is, that Utopia never existed. Bummer.
2) CU makes giving easier and less transparent
3) Economic freedom and competition suffer.
Not all that hard to figure out.




