kalm wrote:GannonFan wrote:Considering his advanced age and deteriorating mental state, does Stevens even remember that "corporations" are not evil, skynet-like computers or some other non-human thing but instead actually a collection of individuals (i.e. people) who have grouped together for a purpose? I understand that he has most certainly forgotten more law than I'll ever know, but he is certainly reaching in his attempt here to single out corporations as things different than all the other groups of people that influence elections.
Corporations are neither good nor evil, they are inanimate.
They are indeed groups of people, but that is not the same as a person.
Corporations may be large or small. They may be democratic or autocratic. They can have a huge impact on elections and therefore democracy and freedom outside their jurisdiction.
As Stevens pointed out, they currently don't have the right to vote...yet. But since they tend to be intelligent, hard working, and often times possess property, I'm sure Ivy is working on that one.
So where do we draw the line for what groups of people can "have impact" on elections? Unions are an easy example, they've been involved in elections forever. Why is that allowed and corporations aren't? How about any lobbying group? The NRA, Planned Parenthood, the Sierra Club, self proclaimed Tea Party people, Greenpeace, the League of Women Voters, AARP, AMA, any professional societies, colleges, the Chamber of Commerce, and so on. Heck, when you think of it, what are political parties other than groups of people gathered together under one umbrella for the explicit purpose of impacting the political process. Should we do away with those groups too? In your hyperfocused pursuit to deny certain groups (i.e. groups you don't agree with) the ability to collectively impact elections in favor of the "individual", you and Stevens seem to be missing the fact that it is individuals who initially come together in the first place to create these groups.
Again, while you claim to be against groups having "huge impact", your sole focus on "corporations" as the only group to ban undermines your premise since you conveniently forget all the other groups that have just as much if not more of an impact on the political process.