Can someone give me a libertarian analysis of this recent court decision?
I've had a few conversations with others on other forums (they were lefties by the way) who essentially believed that groups of people who contracted together (corporations in this case) shouldnt have any rights, including free speech or the right to give money to whom they want to.
however the part that they keep bring up in their hysterical rants is that soon foreign owned or corporations that have foreigners on the board of directors will be running for the presidency and will win.
i want to hear a basic analysis of rights of the corporation and then comments on the second scenario of foreign or domestic 'corporations' occupying the white house and congress.
this is the only quasi libertarian analysis i could find...
Yet, I fail to see where a ban on corporate political advertising has any impact on the rights of those individuals as individuals. It is true that corporations are made up of people who have rights - and those people continue to have rights even when the corporation itself (as a "legal person") is banned from doing things the people have a right to do.
I find it interesting that there are citizens that buy the idea that a bunch of giant corporations should be prevented from speech while another bunch of giant corporations are free to speak as they please.
Bogart:I find it interesting that there are citizens that buy the idea that a bunch of giant corporations should be prevented from speech while another bunch of giant corporations are free to speak as they please.
Well, this description applies just as well to defenders of the decision, if it is assumed to apply to opponents of the decision. The decision was specifically written to exclude foreign firms, so the decision itself protects the right of some giant corporations to speak while preventing others from doing so. This was the subject of a minor tussle, with yet another attendee at an Obama speech (this time, Alito) accusing him of lying, although Alito simply mumbled it to those around him rather than shouting.
You might say that no, you disagree with that provision while agreeing with the rest of the decision. That's fine, but then you should recognize my ability to disagree with the media exception.