The Supreme Court decision
For those on my flist, if any, who support the Court's decision in /Citizens United v. FEC/, I would be interested to know your answers to the following questions:
Is a toaster a person?
Is a corporation a person?
Can you explain the difference?
What would it mean for a toaster to have a right to free speech?
What does it mean, precisely, for a corporation to have a right to free speech? This is not the same as the free speech rights enjoyed by any of the people involved as individuals -- this, as ruled by the court, is a separate right, belonging to the corporation as an entity in and of itself, completely independent of the rights of any of the individuals involved.
Can you explain the difference?
ETA: Justice Rehnquist's dissent in /First National Bank of Boston v. Bellotti/
makes for excellent reading on the subject.
Is a toaster a person?
Is a corporation a person?
Can you explain the difference?
What would it mean for a toaster to have a right to free speech?
What does it mean, precisely, for a corporation to have a right to free speech? This is not the same as the free speech rights enjoyed by any of the people involved as individuals -- this, as ruled by the court, is a separate right, belonging to the corporation as an entity in and of itself, completely independent of the rights of any of the individuals involved.
Can you explain the difference?
ETA: Justice Rehnquist's dissent in /First National Bank of Boston v. Bellotti/
makes for excellent reading on the subject.
no subject
I think your solution is the source of your problem. That is, the only reason you can't get money for a campaign without a corporate form is that you will be drowned out by corporate forms. I see an obvious solution here.
As to your comments about CU, I think you are committing a fundamental error. If CU were an unincorporated association of private citizens, they would be using their individual funds, acquired and owned as private citizens, to screen the movie. You are absolutely correct that preventing them from doing that would be a clear violation of their individual rights. But they did not merely "file the corporate paperwork". Had they done that, they would _still be free_ to use their individual privately-owned funds to show a movie, and nobody would be able to stop them.
But clearly they were using corporate funds, which means they were taking advantage of the legal benefits granted to corporations over people. (I couldn't say which ones; maybe they were nonprofit and thus not taxed, for example.) So let's be clear: When we talk about preventing CU from showing a political movie, we are in no way preventing the people involved from doing so. All we are doing is preventing them from using the extra advantages given to them as a corporation under state law to do it. That's a critical distinction to remember, when people start throwing around things like "but corporations are made of people!" The privileges we're talking about here are EXTRA rights, handed out _above and beyond_ those already held by the people involved, by virtue of the fact that the state has chosen to charter a corporation -- a choice it is absolutely free to reverse, and therefore must also be free to regulate.
no subject
Also, corporate law in the United States is massively fucked up, and since it's the hands of our 50 corrupt state governments, it's impossible to reform. (Someday I'll start my blog back up to rant about how broken our political and legal systems are.)
As a side note: non-profit unincorporated associations can qualify for the various 501(c) tax exemptions just as if they were incorporated. The benefit of incorporation is that an association has no legal existence and can't enter into contracts to, say, lease office space on its own. This makes it necessary to incorporate once your organization reach a certain size.
no subject
This is a very interesting point. I am not sure I understand it fully. If the situation is as you describe, why did CU incorporate? It's not like they're selling any actual product. They have no revenue.
...Come to think of it, where did they get the money to make this movie? Corporations don't just spontaneously develop "corporate funds". Who donated to them? (Was it individuals, or corporations?)
Is it really true that CU could have been an "association" and made the movie legally (at the cost of paying some extra tax on donations received)?
If so, it seems like we should be seeing a lot of corporate-inspired political advertising already. I mean, sure, there's a 1.5x or 2x multiplier on the cost of such advertising, but what is that to an entity with revenue in the billions?