Company Decides To Run For Congress
from the brilliant dept
Earlier this week, we jokingly pointed out that with the Supreme Court's ruling on how corporations were people, a company like Google could run for President. Well, it appears that others have the same basic idea. A PR firm in Maryland has announced that it's running for Congress in Maryland's 8th District and has put together a nice campaign ad:






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YES!
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Well
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Re: Well
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Re: YES!
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Corporate Congress
If I was President Obama I'd be looking over my shoulder right about now. Hmmm... will Minnie be First Lady I wonder?
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You know what...
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Hey wait...
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Re: Re: Well
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Wrong
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The Neilds put something similar in their last newsletter. I couldn't tell if it was meant as a joke or not.
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ha ha i love the onion
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Re: Wrong
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Re: Re: Wrong
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We are registered at The Limited
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Re: Hey wait...
* Need to be 14-16 years to marry
* Cannot f*** startups
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Re: YES!
The middle-men will never stand for it.
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Re: Hey wait...
it would also have to be a citizen which corporations to my knowledge do not hold citizenship.
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yep
The middle-men will never stand for it."
Exactly. The Lobbyists would end up suing to PREVENT this, since it would make them obsolete. Just like the RIAA.
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My District
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A boon for loyal customerz
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Re:
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Re: ha ha i love the onion
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Re: yep
I think he meant the middle-men were the politicians.
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Re: You know what...
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ignorance of constitution
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Re: ignorance of constitution
SCOTUS has already done that
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yuck, yuck, yuck: the trouble is only Stevens' dissent refered to the theory that corporations are persons
The problem is that the majority opinion repeatedly referred to "corporations or other associations" and no where referred to the legal theory that corporations are legal persons.
The only reason the ruling is obnoxious is that the management of corporations has stopped working for their shareholders and started working for themselves (oh, for a generation of Jay Goulds, "The public be d*mned, I work for my shareholders"!), and without some reform, it would be the management of corporations using their shareholders' resources (remember corporations belong to their shareholders, folks saving for pensions, and so forth) to engage in political speech.
I suggest that Campaign Finance Reform v 2.0, besides requiring a heavy dose of transparency, require that expenditures by corporations or unions that either 1) explicitly or implicitly endorse or oppose a candidate running for public office or 2) engage in advocacy on an issue in contention during any election campaign be approved in terms of their purpose, their amount, and the venues of publication by a majority vote of the shareholders or members.
The majority opinion vindicates the free speech rights of corporations and unions as associations, meaning derivative from the rights of those associated, meaning the shareholders and members, not corporate managers or union bosses, who are, in the eyes of the law, fiduciaries for the shareholders or members, even if they all think of themselves as bosses and de facto owners.
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Re: Hey wait...
Sigh, you know, I don't want to get too pissed off too early today (It's me birthday!), but the fact that our courts have ruled in such a way that your question even makes sense proves how retarded this whole thing has become.
Is too early to start drinking scotch?
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Re:
You think?
Most of the $H17 started as a joke.
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Welp......
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The video
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the video
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Re: You know what...
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