Source: https://truth-2-power.com/2011/08/14/corporations-are-people-too-wackadoo-wackadoo/
Timestamp: 2019-04-25 02:54:42+00:00

Document:
Mitt Romney has been out on the stump, proving once again that he is a good automaton for scripted moments, but that his ability to engage in retail politics is a little lacking. The Fire Alarm disaster of late May was nothing by comparison to his Wonderama-rific “Corporations are people, my friend” speech yesterday. Legally right, morally wrong, and politically incorrect, the gaffe was even cat-called by fellow Republicans attending the Mittster’s stump speech late last week.
The crowd, which did not heckle much else in his speech, suggested that the hecklers probably were not some Liberal group’s plants, as the spin machines at Fox and Right Wing radio will likely spin the story today.
Rachel Maddow at MSNBC and Cenk Uygar at the Young Turks had a field day with that mush ball that Romney inadvertently tied into a highly unpopular position which the Supreme Court took last year in the Citizens United decision, allowing corporate “people” to engage in campaign advertising that flushed millions into the election cycle of 2010 and radically altered the equation for public access and accountability for our politicians of all political stripes.
While it pains me to agree with Mitt Romney on much of anything, speaking truth to power also means taking on our own punditry, and even easy-to-digest public opinions.
In Dartmouth College v. Woodward, decided in 1819, corporations were recognized as having rights to contract, and to have those contracts honored the same as contracts entered into by “natural persons,” In Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad in 1886, 118 U.S. 394, the Supreme Court recognized that corporations were recognized as persons for purposes of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Politically, corporations have been denied a voice in politics by the choice of many Congresses, for the very reason that their big, very loud and well funded voices can easily squash the voices of people like you and me. Prior to Citizens United, it has been up to Congress when and how these corporate “people” get to speak.
The Tillman Act of 1907, banned corporate political contributions to national campaigns.
The Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971, a post-Watergate gut-check, was landmark campaign financing legislation which changed the disclosure laws on contributions, a first-strike at transparency.
Buckley v. Valeo (1976) upheld limits on campaign contributions, but held that spending money to influence elections is protected speech as in the First Amendment.
First National Bank of Boston v. Bellotti (1978) upheld the rights of corporations to spend money in non-candidate elections, like a ballot initiatives or a public referendums.
Austin v. Michigan Chamber of Commerce (1990) upheld the right of the state of Michigan to prohibit corporations from using money from their corporate treasuries to support or oppose candidates in elections, noting that “[c]orporate wealth can unfairly influence elections.” This is the piece of law that Citizens United obliterated.
Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act of 2002 – More commonly known by pols as McCain–Feingold, banned corporate funding of issue advocacy ads that mentioned candidates close to an election.
McConnell v. Federal Election Commission (2003), substantially upheld McCain–Feingold.
Federal Election Commission v. Wisconsin Right to Life, Inc. (2007) weakened McCain–Feingold, but upheld core of McConnell.
In Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission (2010) the Supreme Court of the United States held that corporate funding of independent political broadcasts in candidate elections cannot be limited under the First Amendment, obliterated the Tillman Act, overruled Austin (1990) and partly overruled McConnell (2003).
The problem with the granting that “personhood” to a corporation is that it becomes a “super person.” What Liberal pundits all seem to be missing today, though, is that the Supreme Court has defined it as an incomplete person. We have given corporations corpus, a body, but not a soul. They have no imperative other than the bottom line, and morality only as good as that of those running the company. Thus, the Supreme Court has allowed that corporate “person” to become little more than an extension of the political persona of the CEOs or boards of directors that run these companies. Without a soul, a conscience, these organizations often lack any shred of moral scruples. They lack accountability.
These thuggish giants dominate the landscape. They can drown out the voices of you and me. Citizens United makes ordinary whack job cranks like the Koch Brothers into well-funded super villains, and leaves billionaire families like the Coors or the Mellons with so much money that these New Deal haters can affect a political structure from beyond the grave. As we decided when Mayor Daley gave it a whirl back in the 1960s, the dead can’t vote. Why, then, should they fund political campaigns?
Mr. Obama is right to suggest that the United States Supreme Court overreached itself in Citizens United. Corporations have to be “people” in a contractual sense to have standing to do business. The are entities though solely devoted to the pursuit of profit. The morality of that pursuit, and the limits of that power, rest solely with the men and women who run them.
We have had the rare corporate CEO, a William Paley of CBS, the New York Times, and the Washington Post, that recognized the necessity of creating a free and fair media. Paley would even take a loss on his news operations if it meant getting the truth out there to the public.
What we have now are a bunch of shadow billionaires that represent the power that has had its hands on the throat of Lady Liberty since the dawn of the Industrial Revolution. Groups like the Club for Growth, whom we exposed for you before our vacation break, struggle against diversity.
They want the freedom to organize the country back into their limited world view of unfettered capitalism that can exploit our citizens and take from the land without protections or preservation. A white Christian America where all others are good subservient consumers.
When you give these monied people, and to be fair, unions, which also benefit from Citizens United, a chance to be people, maybe they should be people, limits and all.
Democrats in Congress should introduce legislation that holds corporate “people” to the same donation limitations and disclosure that real, live, breathing human beings have. $5000 per year per candidate. Complete disclosure of donations, with filings over a certain amount.
It is also time to create legislation that makes the books of 927s, the vehicle these shadow groups use to fund millions in position advertising and candidate support/candidate attack ads, a matter of public record if they spend money on advertising of any kind that influences public political opinion or election outcomes.
The Teahadis might even back it. After all, it corrects some serious “judicial activism” on the part of Koch friends like Antonin Scalia and Clarence Thomas.
Mitt is right, though. Corporations are made up of people. People like him. People who bought companies, stripped them down of American workers, and sold them off to companies who shipped the jobs overseas making those brands.
That’s the kind of people I’m afraid are going to stranglehold our government in the name of the almighty corporate bottom line. You should be too.
And try to lend a helping hand.
Do-do-do-do. Corporations are people too.
They’re really, really people too.
This entry was posted on August 14, 2011 by Brian Ross in 2011, Big Insurance, Big Oil, Big Pharma, Big Three Auto Makers, Campaign 2012, Corporate-controlled Media, Corporatocracy, Defense Contractors, Democrats, Elections, Federal Government, Ideologies, Iowa, Koch Brothers, Legislation, McCain-Feingold, Mitt Romney, Neo Conservatives, Politics, Religious Right, Republicans, Richard Mellon Scaife, States, Tea Party, The White House, Totalitarianism, Wall Street, Years.

References: v. 
 v. 
 v. 
 v. 
 v. 
 v. 
 v. 
 v.