Recent Forum Topics › Forums › The Public House › Interesting article on Citizen's United
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May 20, 2016 at 12:15 pm #44393waterfieldParticipant
from a Northwestern Law Professor
May 20, 2016 at 2:49 pm #44401wvParticipantThe thing about the rightwingers is they are usually quite honest. I mean this is a perfectly honest, up-front, direct encapsulation of their view:
“..The 1st Amendment guarantees freedom, not equality. Rights are exercised to radically unequal degrees, and the right to speech is no exception.”
That was, essentially what William F Buckley repeated over and over again for decades on his show. That same idea, right there.
Citizens United fosters Inequality. The Right is fine with Inequality.
(Buckley used to argue you cant have democracy without inequality)As a person of the left that whole notion is
appalling.…and i’m still not voting for Clinton đ
Cause she’s a crusher-of-poor-human-beings.w
vMay 20, 2016 at 7:19 pm #44410ZooeyModeratorFuck
Wealthy people are more ideologically balanced than academics and journalists? He states that as a statement of fact; he doesn’t even need to back that up. It’s just true, apparently.
Cuz academics and journalists are liberal. Studies say so.
You know what else studies show?
Studies show that EVERYBODY is liberal. That’s the weird thing. Large majorities of people think global warming is accelerated by human activity and that we should do something about it. Large majorities of Americans are in favor of national health care, more spending on education, less spending on the military, more protections of the environment, and on and on.
So one wonders…why do they always single out academics and journalists? Would it be to imply that one can’t really trust the two segments of society that are more highly informed than other segments?
So we have this weird society where people don’t trust what they themselves believe.
Besides which, I still don’t know how money = speech. I would think speech is speech, and money is money, and they are different things. But one thing I am pretty sure of is that the authors of the first amendment did not even conceive of corporations having “speech rights.” I doubt the concept would have made any sense to them in any way. For the same reason it makes no sense to me.
And if the cost of getting corporate money out of elections means getting union money etc. out of elections, sign me up. Only humans should be able to individually contribute, and institutions are welcome to pay for advertising on their own…but not directly contribute to the political process.
May 23, 2016 at 1:01 am #44519waterfieldParticipantI have no idea where you get she’s a crusher of poor people. To be honest that just sounds to me like some revolutionary, anarchist, unsophisticated and simplistic statement right out of the 60s. Just remember a non vote for her is a vote for Trump. To me that’s disgusting. If your comfortable with that-just consider the poor people in this country from south of our border that will be broken up and impacted for the rest of their lives if he becomes president. Consider the poor and the innocent who will continued to be gunned down in our cities because of a lack of gun control. Consider the enormous devastation a Supreme Court can do to Roe v Wade and the impact on poor women across this country-when Trump nominates his SCT justice(s)
Etc, Etc. …All just to make a statement? Fine -go ahead.
May 23, 2016 at 7:27 am #44523wvParticipantI have no idea where you get sheâs a crusher of poor people. To be honest that just sounds to me like some revolutionary, anarchist, unsophisticated and simplistic statement right out of the 60s…
All just to make a statement? Fine -go ahead.
——————-
Yes, i know that’s how your your brain interprets it, W. I know.Voting for Jill Stein — the candidate that best reflects humane, compassionate views — the candidate whose policies would help the poor — is not just ‘making a statement’. My hope would be that leftists abandon the Duplicat Party, and a Trump victory would once and for all fracture the Rich-folks (DNC) hold on the democrat party. The Party might take a look at itself. Might change. Might move to the left. Likely? Maybe not. But there’s a chance. Every other road leads to crushing-the-biosphere.
So, ya know, we see things differently.
w
vMay 23, 2016 at 1:07 pm #44541waterfieldParticipantZooey: I am no fan of Citizen’s United-believe me. However, as a lawyer I do understand the legal rational that is the foundation for the decision. Additionally I find the antagonism of some on the left interesting. I assume you are a member of the teacher’s union only because of your occupation. If so there are more than ample articles on the net and in papers explaining that one of the largest benefactors of the decision was labor unions. I understand the argument as to why should my dues to into a general fund (i.e. treasury) to support an issue or candidate I oppose. However, that same argument can -and is-raised by shareholders in a corporation.
IMO the single most important issue before us and will have an impact on those less fortunate than us will be the next Sup Ct justice. W/ Clinton as president the odds favor a 5-4 liberal majority court. That will save Roe v Wade and will also likely result in severe restrictions to Citizens’s United or possibly overrule it. Those are quality of life decisions that have far more impact on the poor than any president could have. And if Trump becomes president forget about the rights of poor women to have what is now a legal abortion and forget about any restrictions or overruling the Citizen’s decision.
If Sanders is the nominee Trump will be the president. If Clinton is then she will be along with a likely change in congress and the Court that will insure far more protection for the very people who need it more than ever. To me it is critical to vote for Clinton even if one has to hold their nose to do so.
I also think a lot of Sanders followers are really no different than the Trump supporters in terms of their lack of any analytical inclination to really explore the issues. They are the same as Trump’s simplistic lets make American great again. Instead it’s lets blame the corporations for stuff that’s wrong. To me many of Sanders supporters including on this very board have given up (i.e. it’s hopeless, big money and corporacracy controls, so why not make a statement much like “we” did in Nader) I’m simply not that cynical. Moreover, I find that notion to be misguided and even juvenile when it comes to “doing something” that might actually cause a change-especially in the fortune of the poorest among us. And again the biggest change can and will come from a more sympathetic Sup Ct on issues that actually affect the poor. Remember, if not for one vote Al Gore would have been president for the next two terms. And if it were not for Nader the Florida vote would never have been an issue.
Now you may be one who is in the camp of “our political system is rigged and there really isn’t any hope”. Well if Trump becomes president the irony is he will have proved you wrong. I just think the entire matter is far more serious than school yard politics.
May 23, 2016 at 1:44 pm #44543nittany ramModeratorSanders beats Trump in every major poll.
http://elections.huffingtonpost.com/pollster/2016-general-election-trump-vs-sanders
I haven’t decided who I will vote for if Sanders doesn’t get the nomination, but I think it’s the Clinton supporters who fail to look at the issues. If they did they wouldn’t be supporting a candidate who promises to maintain the status quo of endless wars, environmental degradation and government by the rich for the rich. It is the Clinton supporters who have given up, because it is they who claim to care about these issues but insist any positive changes must occur so slowly and incrementally they could be measured on a geologic time scale.
And you know your ‘only moderates can see the truth’ schtick isn’t going to make any headway around here, right?
May 23, 2016 at 2:52 pm #44547waterfieldParticipant“And you know your âonly moderates can see the truthâ schtick isnât going to make any headway around here, right?”
I most certainly do.
I don’t believe Sanders can beat Trump. They will have a field day with him. Nevertheless, even if he could beat him he won’t be the nominee. So my entire point is that a failure to vote for Clinton is akin to the vote for Nader which cost a truly good liberal from being President. In this case it would mean an idiot for President. Good luck with that.
As far as your comment above- I’m not sure what you mean by “truth”. I do plead guilty to the opinion that our greatest political achievements in this country have been ushered by so-called “moderates”. (Civil Rights Act of 64, Subsequent Voting Rights Act, Abortion rights for women, Marshall Plan, Women’s suffrage, even the Declaration of Independence) None of which would have been accomplished by the polarization of extremism. Hitler would not have been stopped if we listened to the isolationist extremists on both the left and right prior to the war.
I know my above post was overly lengthy-I suppose what I mean in simple terms is that I believe Clinton has a far better chance of securing more protection and advance more causes of the poor and disadvantaged than Trump. Indeed Trump is a dangerous man who will cause more harm to the poor than any President ever has. I’m as totally convinced of that as I am that Trump will beat Sanders if it’s between the two of them. I really hope it won’t be between the two of them. Even if Sanders somehow won the nomination and somehow beat Trump I can’t see him having what the pragmatism it takes to be a good President. I loved and voted for Carter but don’t think he had the pragmatism to be a good President. I see Sanders in the same light. Nothing would get done-nothing for the poor -nothing. He would simply sit there and say F— to the corporations and they would say F— to him and nothing would ever get done. I loathed LBJ but he was a leader and got stuff-good and bad done.
May 23, 2016 at 5:47 pm #44556Billy_TParticipantWaterfield,
Nader didn’t cost Gore the election. That would have been mathematically, physically and, due to the way we structure elections, impossible from an electoral point of view. Presidents win via a cumulative count in the Electoral college. No one state can possibly be “decisive” because of this. You need a lot of states to get to 270. Gore won 20. Bush won 30 and received 271 electoral votes to Gore’s 266. Take any of those 30 states for Gore, leave Florida in Bush’s column, and Gore wins.
It’s akin to saying that a missed field goal, in the last second of the last game of the season, cost some NFL team a chance to get to the playoffs. Wrong. If they had won another game prior to that last one, it wouldn’t have mattered, and if they had scored more points prior to that last-second field-goal attempt, it wouldn’t have mattered, etc. etc.
It’s become an article of faith among too many Democrats, but it’s really nothing more than a copout and a refusal to take responsibility for Gore’s terrible campaign, the lack of turnout among Dems, and the fact that more than 300,000 Democrats in Florida voted for Bush. Nader cost Gore roughly 27,000 likely votes there. If just 564 Democrats had stayed with their own candidate, instead of voting for Bush, Gore wins. And if the ballots hadn’t been so confusing to people in Palm Beach — even Buchanan said he believed at least 95% of his votes should have gone to Gore — Gore wins. And if Gore takes his own state of Tennessee, he wins, etc. etc.
If, if, if. Too many Democrats want to cherry pick just one possible counterfactual among a sea of them, while ignoring 99% of the rest. They need to do some real soul searching, or just let all of that go.
Nader had nothing to do with Bush’s victory. He couldn’t possibly.
May 23, 2016 at 6:29 pm #44564wvParticipantWaterfield,
Nader didnât cost Gore the election. That would have been mathematically, physically and, due to the way we structure elections, impossible from an electoral point of view. Presidents win via a cumulative count in the Electoral college. No one state can possibly be âdecisiveâ because of this. You need a lot of states to get to 270. Gore won 20. Bush won 30 and received 271 electoral votes to Goreâs 266. Take any of those 30 states for Gore, leave Florida in Bushâs column, and Gore wins.
Itâs akin to saying that a missed field goal, in the last second of the last game of the season, cost some NFL team a chance to get to the playoffs. Wrong. If they had won another game prior to that last one, it wouldnât have mattered, and if they had scored more points prior to that last-second field-goal attempt, it wouldnât have mattered, etc. etc.
Itâs become an article of faith among too many Democrats, but itâs really nothing more than a copout and a refusal to take responsibility for Goreâs terrible campaign, the lack of turnout among Dems, and the fact that more than 300,000 Democrats in Florida voted for Bush. Nader cost Gore roughly 27,000 likely votes there. If just 564 Democrats had stayed with their own candidate, instead of voting for Bush, Gore wins. And if the ballots hadnât been so confusing to people in Palm Beach â even Buchanan said he believed at least 95% of his votes should have gone to Gore â Gore wins. And if Gore takes his own state of Tennessee, he wins, etc. etc.
If, if, if. Too many Democrats want to cherry pick just one possible counterfactual among a sea of them, while ignoring 99% of the rest. They need to do some real soul searching, or just let all of that go.
Nader had nothing to do with Bushâs victory. He couldnât possibly.
—————–
I always thought it was Gore who cost Nader the election đ
But people disagree on these things.
This election really is quite interesting. The most interesting
in my lifetime. (to me, anyway)A week ago, i thought Clinton was a shoe-in. Now, I think Trump
really has a good chance. The biosphere loses either way, but its
all pretty interesting.w
vMay 23, 2016 at 6:47 pm #44567ZooeyModeratorThanks, W. That was a thoughtful post. There is a lot there, much of which I agree with, and some of which I disagree with. But your argument for voting for Hillary as a practicality has a lot of merit. There is no reason whatsoever to think that Donald Trump is a suitable candidate to occupy the White House. He is unpredictable, and therefore dangerous. Every moment he is in office, I will be figuratively holding my breath. There is no doubt in my mind he will make things worse for minorities, even if he is unable to go anywhere near as far as he claims he will. (I mean, the sheer impracticality of building a wall and/or deporting 11 million people is staggering. He canât do it).
I also fear his SC appointments. The man is rash, and unprincipled. His unpredictability makes him a real loose cannon â not what one wishes for the most powerful position on the planet.
However, I canât say I have any faith in Hillary Clinton, either. I assume her appointees will uphold Roe, but I donât have any faith at all that they will overturn Citizens United. What has she ever done to make anyone think she would?
There is no question that organized wealth controls our politics, and that when a majority of citizens disagrees with economic elites or with organized interests, they generally lose. What happens on Capitol Hill is different from what is promised on the campaign trail, and what is promised on the campaign trail is different from what happens on Capitol Hill because what the majority of voters want is something different from what the organized wealth in this country wants. So we get lip service, and when the oaths are taken, and the doors are closed, the government gets busy serving organized wealth. Everybody knows this. Everybody. And everybody has known it for a long time. And from time-to-time, a candidate comes along and promises to change that, but like Lucy pulling the ball away from Charlie Brown, the government keeps up business as usual. Obama promised Hope and Change. Meanwhile, he took huge money from banks. So Obama bailed out the bankers, but not the homeowners. We got some incremental progress on a couple of things, but no change to the system.
So while I agree that Trump will be bad, I really have no reason to see Hillary as anything but Lucy. The entire Clinton fortune has been generated in the wake of Citizens United, and she has expertly used the system to landscape the democrat party to support her presidential bid. Itâs what got her where she is. And, heck, she has scooped up more than $13 million from the healthcare industry alone, including over $2.8 million in speaking fees that went straight into her personal checking account. Millions of Americans believe that $2.8 million in personal money plus another $10 million in campaign money may just be at the root of her âpracticalâ approach to healthcare. Hillary may be better than Trump, but she is not a reformer.
She talks about incremental progress. I am not sure incremental progress is acceptable anymore. I have waited 3 decades now for progress, and for 3 decades I have accepted the âlesser of two evilsâ argument (though I didnât vote that way because it hasnât mattered in California). But I believe we are running out of clock. And right now, I am weighing whether the risk of Trump against the value of destroying the democrat establishment. Is it better to risk 4 years of Trump on the gamble that he will be a one-term president, thus opening the door for a Warren run in 2020, or is it better to avoid risking possible Trump excesses by rewarding a corrupt democrat establishment, thus making a progressive run unlikely until 2024?
Because, you see, I donât think we can afford to wait another minute on taking action on the environment. We need to make a serious move â not an incremental move â away from poisoning the biosphere. Life itself is at stake. And Hillary isnât going to make a serious move. Sheâs already told us that repeatedly. We are killing the planetâs ability to support human civilization, and incrementalism is the same as doing nothing at this point. That is the dilemma.
Moreover, you misread the seriousness and scope of the movement Sanders happens to head up right now. Millions of other Americans are unhappy with the current system/establishment, and that is the story of this election. That is the story of Trump and Sanders. Yes, they have one thing in common: they both have called out the system for being a payola scheme, and neither has taken money from that system. Thatâs why they are getting the support they are. And you can dismiss it as childish â âlack of any analytical inclination,â âsimplistic,â âjuvenile,â âschoolyard politicsâ â but that attitude from Hillary and Hillary supporters does not warm us up to vote for her. Just so you know. And it is that smugness that informs us that the Democrat establishment just doesnât get it. The writing is on the wall. This is the last gasp of Clintonism. The Clintons, the Rubins, Emmanuels, Wasserman Schultzes, are at the end of the road. The environmental pressures are building, and Sanders has just made it okay for the first time since the 70s to talk about certain issues. Half the party is for a self-described democratic socialist right now. Maybe more than half. I wouldnât be surprised if some of those votes cast in early February for Clinton would go to Sanders if those primaries were held now. And Hillary supporters are talking about half the party as if it is a child who needs to be removed from the room while the adults handle the serious business of the nation.
I am telling you that a vote for Sanders or Trump or Stein is not a immature, self-serving âstatement.â It is a deliberate blow to the establishment which keeps breaking its promises to the American people. It will not stand. I do not accept the argument that what Sanders is calling for â a more equitable distribution of wealth, a national health care system, âfreeâ college education â is juvenile, or unrealistic. Dozens of countries have those things. So we can, too. And the only thing stopping us is popular insistence upon those things. But 58% of Americans want single-payer health care, including 41% of Republicans. Not only is it feasible, weâre going to get it. Within 10 years is my bet. The pendulum that Reagan started swinging to the right has crested, and its rightward arc is within a whisker of being complete. This country has started looking to the left.
And if I am wrong about that, then may god help us because the shit is going to hit the fan.
Last note: it isnât that corporations are evil, or that corporations are even to blame. Corporations are just a stack of legal documents, nothing more. But the playing field is tilted towards organized wealth, so the executives of corporations are just playing by the rules, and in fact rewriting the rules in their favor all the time. So the rules have to be changed. That is all.
May 23, 2016 at 6:48 pm #44568Billy_TParticipantWV,
Good way to look at. The Dems were never entitled to the win, nor were the Republicans.
Nader was far and away the best candidate of the three. The only antiwar candidate. The only anti-empire candidate. And the platform of the Green Party was wildly preferable to the duopoly’s.
Will be voting for Jill Stein this time, like I did in 2012.
Also agree with you about the bizarre shift regarding Trump. A few weeks ago, I thought either Dem could have destroyed Trump in the general. I was seeing an embarrassing landslide for them. Today? With the Republicans deciding to put tribal loyalties above all of their talk about “principles,” it appears Trump could win this thing. And Americans seem to be in a state of mass amnesia right now, if the polls are any indication. Goddess help us all!!
(Austria just elected a Green. Barely, but still. Why can’t we?)
May 23, 2016 at 9:19 pm #44571wvParticipantWV,
(Austria just elected a Green. Barely, but still. Why canât we?)
————–
Dunno anything about the political history of Austria. I would
speculate wildly that Austria’s people werent harnessed by
forces of religion and corporate-propaganda as much as Americans were.
I guess. I dunno.Religion and Corporate-Power. Put’em together and ya got the End of the World.
w
vMay 23, 2016 at 9:20 pm #44572ZooeyModeratorComes down to this:
A Trump presidency means minorities are going to suffer, and we are at risk of worse. Possibly a stacking of the Supreme Court that will affect a generation. On the upside, his victory would smash both the Republican and Democrat establishments, and create an opening in 2020 for moving the country in a new direction. Maybe he gets only 1 SC appointment.
A Clinton presidency means no progressive can run for 8 years by which time – who knows? – the public may be sick of Democrats in the White House, and no progressive has a shot, but she may not be as awful as of Trump. And 8 more years of nothing happening to replace fossil fuels may render the whole question of who is in charge of Rome burning moot.
Finally. I’m not sure Hillary can beat Trump no matter how I vote. I think W is completely wrong about this. Not only do polls show Sanders beating Trump by much wider margins, I think Hillary is more vulnerable. Here’s why.
Trump made mincemeat of Bush by calling him Low Energy. He called Rubio “Little Marco” to highlight his inexperience (never mind his own lack of experience). He hit Cruz with “Lying Ted.” In all cases, there was an element of truth. Trump exploits and belittles that. And we see what happens when they try to play his game. They all went down.
When Hillary wins, get ready for “Crooked Hillary.” That is all you are going to hear for 4 months. “Crooked Hillary.” Followed by a litany of her scandals (real or imaginary, doesn’t matter). She will be toasted if she tries to respond in kind because he is naturally better at that game, and her public list is longer. And he contributed to her campaigns, and he can say he bought her. She cannot counter that. And it is the year of anti-establishment.
I don’t think she’s going to win.
May 23, 2016 at 9:55 pm #44573znModeratorI personally am not persuaded by predictions of positive outcomes of a Trump presidency (like a collapse of the party etc.). No one knows those kinds of things. Those kinds of things are never knowable.
I am hanging my hat on one thing, which I’ve said before. Worse really IS worse, and it is worse in far more ways than you can ever imagine or predict. I remember when LePage got elected in Maine and people would say “well how bad can it get really.” Those people ain’t saying that now. They got a taste of it.
I am probably not going to convince anyone and that’s fine. Just putting my 2 pennies in.
May 24, 2016 at 6:37 am #44576PA RamParticipantI also think a lot of Sanders followers are really no different than the Trump supporters in terms of their lack of any analytical inclination to really explore the issues. They are the same as Trumpâs simplistic lets make American great again. Instead itâs lets blame the corporations for stuff thatâs wrong.
Ahhh, Waterfield, you are precisely the sort of person Thomas Frank discusses in “Listen, Liberal”. You certainly know what’s best for us “less educated” folk. There is so much you simply do not get. And it would be impossible for me to explain it to you. You have a worldview and it is shared by the current leaders of the Democratic party. I understand.
But I could never make you understand.
As for this article and it’s conclusion that this ruling confirms that corporations are entitled to free speech, and that money is free speech–I’d say that is a very divided view along political lines. The vote itself was 5-4 along political lines. I think it’s utter bullshit and yes–I’m no lawyer. But others who are agree with that.
Anyone who does not see the harm being done by money in politics is either willfully ignorant or on board with that agenda. Dark money is the worst of the worst. We don’t know where it comes from. These “non-profits:(what a joke that is)play the old shell game and the money can’t be traced to its true source. We don’t even have DISCLOSURE. That’s astonishing to me. During the grass roots(er..astroturf) movement of the tea party it was found that most of the traceable money all went back to two guys–the Koch brothers. For two guys and their little group of billionaires to have that much influence is to destroy true democracy.
There is a corruption to it all extending to Supreme Court justices who attend the Koch functions.
I put no legitimacy in that ruling.
It’s a disaster.
It must be overturned and other restrictions must be applied if we want to truly save this country for the many and not the few.
"Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away. " Philip K. Dick
May 24, 2016 at 7:55 am #44578wvParticipant…As for this article and itâs conclusion that this ruling confirms that corporations are entitled to free speech, and that money is free speechâIâd say that is a very divided view along political lines. The vote itself was 5-4 along political lines. I think itâs utter bullshit and yesâIâm no lawyer. But others who are agree with that.
Anyone who does not see the harm being done by money in politics is either willfully ignorant or on board with that agenda..
—————-
First off as I’ve said many times, a trained monkey could be a lawyer. Law School is not hard. You wanna know what’s hard? Nursing school.
Anyway, yeah lawyers all disagree on the Corporate-Personhood and the Santa Clara cases up through and past Citizens United. And yes, it fractures along political lines.
…The powers-that-be have never liked folks who wanted big-change. Gandhi was not a popular man with, as zooey called it, ‘organized wealth’. Gandhi was called naive and infantile and a gazillion other things. Not by poor people, though, for the most part.
“It is alarming and also nauseating to see Mr. Gandhi, a seditious Middle Temple lawyer of the type well-known in the East, now posing as a fakir, striding half naked up the steps of the Viceregal palace to parley on equal terms with the representative of the King-Emperor.”
-Comment on Gandhi’s meeting with the British Viceroy of India, addressing the Council of the West Essex Unionist Association (23 February 1931)“Gandhi-ism and everything it stands for will have to be grappled with and crushed”
-Churchill, on the independence movement in India, 1930âFor the poor, the economic is spiritual.â
Gandhiw
vMay 24, 2016 at 10:28 am #44584znModeratorThere is a corruption to it all extending to Supreme Court justices who attend the Koch functions.
I put no legitimacy in that ruling.
Itâs a disaster.
It must be overturned and other restrictions must be applied if we want to truly save this country for the many and not the few.
Here’s a good example. Opinion polls (last I looked) routinely showed that when directly asked, “would you endorse a public health insurance system,” the majority say yes.
But how many candidates in either party support single-payer public health insurance? Outside of Sanders it’s minor.
Also, not coincidentally, 2 of the major contributors to both campaigns and lobbying are the private health insurance industry and the big pharm. And that is regardless of party. In most cases you simply can’t run for office unless you have their support.
Meanwhile, it is docusmented that a HUGE percentage of private health insurance revenue (I have heard up to 30%) goes to administrative costs, including advertizing and lobbying, that PUBLIC health insurance does not have. That’s BILLIONS of dollars.
Meanwhile, one of the reasons the US medical industry is so expensive is because of private insurance. Here’s the numbers on that, from Fortune magazine:
U.S. healthcare is exceedingly expensive. According to OECD data released in 2014, among 34 advanced industrialized countries, the U.S. spends $7,662 per person (adjusted for purchasing power parity differences), which is more than 2.6 times the OECD average. The U.S. devotes 16.9% of its GDP to health care, 1.8 times as much as the average. In the case of health care spending measured any way you want, the U.S. is No. 1 by a large margin. Hero ImagesâGetty Images
Massive political contributions notwithstanding, competition among health systems and pressure to reduce costs will put an end to health insurers as we know them.
Why health insurance companies are doomedMore on the associated problems with that:
âU.S. doctors spend almost an hour on average each day, and $83,000 a year ⊠with the paperwork of insurance companies.â
That disappears with public health insurance.
Which WORKS where it exists. (I am originally Canadian for example.)
The ONLY THING, the ONLY THING in the way of fixing this is the lobbying and campaign money hold that insurers and big pharm have on political life.
There is absolutely nothing good in that. You hand power to a few with money and you don’t have democracy, you have oligarchy.
And this is just one argument among a thousand for dismantling a system that supports oligarchy.
.
May 24, 2016 at 10:41 am #44586ZooeyModeratorMay 24, 2016 at 10:47 am #44587PA RamParticipantFirst off as Iâve said many times, a trained monkey could be a lawyer. Law School is not hard. You wanna know whatâs hard? Nursing school.
I don’t know that I agree with that. Would the monkey REALLY have to be trained? Or could he just wing it?
Seriously though–I think you belittle your profession a little bit, wv. I am sure that learning procedures and laws and cases would drive me batty. And you have to have some memory skills on top of communication skills and be able to learn about a variety of things that may come up in a case. Knowing the ins and outs of DNA evidence alone is enough to make my eyes glaze over.
I think that it’s more about the law being open to interpretation–to the subjectivity of it in some cases. The fact that the highest lawyers in the land can disagree says something about it. Sometimes there seems to be randomness in how it’s applied in a given situation. While one judge may accept certain evidence or allow for certain testimony–another may not.
No one wants to feel there is any “fuzziness” to the law because that suggests there could be some injustice. But we know that’s how it is.
Looking at large issues like Citizen’s United or Roe V. Wade has it’s own sort of “fuzziness” in how it is ruled upon with dissent noted in rulings.
I have respect for any professional who invested his time and money to navigate that particular and frustrating maze.
But you don’t have to be a lawyer to sense injustice or legal decisions that harm a democracy. If someone could put up an argument explaining why “Citizens Untied” is good for the country I have yet to hear it.
"Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away. " Philip K. Dick
May 24, 2016 at 10:48 am #44588znModeratorZ, for some reason, your images are not posting.
When I search the image url in this case, I get this:
The URL doesn’t refer to an image, or the image is not publicly accessible.
One guess is you may be trying to post images from facebook (maybe?) FB is very tricky about letting images be copied.
May 24, 2016 at 10:54 am #44589PA RamParticipantZ, for some reason, your images are not posting.
I blame the “bean” thread. The “bean” thread is responsible.
"Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away. " Philip K. Dick
May 24, 2016 at 12:01 pm #44594ZooeyModeratorZ, for some reason, your images are not posting.
When I search the image url in this case, I get this:
The URL doesnât refer to an image, or the image is not publicly accessible.
One guess is you may be trying to post images from facebook (maybe?) FB is very tricky about letting images be copied.
Interesting.
I saw that one of my bean images wasn’t posting, so I downloaded the image and uploaded it to a defunct school website that still exists, but to which nobody is directed any longer since the school moved to a different place. It is with googlepages. Let me try something. Does this work?
May 24, 2016 at 12:11 pm #44595znModeratorZ, for some reason, your images are not posting.
When I search the image url in this case, I get this:
The URL doesnât refer to an image, or the image is not publicly accessible.
One guess is you may be trying to post images from facebook (maybe?) FB is very tricky about letting images be copied.
Interesting.
I saw that one of my bean images wasnât posting, so I downloaded the image and uploaded it to a defunct school website that still exists, but to which nobody is directed any longer since the school moved to a different place. It is with googlepages. Let me try something. Does this work?
Yes that one worked.
I don’t like the color arrangement and design, though. Strive for better.
Kidding. I know that particular image, it’s a good one.
May 24, 2016 at 12:13 pm #44596znModeratorThat disappears with public health insurance.
Which WORKS where it exists. (I am originally Canadian for example.)
One of my favorite one-image comments on this. Oldie but goodie.
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May 24, 2016 at 3:06 pm #44603wvParticipantI donât know that I agree with that. Would the monkey REALLY have to be trained? Or could he just wing it?
Seriously thoughâI think you belittle your profession a little bit, wv. I am sure that learning procedures and laws and cases would drive me batty.
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No, its true, Pa. Trained monkeys. Visit a bar meeting sometime. Talk to a bunch of lawyers.
Be prepared to talk about golf, though.Btw, the first thing you learn in law school is to “think like a lawyer”. Thats what ‘they’ call it. Thinking like a lawyer. What that means is to always look at things from many sides. Be prepared to see things from various points of view, and dont think that there is ‘one holy truth’. There may be a final ‘verdict’ but thats not ‘the truth’. For example, the law allows for arguments about ‘self-defense’ but just what constitutes ‘self-defense’ ? There could be a gazillion fact patterns, each one just a slight-degree different. Or, what is ‘free speech’? Is it money? Sometimes? When? When not? Well, Scalia might say X, and Thurgood Marshall might say Z, and Oliver Holmes might say Q….law is not like math. Its more like looking at a painting. Interpretations. Based on Interests, politics, logic, a gazillion conscious and unconscious things.
In other words the ‘law’ is full of ‘questions’ but not necessarily full of ‘bright line answers’. And thus to ‘think like a lawyer’ is to ‘get’ the fact that there are many ‘arguments’ and even opposing arguments might have equal merit…depending.In other words ‘thinking like a lawyer’ is much like posting on a message board….which…a trained monkey could do. Yes?
PS — a trained monkey is driving a car. He goes through a red light. Did he break the law? Well, a person NOT thinking like a lawyer might give a quick yes or no answer. But a person “thinking like a lawyer” would say, “it depends” (and then they’d talk for three hours, going back and forth about whether it might be an illegal act or justified in some way…
w
vMay 24, 2016 at 5:42 pm #44613ZooeyModeratorOld world monkeys and apes mainly see as humans do â they are trichomats, so they pick up red, green, and blue. But many new world monkeys do not. There is no real pattern among species. In fact, in the same family of monkeys there can be up to six different types of color blindness or vision. As with their human cousins, color blindness is more common in males than in females.
Basically, the way I see it, is that red lights are unfair to monkeys, and they should not have to abide by them.
May 24, 2016 at 7:02 pm #44618wvParticipantOld world monkeys and apes mainly see as humans do â they are trichomats, so they pick up red, green, and blue. But many new world monkeys do not. There is no real pattern among species. In fact, in the same family of monkeys there can be up to six different types of color blindness or vision. As with their human cousins, color blindness is more common in males than in females.
Basically, the way I see it, is that red lights are unfair to monkeys, and they should not have to abide by them.
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Normally, i would post a picture of a funny monkey, at this point.But I think a history lesson is required before
we can move on to the funny monkey pictures.…some traffic lights had four colors, not three. I bet u didnt know that.
w
vMay 25, 2016 at 7:52 am #44636PA RamParticipantOkay–if you won’t wv–I will.
"Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it, doesn't go away. " Philip K. Dick
May 25, 2016 at 12:18 pm #44655wvParticipantOkayâif you wonât wvâI will.
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Ok, but is see you could not find a photo of a monkey at a Red Light, either.What are those guys doing? Golfing? Are they Golfing Republican Monkeys? See, PA you totally misunderstand this thread. Its not a thread about Republican Monkeys playing golf. Or Liberal Monkeys playing golf, for that matter. Near-as-I-can-tell this is a thread about how staring too long at stop-lights can cause color-blindness in primates.
I just dont think you are thinking like a lawyer.
w
v- This reply was modified 8 years, 6 months ago by wv.
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