mykevermin
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It's a touch hyperbolic to say "do away with the First Amendment," no?
You can look at it that way; I, OTOH, look at it as a means of removing the "cash on hand = prominent candidate" element to elections. Several candidates in this cycle couldn't generate the money to get a campaign rolling. Some of them you may have already forgotten: Duncan Hunter, Fred Thompson, Dennis Kucinich, Joe Biden, Bill Richardson, Mike Gravel (I think he's out anyway), etc.
Why are these candidates inferior to those currently likely to win the primaries? Can you point out to me, on a policy level, why that may be the case? Or is it more likely that money = legitimacy in campaigns? When that's removed (or, realistically, reduced), candidates can compete on the terms of actual issues - we can't write off Ron Paul because he doesn't have money to compete, or Huckabee, or others (hell, even McCain in the middle/late of 2007!). That finances are related to how loudly a candidate is heard is an impediment to "free speech," in my opinion.
If we can silence partisan organizations in disguise, such as the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, then *great*, IMO. Free speech is often misused in campaign seasons to promote biased agendas by organizations that hide their true partisan underpinnings. Get rid of 'em.
You can look at it that way; I, OTOH, look at it as a means of removing the "cash on hand = prominent candidate" element to elections. Several candidates in this cycle couldn't generate the money to get a campaign rolling. Some of them you may have already forgotten: Duncan Hunter, Fred Thompson, Dennis Kucinich, Joe Biden, Bill Richardson, Mike Gravel (I think he's out anyway), etc.
Why are these candidates inferior to those currently likely to win the primaries? Can you point out to me, on a policy level, why that may be the case? Or is it more likely that money = legitimacy in campaigns? When that's removed (or, realistically, reduced), candidates can compete on the terms of actual issues - we can't write off Ron Paul because he doesn't have money to compete, or Huckabee, or others (hell, even McCain in the middle/late of 2007!). That finances are related to how loudly a candidate is heard is an impediment to "free speech," in my opinion.
If we can silence partisan organizations in disguise, such as the Foundation for the Defense of Democracies, then *great*, IMO. Free speech is often misused in campaign seasons to promote biased agendas by organizations that hide their true partisan underpinnings. Get rid of 'em.