Re: The Power of the SCOTUS II: "Release the Kagan!"
I've to agree with Priceless on this one. There is a fine distinction in the recent SCOTUS ruling. I think original intent of congress was limited in scope and the courts are getting it wrong again.
Not so sure one way or the other....hard to discern "original intent" sometimes when technological changes have made the world so different. I suspect that it is simpler than you put it...."original intent" was probably more for citizen legislators who served a few terms in Congress as a sort of "jury duty" writ large....I highly doubt that "original intent" was to have career politicians supported by government pensions! I think the enormous amount of power and influence concentrated in federal government
clearly is
not the intent behind Amendment X !!
At least this time the Court was consistent, it is not merely "corporations" it is
all assemblages of people, corporate, union, not-for-profit.
I know you can make the argument that corporations need to influence elections for business but it's bad for democracy. especially when most corporate coffers are controlled by few executives and stock owners.
Agreed totally...
... just as most labor unions are controlled by a few people who often clearly do not represent the well-being of their rank and file members!! (Andy Stern lobbying for Obama'care' while president of SEIU, then retiring to accept a job in the Obama administration as soon as it passes is the most blatant example.)
Case in point, you can see it in many states: it is by far in the best interest of people who already have jobs in state government to make sure that said state is solvent enough to pay their pensions! Existing union members have a strong vested interest in preserving benefits for themselves at the expense of people who get new jobs. Yet union leaders' well-being is driven by how many union dues they collect. There is often a clear and blatant conflict of interest between union leaders insisting that existing benefits be extended to new hires while existing members would often prefer benefits for new hires to be less costly, otherwise everyone's pension is at stake (see that town in RI that went bankrupt, forcing existing pensioners to accept reduced payouts....the money just wasn't there for them despite the unfunded promises to the contrary).
I also know quite a few teachers that are totally outraged and disgusted at the way teachers' unions protect the truly terrible teachers. They would prefer that the bad teachers be tossed. Again, if a teacher's union leader lets
any teacher be tossed, that is so much less in the way of dues rolling in.
Just because I think today's union leaders are sell-outs does NOT make me "anti-"union, so please don't start arguing with a straw man upon whom you stuck my picture!