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In reply to the discussion: Glenn Greenwald POPPED Tim Geithner in the chops, way before it was cool. [View all]Octafish
(55,745 posts)Im also quite skeptical of the apocalyptic claims about how this decision will radically transform and subvert our democracy by empowering corporate control over the political process. My skepticism is due to one principal fact: I really dont see how things can get much worse in that regard. The reality is that our political institutions are already completely beholden to and controlled by large corporate interests (Dick Durbin: banks own the Congress). Corporations find endless ways to circumvent current restrictions their armies of PACs, lobbyists, media control, and revolving-door rewards flood Washington and currently ensure their stranglehold and while this decision will make things marginally worse, I cant imagine how it could worsen fundamentally. All of the hand-wringing sounds to me like someone expressing serious worry that a new law in North Korea will make the country more tyrannical. Theres not much room for our corporatist political system to get more corporatist. Does anyone believe that the ability of corporations to influence our political process was meaningfully limited before yesterdays issuance of this ruling?
SOURCE: http://www.salon.com/2010/01/22/citizens_united/
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