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bzmrgonz 2 hours ago [-]
We have to do something tho. Today I was thinking out loud how it would be awesome if we could build a middle ground party around mamdani and company, along with like minded individuals. Sure he couldn't run for President, but what if the Party was different in it's constitutional structure. What I'd party power was divided into two heads, chairman(who vehemently defends the brand), and the political leader (charismatic figure dujur). This setup would mimic nature, close to perfect ecosystems in nature make use of antagonistic forces to maintain balances and preserve environment. This thir party would exist smack in the middle of the spectrum. Let the Oligarchs have the republican party, and let the corporatist/wall-street/speculators have the Democratic party. The Pleb/people can build a new modern real and functional party in 2026. Why Mamdani?? He just achieved what seems like an impossible fiscal feat, in your face Bezos and his bold claim that taxing the Rich won't make a difference. Honestly guys, the Mandani movement has gained cosmic gravity power with that move, I'm talking probably surpassing Bill Clinton's mobilization and even the legendary "yes we can" of Obama fame. Even if he cannot run for President. We'll make him Governor of the new Moderate Centric Progressive People's Party. First constitutional commandment: Though shalt not take candy from Corporations.
2 hours ago [-]
wanoir 13 hours ago [-]
Fascinating!
But does this only apply if the company is incorporated in that particular state?
If there is any state that doesn’t adopt the new law structure, then companies will just re-incorporate to that other state.
Of course, not every company may find it worthwhile to do that. So on the whole, it will probably mean companies that aren’t that involved in political spending will become even less involved. But, the largest spenders may find it worthwhile to re-incorporate so they can continue to do it.
sgc 6 hours ago [-]
Hawaii can only make laws for Hawaii. So I don't even think it could stop a Hawaiian corporation from spending political dollars in another state. But it can probably stop corporations from spending money in Hawaii even if they are not incorporated there. This law will make its way to the supreme Court relatively quickly I expect.
9 hours ago [-]
mindslight 9 hours ago [-]
Corporations/LLCs generally have to explicitly register with every state they do business in. Presumably at this juncture they can be subject to the same restrictions. No idea how this concretely plays out with this law though.
blevinstein 6 hours ago [-]
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upboundspiral 6 hours ago [-]
Stories like this one, though rare, often remind me that there is hope, and that society is not static. That even though there is corruption, and setbacks, by continuously pursuing a goal we can slowly claw our way towards a better tomorrow.
LocalH 6 hours ago [-]
Corporations, as an entity, deserve no Constitutional rights. Only the individuals that make them up, and as individuals, not as a group.
metalman 55 minutes ago [-]
high school, something, magna carta seperation of church and state, something, something
NOW, we need a seperation of business from state, where state regulation is explisetely antagonistic to mega business/bank acumulation of assets/capital.
It has to happen, and soon, or China, which maintains an actual functional central government, will thrive, while we decend further into a new dark age.
Unconstitutional on 14th amendment grounds and first amendment grounds.
They are privileging speech rights from some groups over other groups (unions v corps).
halJordan 9 hours ago [-]
You can (and others surely will) make that argument. But it doesn't apply because an LLC isnt a protected group. Gov'ts are fully allowed to discriminate outside of the relatively constrained race, religion, gender stuff. If the individuals in an LLC want to politic, then they are using the wrong venue. The state has created other venues and can force citizens to use them (you surely approve of this power when it forces your doctor to be board certified).
tenuousemphasis 9 hours ago [-]
Where in the constitution does it say that corporate entities have any rights at all?
halJordan 9 hours ago [-]
Corporations inherit their rights and privileges from the people in them. Because a corp is in fact just a series of individuals in a trenchcoat. (This would make immediate sense if we had not let grammar decay and you implicitly knew corp = plural)
bdangubic 9 hours ago [-]
people are corporations. I hardly exist as an individual in america. I do not own anything, my company does (my company employs only me and soon my daughter when she is of age), I do not buy anything, my company does. I don’t have phone service or internet service or practically anything under my name. and my company (me) has about the same rights as you, an individual, except of course a lot more cause capitalism be capilizing :)
mgh95 10 hours ago [-]
Not necessarily. Unions are typically organized as a not-for-profit. The legislation acts on all entities including unions.
mindslight 9 hours ago [-]
Repeat after me: Corporations and LLCs are not individuals. Corporations and LLCs are government creations. Corporations and LLCs do not have natural rights.
polski-g 6 hours ago [-]
Corporations, just like a group of concerned mothers pooling money for a billboard, are a grouping of people. And shareholders have rights to spend their own pooled money on speech, just like the mothers have that same right.
mindslight 6 hours ago [-]
This is disingenuous - a group of concerned mothers does not have a government-created liability shield, for starters.
In general, shareholders are always able to pool their money directly in the manner you are stating. This being uncommon shows that the situations are not equivalent.
gruez 8 hours ago [-]
>Repeat after me: Corporations and LLCs are not individuals. Corporations and LLCs are government creations.
They are however, groups of individuals.
Arodex 2 hours ago [-]
Yeah, and those individuals already have rights. I don't know why you think the group itself should have rights too on top of it.
Should we give corporations the right to vote? Should its members would have double voting rights?
mindslight 7 hours ago [-]
I know that's part of the Supreme Council's current justification for why corpos deserve natural rights, but I don't really see what it actually has to do with anything. Regardless of how corpos might be regulated, the individuals associated with a corpo are all still capable of exercising their free speech rights in their own individual capacity. Declaring that the government-created legal entity should not be able to direct individuals to speak a certain way fundamentally preserves those individuals' rights. The corpo's owners are also still able to freely speak on the corpo's interests using their own individual rights.
Of course, not every company may find it worthwhile to do that. So on the whole, it will probably mean companies that aren’t that involved in political spending will become even less involved. But, the largest spenders may find it worthwhile to re-incorporate so they can continue to do it.
NOW, we need a seperation of business from state, where state regulation is explisetely antagonistic to mega business/bank acumulation of assets/capital. It has to happen, and soon, or China, which maintains an actual functional central government, will thrive, while we decend further into a new dark age.
https://afj.org/article/corporate-power-reset-movement-updat...
https://www.americanprogress.org/article/addressing-question...
They are privileging speech rights from some groups over other groups (unions v corps).
In general, shareholders are always able to pool their money directly in the manner you are stating. This being uncommon shows that the situations are not equivalent.
They are however, groups of individuals.
Should we give corporations the right to vote? Should its members would have double voting rights?