🌟 Exclusive 2024 Prime Day Deals! 🌟

Unlock unbeatable offers today. Shop here: https://amzn.to/4cEkqYs 🎁

An Anti-Competition Amendment

PoliticalChic

Diamond Member
Gold Supporting Member
Oct 6, 2008
125,093
60,647
2,300
Brooklyn, NY
Each day, Donald Boudreaux, professor of economics at George Mason University, writes a letter to the editor of a major American publication. Often, he writes in response to an absurdity offered up by a columnist or politician, or an eye-catching factoid misleadingly taken out of context. This guy is da' bomb!

Here's one of his cruise missiles.



1. [To the] "Editor, Roll Call: Tom Udall and 42 other incumbent U.S. senators propose a Constitutional amendment with the following key provision:

“To advance the fundamental principle of political equality for all, and to protect the integrity of the legislative and electoral processes, Congress shall have power to regulate the raising and spending of money and in-kind equivalents with respect to Federal elections, including through setting limits on (1) the amount of contributions to candidates for nomination for election to, or for election to, Federal office; (2) the amount of funds that may be spent by, in support of, or in opposition to such candidates”
(“Senate Democrats Begin Efforts to Amend Constitution,” June 6).


2. ... this amendment strikes at the heart of the First amendment values of freedom of speech and freedom of petition. .... if ratified, this amendment would create far greater political inequality and eat like a cancer at electoral processes.
It would do so by shielding incumbent politicians from competition.




3. [If] Ford, Toyota, Volkswagen, and other of today’s successful automakers seek, and get, the power to regulate the raising and spending of money and in-kind equivalents with respect to auto advertising..... you think that these incumbent automakers — whose brands are currently established and well-known — would never be tempted to use this power to protect themselves from the competition of upstart automakers?

4. Would you take at face value all the fine rhetoric from these incumbent automakers about the need to protect members of the car-buying public from being overwhelmed and misled by expensive and glitzy ads?

5. ... would you be confident that allowing incumbent automakers to regulate spending on auto ads and on sales campaigns would improve the quality of competition among automakers and heighten these firms’ responsiveness to the ‘true’ demands of the car-buying public?




6. .... most people would correctly see such an effort by incumbent automakers as being a scheme to restrict competition — a scheme that would benefit incumbent automakers and make them less responsive to the general public. It’s astonishing, therefore, that so many people continue to believe that the very same such scheme by incumbent politicians is a noble endeavor to improve political competition....
Sincerely,
Donald J. Boudreaux
Professor of Economics
10 June 2014" Competition, Job One - The New York Sun




Competition....the life's blood of the free market.

Boudreaux: now, here is a man who understands economics, politics, and human nature. Of course, the lesson will fall on deaf ears and dumb minds for Obama voters.
 
My views on campaign financing are "evolving." The original intent of the Constitution was to create a federal system based on representation of individual State interests. Today, the infusion of out-of-state money has turned most Congressional races into national elections, unduly influenced by big money special interests. This is one area where the British system seems to be superior to ours.
 
The amazing thing is Prof Boudreux never seems to run out of material. The level of economic ignorance among editorial page editors is scandalous. Nearly as bad as among the leftist posters here.
How many of them believe: consumer spending drives the economy, government creates jobs, protecting domestic industry leads to higher standards of living, automation costs jobs, off shoring is the cause of industrial job loss? All of those are patently false, btw.
 
The relationship between money and politics is disturbing indeed, and people in Congress (H.R.) feel it much more acutely than the general public because many of them feel like they have to be fundraising essentially all of the time, in order to stay in office.

Their main fear is that some jackass (in their mind) might find a "Koch Brothers" or Bloomburg patron who will blow them out of the water - and out of office - with a barrage of advertising that they cannot match.

Still, it is refreshing when an underfunded candidate (e.g., Brat) is able to unseat a well-funded incumbent, merely on the basis of his "message." Pity it doesn't happen more often.

But the problem with paid political discourse is the lies, misrepresentations, and distortions that pervade political advertising. Secondarily, the compliant liberal news media rarely challenge the falsehoods coming in support of candidates they favor, and go overboard in the opposite direction.

But restricting spending on political advertising is unconstitutional.
 
The relationship between money and politics is disturbing indeed, and people in Congress (H.R.) feel it much more acutely than the general public because many of them feel like they have to be fundraising essentially all of the time, in order to stay in office.

Their main fear is that some jackass (in their mind) might find a "Koch Brothers" or Bloomburg patron who will blow them out of the water - and out of office - with a barrage of advertising that they cannot match.

Still, it is refreshing when an underfunded candidate (e.g., Brat) is able to unseat a well-funded incumbent, merely on the basis of his "message." Pity it doesn't happen more often.

But the problem with paid political discourse is the lies, misrepresentations, and distortions that pervade political advertising. Secondarily, the compliant liberal news media rarely challenge the falsehoods coming in support of candidates they favor, and go overboard in the opposite direction.

But restricting spending on political advertising is unconstitutional.





"But the problem with paid political discourse is the lies, misrepresentations, and distortions..."

This is true...but the real culprits are the people, who decline to provide due diligence.

When the people are wide-eyed, villains get tossed.
 
The relationship between money and politics is disturbing indeed, and people in Congress (H.R.) feel it much more acutely than the general public because many of them feel like they have to be fundraising essentially all of the time, in order to stay in office.

I don't buy this.

Most people in office are millionaires and they own businesses so I feel they are there to protect their wealth. They are using society to work for them by making laws to make you regulate the political industry and yes, it is a business.

How many of them take your phone calls? How many of you can actually talk to your senator or state representative? The answer is none. They make more money than you and I will ever see in our lifetimes and they are crying that they would have to go out and raise more cash when they don't care about their average constituent.

We as a society shouldn't be their employees to regulate how much their competition can raise. If you want to make it fair, tax their contributions over a certain amount and watch them cry, cry, cry fowl.
 
I wonder if any of the proposed changes towards the most wealthy in this country should be applied to campaign earnings. Why not? Should you have billion dollar races that aren't taxed? Why should they pay no tax while we pay tax?
 

Forum List

Back
Top