TheRiov wrote:
Again, you're completly ignoring third party ads Taskiss. So-called 'issue ads' where companies don't have to report their spending in the same way. Those contributions DON'T show up on party balance sheets.
http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/vote-201 ... d=11910807Quote:
The group estimates $564 million will be spent by political committees and nonprofit groups this year, including $334 million by pro-Republican organizations and $230 million by pro-Democratic groups.
Experts say spending by independent third-parties are driving the surge, infusing 73 percent more cash into the campaign through mid-October than they did two years ago.
Emphasis mine.
And no one is claiming that its the sole determiner of public opinion. Only that it can sway it.
I only see a difference there of 104 million in favor of "pro-Republican groups." Who is deciding what is pro-Republican/pro-Democrat I wonder?
Taskiss's data shows a $170 million advantage in total spending on the part of the Democrats; your $104 million Republican advantage in "issue ads" and whatever still leaves an overall advantage of $66 million for the Democrats. Yet the Democrats suffered.
In any case, it's amazing how the goalposts have subtly shifted. First, the objection was to company lobbying of politicians, now it's to companies attempting to get rregular people to vote in ways that they would prefer.
Naturally, political advertising will sway people's opinions. That's rather the point of it. There's nothing inherently wrong with that, but it seems that there's an objection when
corporations do it for no better reason than that they're corporations.. and therefore that this is somehow inherently a problem, evidently because they generally seem to lean Republican and basically, you don't want them convincing people to voite for things you don't like.
Of course, when closely questioned, yes, its apparently acceptable (according to Aizle, at least) at least to limit unions as well, but no mention of any other type of political advocacy group has been made, nor the question of people who are famous being able to buy themselves a platform to expound sheer nonsense from addressed.
You have yet to actually point out anything that's really a problem. As I said before, everything so far is just an implication that there's some sort of "inequality" or unfairness going on, without specifying exactly what it is or how you know it exists, or why there is anything wrong with it. Spending money in order to persuade, convince, or sway opinion is not inherently dishonest or wrong, and it does not matter that one side or the other might have an advantage in that regard, espcially since there are plenty of other ploys to do exactly the same thing, such as trotting out a popular actor carrying on about their pet social ill. Yes, when it crosses the line into back-door deals, vote-buying, or outright blatant fabrication and slander its a problem, but we already have laws to deal with such things, and they are to be dealt with as individual wrongs, not by broad "reforms" which are really just a smokescreen to neutralize the other side's political efforts, nor does normal persuasive effort somehow become vote-buying, slander, or fabrication simply because it results in something the other side disagrees with.