Justice Scalia Has Simple Solution For Critics Of Citizens United

He smoothed it out all right, he asked the FEC to create a media exception so Clbert could have a PAC that is a joke.

Sooo, your point is...?

That the fact that federal laws 71 separate entities subject to different rules for 33 types of political speech is stupid. Why do we need 568 pages of regulations and thousands of pages of explanations in order to talk about politics?

I don't know...
 
ALL outside funding should be stopped - and not just for elections. Lobbying should be stopped as well.

You want government of, by, and for the people? Then get the money out of politics. All of it, union, corporation, 1%ers, special interest groups, et cetera.

How do you get government money out of politics?
 
Change the channel? Really, Scalia? Really?

Justices Are Split on Broadcast "Indecency"

(January 11, 2012) - Yesterday's long-awaited Supreme Court argument on the constitutionality of the Federal Communications Commission's rule against "indecency" on the airwaves was rocky and inconclusive. Despite high hopes of many observers that the Court will finally strike down this anomalous policy of government censorship, only two justices - Ruth Bader Ginsburg and Elena Kagan - expressed First Amendment concerns, and the two lawyers representing the broadcast industry mainly focused their arguments on ways that the Court could rule for their clients while leaving the indecency regime intact.

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An even more striking pro-censorship argument came from Justice Antonin Scalia, who six months ago wrote a strong First Amendment opinion for the Court invalidating a California law that restricted minors' access to violent video games. Scalia expressed his support for continuing government censorship of the airwaves not based on any constitutional rationale or showing of harm to minors, but on "symbolism." After Justice Anthony Kennedy rephrased Solicitor General Donald Verrilli's argument "that there is a public value in having a particular segment of the media with different standards than other segments," Scalia said:

Sign me up as supporting Justice Kennedy's notion that this has a symbolic value, just as we require a certain modicum of dress for the people that attend this Court and the people that attend other federal courts. … These are public airwaves, the government is entitled to insist upon a certain modicum of decency. I'm not sure it even has to relate to juveniles, to tell you the truth.

It was a remarkable statement, especially from a justice who only six months before had writtten that “government has no power to restrict expression because of its message, its ideas, its subject matter, or its content”; but it also reflected a political truth: FCC censorship does nothing to protect or educate children, but it does send an essentially symbolic message of government disapproval. The fact that only 10% of the population still accesses broadcast TV over the airwaves rather than through a cable only undermines the shrinking impact of FCC censorship on the overall media landscape.

The Free Expression Policy Project
 
Sooo, your point is...?

That the fact that federal laws 71 separate entities subject to different rules for 33 types of political speech is stupid. Why do we need 568 pages of regulations and thousands of pages of explanations in order to talk about politics?

I don't know...

Yet you think the CU decision, which actually simplified things, and put poor people on an equal footing with rich people, is a bad thing. Can you explain that?
 

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