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superfluous. In the future, outright bribery, clear quid pro quo agreements, won't be necessary.
John Roberts' children and Alito and Scalia's grandchildren (all of them) will pay dearly for this decision.
These are people who are used to benefiting from corruption. There children may not be so lucky.
But if they had the foresight to understand what this will mean for their children and grandchildren, they would not be conservatives in the first place.
I have read a synopsis of the decision. I hope to get time to read the whole thing next week. Here are my comments without having had time to read it.
I understand that persons, individuals have freedom of association and that corporations are made up of associations of individuals.
But when individuals join other associations such as partnerships or unincorporated clubs, they remain responsible, liable as individuals and can, in the case of partnerships other than limited partnerships, be financially and otherwise responsible for what they and the partnership or association do, especially if they are officers or leaders or decisionmakers in the association.
Corporations, LLCs and limited partnerships are specifically designed so that the principals in them are protected from their responsibilities and potential liabilities as persons. That's why this is a problem. Who do you sue? If the corporation commits libel and then folds. How do you pierce that corporate veil and make the persons behind the corporation answer for the libel? It's not so easy.
I am particularly appalled that Scalia supported this decision. He claims to interpret the Constitution according to its plain meaning and as it would have been interpreted at the time of the American Revolution. As I understand it, at that time, corporations were mostly non-profit. Schools like Harvard were non-profit corporations.
Corporations as we know them did not exist. They became commonplace much later.
James Madison must be turning over in his grave. I don't think that he or Jefferson would have been pleased with this.
Alexander Hamilton -- might have liked it, but James Madison wrote the first draft of the Bill of Rights. I do not think he would support this Supreme Court decision at all.
I am really saddened that Antonin Scalia once again abandoned principle to please his close friends on the right wing. He could have been a very independent Justice. He especially has failed Americans.
I know you will all jump on me for saying anything good about him. But this decision, I believe is inconsistent with his theories. I understand that the freedom of association is guaranteed, but the corporate form is not an "association." It was created and has become popular because it is not an "association" in the traditional sense.
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