Speaker to Animals wrote:TheOneX wrote:Sorry for going back to page one.
I disagree with this, corporations should have rights, they should just be very limited. A corporation should have the freedom of speech just like a human, but it shouldn't include political donations, which isn't speech/expression to begin with. If you take away freedom of speech from corporations, then suddenly the government can censor what a corporation says. This means press that isn't an individual working on their own can be censored. Even then individuals would have issues as most of the ways they communicate with the public is through corporation owned mediums that would then be able to be censored. It is just as important for a corporation to have freedom of speech as it is a human. This is true for basically every single right in the bill of rights. It is important for corporations to have rights because those corporations having rights protects the rights of individuals. If Google didn't have the right to privacy then all of the data they collected about you would be free for the government to confiscate without a warrant.Martin Hash wrote:People have Rights, corporations should not.
I can only think of two rights that corporations shouldn't have the right to donate to political candidates, and the right to discriminate. I think those rights are forfeit when you gain government protection.
Congress shall make no law.. abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press...
If corporations do not have rights, those rights don't apply because those corporations don't have rights. Those rights can only apply to corporations if corporations have rights. I'm just saying that corporations should have rights, they should just not be as broad as individual rights. If those corporations don't have rights any work that is done for those corporations, or posted through those corporation's medium would not be subject to the same rights as an individual person. As is the only way to have those rights is to be considered a person. If you are not considered a person you do not have rights under the US Constituion. Any rights a non-person has is defined by Congressional legislature, or court precedent.
In my opinion, this needs to change. Instead of giving corporations personhood, giving them all the same freedoms and rights as an individual person, we create a new legal definition that recognizes that corporations shouldn't be considered equal to a person.