[EL] Rousseau and McCutcheon

JBoppjr at aol.com JBoppjr at aol.com
Sun Apr 6 16:57:19 PDT 2014


Geeze.  Over decades, as you concede, the German govt did target Jews  and 
Catholics in the name of the German volk -- before Hitler.  Just  because 
Hitler did it too does not make it out of bounds to discuss what the  German 
govt did before him, as you suggest.
 
And yes I hid it well because I was not doing it.  
 
So the problem here is that the government is suppressing the freedom of  
some -- rich people -- in the name of allowing the "authentic" voice of the  
people to be heard. There is a long history of governments doing so, 
sometimes  with modest measures, like speech restrictions through campaign  finance 
measures, sometimes not, in order to get their favored policy  agenda 
implimented.  
 
But the point is that this is just what campaign finance  "reformers" are 
doing now.  Jim
 
 
In a message dated 4/6/2014 5:47:20 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
dlublin at american.edu writes:

Jim,  


You stated that "the German government targeted Jews, gypsies, Catholics  
and Communists . . . "? Most minds would tend to go to Nazi Germany headed by 
 Hitler at that point. It wasn't the Weimar Republic and I don't think the 
last  period of the German Empire particularly targeted Catholics. Any 
earlier and  there wouldn't be any Communists to target. The mention of Pol Pot 
would seem  to be a clue too.  


So if you weren't meaning to invoke Hitler and this period, you hid it  
well.


In any case, there's a reason that Martin Niemöller's famous quote  doesn't 
begin with "First, they instituted campaign finance reform and I did  not 
speak out -- Because I was not a major donor."


Again, dialing it back would be welcome here. If the Supreme Court  managed 
to make the argument without Rwanda, Nazi Germany, and Cambodia, I am  
confident that you can do the same.


David








On Sun, Apr 6, 2014 at 5:31 PM, <_JBoppjr at aol.com_ (mailto:JBoppjr at aol.com) 
> wrote:


Furthermore, I purposefully did not invoke  Hitler.  (1) I agree that he 
was "very distinguished in his field," and  (2) the concept of the German 
volk, and that Jews were an enemy of the volk,  long preceded Hitler's rise to 
power, even though he avidly believed it,  exploited it for his own political 
purposes and took it to extreme's never  imagined by its most feverish 
supporters before his time.  Jim  Bopp
 
 
In a message dated 4/6/2014 3:13:50 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, 
_JBoppjr at aol.com_ (mailto:JBoppjr at aol.com)  writes:

Regarding this:
 

Oh, and you forgot Rwanda.
 

 
Yes, so many examples but so little space.  Jim Bopp
 

 
 
In a message dated 4/6/2014 1:22:26 P.M. Eastern Daylight Time, 
_dlublin at american.edu_ (mailto:dlublin at american.edu)  writes:


I haven't read all of this debate but it's always good to  see _Godwin's 
law_ (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Godwin's_law)  proved again.  
 


I remember Prof. Judith Shklar, whose family fled Germany, teaching  my 
graduate political theory class to avoid comparisons to Hitler  because "he was 
very distinguished in his field."


Surely, one can make a strong argument against campaign finance  reform 
without having to go there.


Oh, and you forgot Rwanda.


David


-- 
David Lublin
Professor of Government
School of Public  Affairs
American University
4400 Massachusetts Ave.
Washington,  D.C. 20016
http://davidlublin.com/







On Sun, Apr 6, 2014 at 10:08 AM, <_JBoppjr at aol.com_ 
(mailto:JBoppjr at aol.com) > wrote:



 
One of the side benefits of the McCutcheon case is that it has  revealed 
what the campaign finance "reformers" are really all  about.
 
First, their goal is the typical liberal agenda.  Then they  identify those 
who they think are opponents to that agenda --  corporations, the "rich.".  
Then they support legislation to shut  them up.
 
Of course they dress this up as regulating the system -- the  "collective" 
voices of the people -- to make sure that the  authentic "will of the 
people" is heard by suppressing those voices  that distort that will -- by 
misleading convincing some and  drowning out others.
 
This approach does have its roots deep in our history and is  frequently 
the justification for tyranny.
 
The communists suppressed the bourgeoisie in the name of  the proletariat.  
Pol Pot destroyed the urban dwellers in  the name of rural dwellers.  The 
German government targeted the  Jews, gypsies, Catholics and communists as 
the enemy of the German  volk. All these enemies of the people had to be 
silenced to defend the  authentic will of the people.
 
Breyer acknowledges that he is countenancing the violation  of the First 
Amendment rights of the "rich," but justifies it as  ensuring that the 
authentic will of the people will be heard through  the "collective" speech of the 
people. And he lets the government  pick the voices to be surpressed.
 
So Breyer sets it all out clearly, as does mpoweru4  below, obviously 
limiting their retribution to be visited on the  enemies of the people to 
campaign finance limits -- while others in  our history were much more willing to 
use the full power of government  against them.
 
Their problem is that the First Amendment was adopted to protect  the very 
speech that Breyer, et al are so willing to violate in the  name of the 
collective.  So they have to pretend that they are  the ones writing a First 
Amendment -- balance the First Amendment  interests involved -- while this 
balancing has already been done  and the First Amendment already written by our 
Founders. And that  amendment was written to protect individual freedom 
against the  efforts of the collective to suppress their speech -- regardless of 
 whether the government thinks that that speech is helpful to democracy  or 
not.  Jim Bopp

 
 

 
 
In a message dated 4/6/2014 8:08:56 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,  
_mpoweru4 at gmail.com_ (mailto:mpoweru4 at gmail.com)  writes:


 
To get a sense of the consequences, one might think not  only about the 
types of players, but the interests they represent.  The demise of aggregate 
limits plays mightily into the hands not  only of rich people in general, but 
of rich people who have highly  focused interests.   


The "general will" if it means anything at all, would  correspond to more 
generalized interests like protecting the  environment, building economic 
strength, preventing economic  collapse, helping people devastated by weather 
emergencies, and  maintaining transportation infrastructure.


The very wealthy, operating from self-interest, are not likely  to define 
their agenda in such general terms. They would likely be  focused on very 
particularized corresponding interests, eg:  resisting EPA jurisdiction over a 
certain sector of the energy  industry; tax incentives for research and 
hedge funds; stopping a  requirement for a level of capitalization in banks; 
maintaining  flood insurance program that will pay to rebuild buildings in  
developments under construction too close to a rising ocean; and  building a 
certain unnecessary road using particular contractors or  sources for asphalt.


The right analyst for this is Prof. Mancur Olsen. He explains  how 
empowering special interests causes political outcomes not  consonant with the 
interests of the people in a republic in his  "Logic of Collective Action." In 
his "Rise and Decline of Nations"  he develops a theory of the pernicious 
consequences on the republic  over time.






On Fri, Apr 4, 2014 at 7:05 PM, John Tanner <_john.k.tanner at gmail.com_ 
(mailto:john.k.tanner at gmail.com) >  wrote:



apologies.  I was skimming comments on the  2d

 
 



On Fri, Apr 4, 2014 at 6:47 PM, Scarberry, Mark 
<_Mark.Scarberry at pepperdine.edu_ (mailto:Mark.Scarberry at pepperdine.edu) >  wrote:



 
My 4/2 post (scroll way down to see it) was probably too  long for most 
list members to wade through. It raised concerns  about the reference to 
Rousseau, whose pernicious concept of the  general will could find a place in an 
analysis like Justice  Breyer's.


I don't think Breyer meant to suggest it, but one reason to  make sure the 
voices of the rich don't drown out other voices is  so that the people won't 
develop "false consciousness." We must  be saved by the government from 
being persuaded by the loud  voices of the rich.


I very much dislike arrogant rich people who think they  know better. I 
even more distrust a government that wants to  protect my ability to think 
clearly about what is in my interest  and in the public interest.


Mark Scarberry
Pepperdine






 
Sent from my  Verizon Wireless 4G LTE Smartphone



-------- Original  message --------
From: Benjamin Barr  
Date:04/04/2014 3:17 PM (GMT-08:00) 
To: John  Tanner 
Cc: Election law list 
Subject: Re:  [EL] McCutcheon 


John, 
This is Breyer's usual three card monte. To  collectivize the Bill of 
Rights he relied on the writings of  Benjamin Constant in his Active Liberty tome 
(expanding all the  positive "values" implicated by the First Amendment - 
none of  which seem relevant to the American founding or history of the  
First Amendment). This dissent is just a continuation of the  same bad theme.  
This profound difference in viewing the Bill of  Rights as a charter of 
"negative" or "positive" liberties is  also at root what separates many 
reformers from free speech  advocates on this listserv and more broadly. 
Forward, 
Benjamin Barr  
Sent by my Android device. Please excuse any  typographical errors.
 
On Apr 4, 2014 6:06 PM, "John Tanner" <_john.k.tanner at gmail.com_ 
(mailto:john.k.tanner at gmail.com) > wrote:



Not to change the subject, but I'm surprised that  no one has remarked on 
the dissent's invocation of Rousseau's  Social Contract, which was far more 
influential on the French  Revolution (and particularly the thought of St 
Just and  Robespierre) than the American, where the strong preference  for 
Locke and Montesquieu has pointed in a different  direction.  It seems odd, 
off-key and, wandering well  away from the subject, I wonder if it prompted the  
counter-invocation of Burke - and the brandishing of the  dissent's 
impolitic choice of the word,  "collective." 




On Thu, Apr 3, 2014 at 8:49 AM, Tyler Culberson <_tylerculberson at gmail.com_ 
(mailto:tylerculberson at gmail.com) >  wrote:



These figures derived from a Bob Biersack piece  at OpenSecrets: 
https://www.opensecrets.org/news/2013/09/mccutcheons-multiplying-effect-why.html

 
 



On Thu, Apr 3, 2014 at 8:45 AM, Tyler Culberson <_tylerculberson at gmail.com_ 
(mailto:tylerculberson at gmail.com) >  wrote:



Doug,   
>From Commissioners Ravel and Weintraub's statement  yesterday, "In fact, 
only 646 donors reached the biennial  limit during the 2012 cycle."





 
 
On Wed, Apr 2, 2014 at 7:24 PM, Scarberry, Mark 
<_Mark.Scarberry at pepperdine.edu_ (mailto:Mark.Scarberry at pepperdine.edu) >  wrote:





 
 
 
 
Can  we distinguish between two “anti-corruption” interests  that could be 
seen as being addressed by the dissent in  McCutcheon? 
The  first is the interest in keeping lines of communication  open between 
ordinary people and their elected  representatives, so as to make 
representative government  responsive to the people *between elections*.  High levels 
of donations cause representatives to listen  only (or mostly) to the rich 
donors, breaking the link  between ordinary people and their representatives. 
The  voice of the ordinary person is drowned out by the voice  of the rich 
donor, because the representative will  listen only (or mostly) to the voice 
of the rich donor.  With a reference to Rousseau (which one hopes does not  
incorporate his concept of the “general will”), the  dissent treats the 
breaking of that link as a form of  corruption.  
The  second is the interest in the formation of the views of  the people; 
the formation of those views may be  corrupted if too much money is spent by 
rich people to  help form those views or to finance the formation of  such 
views. Here we run dangerously close to the concept  of the “general will,” 
a true will of the people that  somehow is different from what they really 
think,  because their thinking has been warped by the spending  of so much 
money by the rich (perhaps creating a “false  consciousness”). The spending 
of huge amounts of money  by the rich in furthering their own views drowns 
out the  voices of the ordinary people, as both the rich speaker  and the 
ordinary speaker try to convey their views to  the people and to persuade the  
people. 
Is  it clear that the dissent only sees the first of those  interests as an 
“anti-corruption” interest that  justifies campaign finance regulation? 
(At first I  wasn’t sure, especially given the “drowning out”  imagery, but a 
more careful reading leads me to this  conclusion.) 
Is  it also clear that the first interest has nothing to do  with which 
person is elected, but rather with who the  elected person will listen to once 
elected? Thus it has  nothing to do with any desire to level the playing 
field  for the election, right? Instead it has to do with the  actions that 
will be taken by the person once elected,  which makes it similar to a concern 
about quid pro quo  corruption. 
My  apologies if I’m asking the list to reinvent the  wheel. 
Mark 
 
Mark  S. Scarberry 
Professor  of Law 
Pepperdine  Univ. School of  Law







 
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-- 
David Lublin
Professor of Government
School of Public  Affairs
American University
4400 Massachusetts Ave.
Washington, D.C.  20016
http://davidlublin.com/


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