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I agree it does not really do anything except give some perceived impression to voters that they are not beholding to anyone.
But depending on the PAC and the race (local, national) a PAC is limited to $5,000 per candidate, and PAC money is not a large portion of what a candidate receives.
Yeah right, talk about an oligarchy
What corruption does that promise prevent??? Name it.
In the first place, you need to read that study. That blurb seems to misrepresent.
An oligarchy consists of just a few people. Name them.
Did you want the study's PDF? https://scholar.princeton.edu/sites...testing_theories_of_american_politics.doc.pdfIn the first place, you need to read that study. That blurb seems to misrepresent.
An oligarchy consists of just a few people. Name them.
It depends on whether donor or recipient and the type of entity making or receiving the contribution:
Contribution limits for nonconnected PACs - FEC.gov
Most PAC's money is to be spent directly by them to promote a cause, party or candidate. So if they will not take the paltry donation, will they also prohibit the PAC from working in a independent effort to get them elected?
I'm not quite sure what "promise" you're referring to here. But the US is supposed to be a democracy. The people are supposed to decide what the government should do. Lately, it's mostly oligarchs that are deciding what government should do, and that's in direct opposition to the idea of democracy. When oligarchs are allowed to make huge campaign contributions, the oligarchs gain the power to make politicians do what the oligarchs want.
I have referred to only one promise on this thread, and it is succinctly stated in the first sentence of the OP and elsewhere. Work on reading comprehension.I'm not quite sure what "promise" you're referring to here.
I read the study the first time it was cited on RF. It has been posted and discussed at least a couple of times.Did you want the study's PDF? https://scholar.princeton.edu/sites...testing_theories_of_american_politics.doc.pdf
We can only discover how many people make up your alleged oligarchy when you name them.How many people is ":a few" people?
I've cited and linked to a good deal of evidence on RF showing, inter alia, showing that campaign contributions have little, if any, effect on representatives' voting in legislatures. I'll get it for you ASAP.Now say I have a PAC called Misunderstood's Great Politicians PAC. I have many news sources that I have influence over, many large donors, and influence over some important Politicians I can get to endorse my selected candidates. I come to the candidate I want and say, 'If I support you with all influence I have, Do I have your support if issue _________ (fill in the blank) comes up. If you do this I will not give you any PAC money, so your campaign will look clean, but I will support you with endorsements, press and our own independent campaign support", and this candidate accepts.
Would this candidate not be a bought and paid for candidate?
See the studies discussed in the OP here:I've cited and linked to a good deal of evidence on RF showing, inter alia, showing that campaign contributions have little, if any, effect on representatives' voting in legislatures. I'll get it for you ASAP.Now say I have a PAC called Misunderstood's Great Politicians PAC. I have many news sources that I have influence over, many large donors, and influence over some important Politicians I can get to endorse my selected candidates. I come to the candidate I want and say, 'If I support you with all influence I have, Do I have your support if issue _________ (fill in the blank) comes up. If you do this I will not give you any PAC money, so your campaign will look clean, but I will support you with endorsements, press and our own independent campaign support", and this candidate accepts.
Would this candidate not be a bought and paid for candidate? As you mentioned in your OP not taking any PAC money means little, as some PAC's can give even more support than money, without giving a candidate a dime.
If the quantity of Tweets a president posts translates into the quality of the president, then Trump is the best president we've ever had. We need to keep him. Trump would make a perfect score; Abraham Lincoln would be a zero.
1 - The US is a republic, a form of government in which the people elect representatives to legislatures. And that is exactly what happens in the US.
2 - You haven't cited a single fact by which to conclude that the US is an oligarchy, a plutocracy or any other form of government.
3 - I asked you to name theose few people who constitute the ruling power if your claim of the US being an oligarchy were true, but you haven't named a single such person yet, nor have you cited a single fact regarding what any such alleged oligarchy does in our republic.
4 - All you have done here is post adolescent nonsense. Are you old enough to vote? Have you ever voted? What are you claiming happens to the hundreds of millions of votes cast every year in the US for representatives, if it were true that the US is an oligarchy?
You haven't answered the question I asked in the OP, nor any other question I've asked you. Why don't you do so instead of posting twaddle about the US being an oligarchy, which you obviously can't deduce from any fact?I'm not quite sure what's got your knickers in such a twist? I will try to carry on in a civil manner, despite your boorish behavior.
I've numbered the sentences in your post..
See #31. Why don't you answer the questions there that I asked him, since he didn't?Have you read the study that @Valjean mentioned earlier in this thread?
3 - Off the top of my head: Koch brothers, Waltons, the major shareholders in Google and Facebook, major shareholders in the top military contractors, major shareholders in the large banks and the largest oil companies.
[. . . ]
The oligarchs step in long before we get to the point of voting. They help craft the bills we get to vote on. They bury the bills we'd like to vote on, but don't get a chance to. In short - and I know you know this - the people have a chance to vote on the things they care about only a small percentage of the time.
Times be a changing.
I know of no rational reason to conclude that the greater number of Tweets a president posts equates to having any desirable quality as a president. Do you know of any such rational reason?