Blog 54. Money, McCutcheon, and the Supreme Court

What happened?

On Wednesday, April 2, 2014, the Supreme Court issued its decision on the McCutcheon case, in which Alabama businessman Shaun McCutcheon and the Republican National Committee claimed that the Federal Election Campaign Act restricted his freedom of speech.  In a 5-to-4 decision, the Court agreed that limitation of political spending limits personal speech. Continue reading

Blog 47. The elephant in the room

Of the economically developed countries of the world, the U.S. has the most dysfunctional society—that is, we have depression despite material goods, materialism without community, more teen and single parents, less trust, more impoverishment, higher infant mortality, more drugs, obesity, school bullying and school shootings. Continue reading

Blog 39. Is federal regulation legal?

In drafting the federal constitution, the founding fathers didn’t foresee a government involved in administering diverse things like air travel, radio waves, rivers, and food purity.  The Constitution specifically allows regulation of interstate commerce and postal roads, but, for example, does it allow federal regulation of pollution in rivers?  Continue reading

Blog 37. Peanut butter: commercial failure or regulatory success?

Regulation reduces freedom?

Industry and its political spokespersons rarely miss an opportunity to state that regulation costs jobs, money, and freedom.  Well, ‘way back in Blog 9, I agreed that regulation (when done right) reduces freedom—the freedom to do harm.  Furthermore, I acknowledge that regulation often increases the cost of doing business—but for a reason.  Continue reading

Blog 36. Italian Earthquakes and Scientific Illiteracy

In America, we have a society infused with technology but a populace that is scientifically illiterate.  That leads to governance by political correctness rather than by critical evaluation.  We’re not alone; similar things happen elsewhere. Continue reading

Blog 33. A New Civil War or Only Old Chaos?

Tea Party Rebellion

This month, the federal government was deliberately shut down by the Tea Party, a minor faction in the House of Representatives that controls the larger Republican Party. The objective was to stop implementation of the Affordable Care Act (“ACA” or “ObamaCare”), which had already been passed by Congress and declared constitutional by the Supreme Court. That’s extreme—to hold everything hostage to a particular narrow objective. Continue reading

Blog 32. McCutcheon, the Supreme Court, and Feedback

The lawsuit

A year ago, the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia dismissed a lawsuit brought by an Alabama businessman Shaun McCutcheon and the Republican National Committee (RNC).  McCutcheon, who owns a firm that develops coal mining and electrical generation, appealed to the Supreme Court, claiming that the Federal Election Campaign Act (FERC) restricted freedom of speech. That law limits the total contributions to political candidates, PACs, and party committees by individual persons.  On October 8, 2013, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments. Continue reading