Zanchief wrote:A bit more reasonable a position. The reason they do it is because they think one candidate over another will be beneficial to their company. Do you really think Clinton would risk her career just for a donation to her non-profit charity? Think things through guys.
do i want a president whose policies will be favorable to certain companies? no i do not. because invariably those companies base their business practices on fossil fuels, private prisons, harmful investment trading with consumer deposits, profit-driven pharmaceutical companies, etc, all of which regularly (and sometimes gleefully) sacrifice the public good on the altar of profit via outsourcing, environmental destruction, slave wages, and so on
goddamn man, why is that leap too hard for you to make? what's the effective difference between me saying "companies donate millions because they know they will receive special treatment and favorable (de)regulation in return" and you saying "naw man they donate because golly gosh they think one candidate over another will be beneficial to their company"? like there's literally zero difference in net outcome, none whatsover
and if your argument is that since such bribery has been basically legalized, it's foolish to argue against it, then no, i reject that too. legality and morality are not mutually inclusive and never have been
but if you're telling me my choice of candidates is between one who reaps millions upon millions from banks and prisons and oil companies and telecoms and pharmaceutical companies and who knows how many other undisclosed "dark money" sources, and another who rejects all that noise and only accepts small individual donations from everyday citizens? that's not even a real choice