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Money Talks Speech Economic Power And The Values Of Democracy Martin H Redish

  • SKU: BELL-51759002
Money Talks Speech Economic Power And The Values Of Democracy Martin H Redish
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Money Talks Speech Economic Power And The Values Of Democracy Martin H Redish instant download after payment.

Publisher: New York University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.13 MB
Author: Martin H. Redish
ISBN: 9780814776773, 0814776779
Language: English
Year: 2001

Product desciption

Money Talks Speech Economic Power And The Values Of Democracy Martin H Redish by Martin H. Redish 9780814776773, 0814776779 instant download after payment.

Many have argued that soft money and special interests are destroying the American electoral system. And yet the clarion call for campaign finance reform only touches on the more general belief that money and economic power have a disastrous impact on both free expression and American democracy. The nation's primary sources of communication, the argument goes, are increasingly controlled by vast corporate empires whose primary, or even exclusive motive is the maximization of profit. And these conglomerates should simply not be granted the same constitutional protection as, say, an individual protester.
And yet neither the expenditure of money for expressive purposes nor an underlying motive of profit maximization detracts from the values fostered by such activity, claims Martin H. Redish. In fact, given the modern economic realities that dictate that effective expression virtually requires the expenditure of capital, any restriction of such capital for expressive purposes will necessarily reduce the sum total of available expression. Further, Redish here illustrates, the underlying motive of those who wish to restrict corporate expression is disagreement with the nature of the views they express.
Confronting head-on one of the sacred cows of American reformist politics, Martin H. Redish here once again lives up to his reputation as one of America's most original and counterintuitive legal minds.

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