It's cute how you've turned someone spending their way to political power into a positive like that.
Except that there is a problem with your argument, well actually two.
Firstly, if you believe that spending money on a campaign buys you political power, then spending anyone's money on a campaign is clearly buying political power, and so all politicians are buying political power. As such, why is it more wrong to spend your own money buying it than to spend that of a bunch of poor people?
The second problem is that to get political power you have to convince people to vote for you. Money doesn't buy votes, and advertising doesn't either, as I'll show below.
It's not a False choice unless you can twiddle your nose and change the way US Politics works.
I prefer that money in politics be minimized to the extent possible. There are a myriad of possible ways to do this, some good, some probably pretty bad. But I support the intent.
As noted either in this thread of one of the others, my preferred system is for all candidates to be give a certain amount of money for advertising, with any money from donors only being allowed to be used for non-advertising purposes such as the production of ads, transport for the campaign, and paying staffers
Bloomberg buying a place on the debate stage moves us in the wrong direction.
Except that he didn't buy his way onto the debate stage, quite the opposite. That he was the sole donor to his campaign is what has kept him off the debate stage, and that was only changed because he made a case that the rule of having to have 200,000 unique donors was unfair due to his current polling.
No!!! This is missing the point! Is this deliberate?
The point is that when some people are extremely wealthy, they can have a massively unfair advantage in getting elected by outspending all rivals. That's the issue!
Right here is where I deal with point 2 above. being able to spend a heap of money is only an unfair advantage is spending a whole lot of money actually gives an advantage. Studies show that Election Advertising,
well it simply doesn't work.
And here's the problem you have have. You can only buy an election is spending loads of money actually buys you votes, and it simply doesn't do that. Yes it might give some name recognition, but beyond that it's generally useless because people don't decide their votes based on a political ad.
Now yes, the evidence is that those that spend the most money tend to win, about 85-90% of the time, however, this is not because spending money causes the money, studies say that it seems to be the other way around. Candidates that are seen as likely to win attract much more money and so can outspend their opponents, and due to a more and more partisan electorate it becomes easier to guess the likely winners, and thus back them.
So the while Bernie and his Bernie Bro's "Bloomberg is buying the election" thing falls down because the science just isn't there to support the claim, in fact all the science is saying that it doesn't matter how much you spend on advertising, if people aren't interested in voting for you, they won't, and all that money is therefore a waste.
As noted above, the one place that it could help a candidate is with name recognition, where a candidate is a retaliative unknown, like Bernie was in 2016. However, again, this isn't a lot of use to Bloomberg because he is relatively well known. The best his spending would do is give him a small bump in the polls due to name recognition, and that's it. He could have achieved the same by getting
suckers donors to part with their money and back him.