You keep talking about the specific case of large for-profit corporations overwhelming broadcast TV spots with paid advertisements. And yet that's only part of what the law was about, only part of what the decision affects, and nothing of what the case before the court was about.
I do indeed place my main focus on the "specific case" (if you insist) of large for-profit corporations overwhelming
prime broadcast TV spots with paid advertisements, because the evidence indicates that those TV spots (in combination with the constant droning of infotainmentganda appearing under the guise of "News") is where spendingspeech has its most significant impact on public perception of the issues -- AND because I do not desire to live under a sytem which features the sort of "unholy alliance" between big business and government that existed during, say, the 1890s.
As to your last point, I notice that was not an obstacle to you dedicating your very next sentence to the matter of the hypothetical banning of books, even though
the case before the court had nothing to do with books. This may be the weakest part of your entire argument. I mean, you won't get a third of the way through the oral arguments before it should become obvious that the court is not limiting its considerations to
the case before the court, but is taking into account a much broader range of considerations and implications. They tend to do that. It being the Supreme Court and all.
Her basic argument is that people wouldn't do that, but that's simply not good enough. Kagan is wrong.
Actually, I saw her argument resting more heavily on this: "
there would be quite good as-applied challenge to any attempt to apply 441b in that context."
The law grants the power to censor books. "likely" doesn't matter: either that's constitutionally prohibited, or it's not.
You continue to display a rigidity in thinking that is going to make it hard for you to wrap your head around this stuff. What is and what is not
Constitutional is almost never as black and white as you suggest. It's a lot of the reason that such an institution as the Supreme Court exists. Speaking of black and white, you ever heard of Dred Scott?