JoeTheJuggler said:
You're attempting to redefine censorship such that the term "de facto censorship" has meaning.
The CU ruling is what did that.
No it didn't. I'm talking about conventional usage. Censorship, in this context, is government restriction of speech. Even more broadly the term means
someone is restricting speech. The term "
de facto censorship"--where free speech is somehow restricted without anyone doing it-- is logically inconsistent and meaningless.
And you're using this meaningless term to support an argument that says then it's possible to restrict speech in order to increase speech.
Strawman argument. Poisoning the well. Slippery slope. These are analogies
[ETA: Those are not analogies. Those are types of informal fallacies.]
Those terms have meanings. I have not committed any of those fallacies. I criticized your analogy as being unnecessary and not constituting an argument. The proper role of analogy is to make something more clear. I understand your position perfectly well, so there is no need for any analogizing.
And spending is now defined as speech. We're going in circles again.
Only if you keep falsely insisting that spending has been defined as speech. It has not. I've already given you a simple example of spending to influence elections that is not considered speech and is not protected by the First Amendment.
We're only going in circles because you keep insisting the facts are other than as they are.
Carelessly worded. The Court held that the government has no anti-corruption interest in limiting independent expenditures.
Cite?
The court held no such thing--unless what you mean is no anti-corruption interest that outweighs free speech rights.
I don't understand why you would think that would matter.
Math. The number of possible eligible voters dramatically increased (nearly doubled at that moment.)
At any rate none of this historical data proves that the Citizens United decisions of 2010 to strike down parts of the McCain Feingold law of 2002 somehow caused a decrease in voter participation. So whatever point you're trying to make from the historical data is irrelevant to this discussion.
Have a look at this graph:
Would you like to argue that disillusionment with our political system is not the reason why such a large segment of the elegibles consistently abstain?
Nice try, but it's not my argument, and it's irrelevant to the current discussion. I'm merely pointing out that you have not proven that disillusionment without or political system is the reason for relatively low voter participation.
I provided a model we might have used to test your assertion that de facto censorship is a self-contradictory concept, but you dismissed it as a flawed form of argument. Do you consider argument by assertion to be superior to argument by analogy?
There is no such thing as "argument by assertion". An assertion is simply an assertion. And your analogy is unnecessary. It did not "model" any test of the inherent contradiction in "
de facto censorship". [ETA: And I understand your point perfectly well. You're claiming that government restriction of speech rights is justified because the fact that smaller voices are "drowned out" by the bigger voices wrt electioneering is itself a type of censorship. But that's not censorship, so your argument fails. There is no First Amendment right that your voice not be drowned out.]
I'd like to see your evidence that people's minds weren't changed.
That's also an illogical way to reason. And my thesis is not the people's minds weren't changed. I was pointing to the flaw in your holding out that people's minds weren't changed as evidence (somehow) of the need to protect them from the harmful effects of this extra electioneering.
On this point, you argued a tautology as if it had any meaning. You said the reason the extra electioneering didn't turn the election is that it couldn't possibly change people's mind about a candidate that they really disliked. I pointed out that if that's so, then it's evidence against there being a harmful effect.
You say that the voters need to be protected from this "harmful" electioneering even if they are immune to harm from it.
Is there any hypothetical election outcome that you wouldn't be able to use as evidence for the "harmful" effect of this electioneering?
And again, I point out that the liberal approach is generally to trust human nature. Your position seems to rely on a view of voters as not being able to take care of themselves in a world with free speech.
In fact, the evidence provided earlier in this thread points to the fact that all that spending doesn't make much difference. And my position is that the court made the correct call in saying the public interest in limiting speech doesn't outweigh the speech rights.