That seems to sum it up pretty nicely. As a libertarian, it's pretty obvious how I lean/where I come from, but we could both quote examples to each other all day and get nowhere fast. I myself am going to vote third party because I think it's the best route for me, and I respect the same for people voting for Obama (unless it's a vote for Not Republican.)Godheval post=18.73968.817679 said:I think you and I agree on a lot of things. You don't trust the government. I don't trust corporations. You'd have government streamlined. I'd have corporations abolished altogether, heh. I do not know what a smaller fed would look like today, and you really can't say that you do, either.
The point I was talking about with the telecoms was the retroactive immunity being granted to them. The NSA bunkers over at AT&T, Sprint, just about all the big name telecommunications have been recording and spying on Americans without as much as a warrant, directly opposite to our fourth amendment rights. Attempts at discovery were met with opposition from the white house, the president-in-stupid claiming state secrets. EFF and a few other awesome organizations tried to bring a lawsuit to figure out exactly what was happening, all around the time FISA + retro immune was being brought a second time (since it was shot down the first).
It passed. SCOTUS dismissed the lawsuits. Even though these companies did some big ******* bad stuff at the request of the executive branch, the federal government denied citizens the right to bring lawsuits to these companies because "they were combating terr'ists." So not only were our rights horribly trampled (don't get me started on the faulty idea that more data = better data), citizens were denied even the most basic way to determine how deep the rabbit hole went.
Instead, now we have corporations running the show by penning legislation and getting it in the door through their paid senators. That is what a strong fed has brought us. When you say you want corporations under control, keep in mind that they are the ones that will pen their own regulations. Yes, the idea of a small federal government relies on people doing their own research and figure out what needs to be done. Any form of government, save a dictatorship which would prevent citizens the abilities to do such, does. I might point out that in this case this is exactly what has happened.
(might be off on the time line, as I'm going off memory, but the important points are still correct.)