The idea of allowing corporations to have unlimited influence on our democracy is very dangerous, obviously.
And it would be fair. Everyone will pay the same tax and it will eliminate tax cheaters and corporate shenanigans.
I sort of thought the framers of the Constitution were talking about the rights of individuals, not corporate entities.
I'm challenging the assumption that you need to be a dog-eat-dog person to survive in a corporate environment.
If corporations are people, as the Supreme Court wishes us to believe, they are stunningly unpatriotic ones.
Turning corporations loose and letting the profit motive run amok is not a prescription for a more livable world.
I plan to lower corporate taxes to create an environment that encourages companies to invest more.
There isn't as much passion and outrage in today's newspapers. That may be because of a corporate decision, but they've lost their personality.
Real lobbying reform must end the practice of corporate lobbyists writing our laws.
The corporate lobby in Washington is basically designed to stifle all legislative activity on behalf of consumers.
With my luck, if I ever invested in General Motors, they'd bust it to Corporal!
I think dysfunctional people are being funneled into very corporate behaviour. Look at the Brits... no one's fighting, and it's boring.
One has to live with the fact that some corporate decisions are going to be wrong. As long as most of the decisions are right.
There are massive efforts on the part of the internet's corporate owners to try to direct it to become a technique of marginalisation and control.
Obviously we're a consumer nation and you have the power to influence these big corporations who are running the world right now through what you chose to, or not to, purchase.
The principle of academic freedom is designed to make sure that powers outside the university, including government and corporations, are not able to control the curriculum or intervene in extra-mural speech.
We are going through tough economic times but things are looking up, and the indicators are improving not only for large corporations but also for small business.
When you have corporate influence on our government outweighing the influence of citizens, that's terrifying. This is something we have to make a big, big noise about.
Populism is not a style, it's a people's rebellion against the iron grip that big corporations have on our country - including our economy, government, media, and environment.
Nine out of every 10 large corporations and government agencies have been attacked by computer intruders.
Journalists are supposed to be skeptical, that's what keeps them digging rather than simply accepting the official line, whether it comes from government or corporate bureaucrats.