Marina's claims aside, how many middle-class families are actually willing to put down $2,000 or $4,000 - several months of car, insurance and mortgage payments, or a semester's tuition at a public university - on one luncheon or dinner? Not damn many, I'll wager (Mike, am I right?) Only somebody who has a LOT of excess money to hand (i.e. the "rich") can afford such a luxury.Darth Wong wrote:Ah, but that way you don't get to use your money to have a bigger voice than the next guy. Remember, that disproportionality is a fundamental "right"Gil Hamilton wrote:I thought there already was a way for people to speak their mind about who they think should win an election in a way that is heard and recorded already built into the system that is very simple indeed. When the polls open, go down to where the booths are held and push down the little lever next to the name of the candidate that you support.Durran Korr wrote:I already did justify it. Making political contributions is a way that individuals can articulate their voice in a way that it will be actually be heard. It would be nice if they didn't have to, I will admit (and perhaps if the government didn't control our lives to the extent that it does, it wouldn't be necessary).
$2,000 a plate luncheons are pretty much the exclusive province of the rich and well-connected.