F
fred flintstone
Guest
An Op-Ed piece originally published in the Washington Times and now being re-posted on various Internet sites and blogs says "yes."
A disturbing assessment. If valid, it would also likely apply to Nova M which has hired Howard Dean's former fund-raiser. Both AAR and Nova M have stated that their primary corporate purposes are to influence the electoral process. Of course, on the right wing side of talk radio, it's an even better deal. Corporations can make "campaign contributions" to underwrite Rush, Hannity and the rest to deliver the Republican message, and they get to run ads to promote their business while they promote the GOP party line. And it's all deductible.
John R. Lott Jr. and Bradley A. Smith said:Special treatment for Air America
When is a campaign donation not a campaign donation? Apparently if you spend the money to run a radio program instead of paying for campaign ads that run on that same program. Just look at Air America. With $41 million in losses since 2004, and $9.8 million owed just to Robert Glaser, RealNetworks chairman, Democrats who bankrolled this "company" weren't so much investors as campaign contributors. The losses are seen as simple business ineptitude,but Air America effectively, and perhaps intentionally, cleverly avoided the campaign finance limits which Democrats had worked so hard to pass.
With McCain-Feingold's "hard money" donation limits of $2,000 per candidate and "soft money" limits to party campaign committees of $57,500, there is no way that Mr. Glaser or other wealthy Democratic donors could have legally given such large sums directly to Democrats. But Air America provided a vehicle for their multimillion-dollar political campaigns. ...
Air America merely follows a grand tradition of circumvention by the very people who have supported campaign-finance regulation. ...
The big innovation for Air America was using the bankruptcy laws to turn non-Democrats into involuntary campaign donors. Not only are Democratic "investors" out in the cold, but landlords, limo services, law firms, stations that sold Air America air time and state governments are owed money....
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A disturbing assessment. If valid, it would also likely apply to Nova M which has hired Howard Dean's former fund-raiser. Both AAR and Nova M have stated that their primary corporate purposes are to influence the electoral process. Of course, on the right wing side of talk radio, it's an even better deal. Corporations can make "campaign contributions" to underwrite Rush, Hannity and the rest to deliver the Republican message, and they get to run ads to promote their business while they promote the GOP party line. And it's all deductible.