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Will officials elected by corporate campaign contributions?

Posted: Thu Jul 10, 2025 5:29 am
by samiaseo222
Hoop points to some 19th century examples of such corrupt corporate unraveling in his letter. He promotes this idea through the Program On Corporation Law And Democracy (POCLAD), which can be found at.

A state by state solution

Hoop's idea is well within constitutional reality. Like the J.A.I.L. movement which has chapters active in 48 states, it will need state by state implementation. Corporations, as creatures of the state in which they are incorporated, are to be regulated there.

But who will call the mismanagers to account? effectively job function email list regulate corporate activities? Is there a state regulatory entity that can be trusted to put the peoples' interests ahead of corporate interests? Can a citizen effectively petition that regulatory entity to redress a grievance of corporate misconduct? Will a citizen fare the same on corporate.

Issues as they do with current attorney and judicial reviews, which have a less than one percent chance for successful remedy? Just as J.A.I.L. is the answer for judicial misconduct, a citizen-controlled review entity for corporations, with the power to enforce effective remedies, could be created in each state. With enough states enacting such a program, corrupt corporations would eventually run out of states within which to do business.