A lying lawyer, a deceitful justice and a morally ambiguous court recorder and 130 years later non-living,...

A lying lawyer, a deceitful justice and a morally ambiguous court recorder and 130 years later non-living, non-flesh-and-blood entities that exist solely on paper have the same rights you and I share. Well, if you're American, that is.

Somewhat unintuitively, American corporations today enjoy many of the same rights as American citizens. Both, for instance, are entitled to the freedom of speech and the freedom of religion. How exactly did corporations come to be understood as “people” bestowed with the most fundamental constitutional rights? The answer can be found in a bizarre—even farcical—series of lawsuits over 130 years ago involving a lawyer who lied to the Supreme Court, an ethically challenged justice, and one of the most powerful corporations of the day.


https://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2018/03/corporations-people-adam-winkler/554852/

Comments

John Mitchell said…
Corporations should not ever be treated as persons.
Agreed.

Popular posts from this blog

So, I asked Andrew Tamm, who filled my Stream with a hundred (sarcasm there) animated gifs and cat pictures to...

I'm shutting down Google+ for the night and quite possibly for the weekend.