If I could ask Mitt Romney two questions, I think I could send him to the home for the Criminally Wealthy Insane.
Among other things, Mister Romney believes in God (the specific religion doesn't matter), and believes that corporations are people.
Holding those two propositions, I have two questions for you.
1) What church does AT&T go to?
The second is a little more complicated.
2) Society has been around for a long time, and there have been countless religions and philosophies to guide humans through their every day existence. The best ones have all boiled down to a single guiding principal, so dear it is named for history's most valuable metal; the Golden Rule. You know, Do unto other as you would have others do unto you; you have to go along to get along; I'll scratch your back if you scratch mine. It's golden because it works. We know that societies prosper when people work together with empathy and passion.
So here is my question for you: if a corporation is bound by its laws to make the largest profits possible at all times, which explicitly stated greed and selfishness is antithetical to the Golden Rule, how can you consider such an entity as a moral being to be dealt with on a human level?
Any person who acted in the despicable, selfish manner that major corporations act would be ostracized by any decent society. Unless, of course, the rules were rigged to make them the powerful.
We all hate King John and the Sheriff of Nottingham and we all love Robin Hood for a reason, and that reason is because the fight for human dignity against overwhelming corporate odds never ends. It was old in Robin Hood's day too.
Mitt Romney and the conservative majority of the Supreme Court should be ashamed.