GannonFan wrote:I'm confused, did Citizens United give corporations the power to vote, and at the same time, did it give them the power to vote substantially more than an ordinary person (you know, a one-vote/one person person, not those people who vote more than once)?
If we don't like the candidate, and if we don't like them because they get all their money from some big bad corporation (sorry for the redundancy, I know every corporation is big and every corporation is bad, right kalmie?) then vote for someone else. Money follows the winners, it doesn't make them, we're just too lazy of an electorate to pick the right winners.

You're not understanding the problem. At all. And, it's not a Democrat vs. Republican thing. It's at the heart of the problem with both parties and as a person that loves to flash around the "independent" label, I would think you would be able to see this.
The problem isn't money deciding elections. Hell, most of the big corporations donate to both campaigns. They're hedging their bets.
The problem is that the winner of the election - whether Democrat or Republican - is beholden to these big money contributors. Lobbyists LITERALLY write the bills. That is insane.
Also, most of these corporations are government contractors. It's hard to think of a major corporation that isn't a government contractor. I know you and others aren't very fond of government spending... but, these political donations are why those who are elected give a reach around with the pork barrel spending. THAT'S why it makes sense for these corporations to shell out piles of money. Not because a Republican or a Democrat is going to be that much more beneficial to them from a pure political or ideological angle. They have bargaining power for more than they spend on political donations for government contracts.
Look at major govermnet contractors' donations in 2014. It's split almost down the middle. And relatively small donations compared to the massive size of their contracts.
Lockheed Martin:
House
Total to Democrats: $938,000
Total to Republicans: $1,350,250
Senate
Total to Democrats: $173,500
Total to Republicans: $168,000
Received: $44,114,358,506.35 in federal contracts
Northrop Grumman:
House
Total to Democrats: $944,550
Total to Republicans: $1,268,645
Senate
Total to Democrats: $147,950
Total to Republicans: $166,741
Received: $9,996,020,880.37 in federal contracts
The problem isn't that the corporations are partisan. In the vast majority of cases they aren't - and the large corporations are very bipartisan in their donations... intentionally so. The problem is that they write themselves fat checks and their lobbyists write (and oftentimes literally write) the legislation.
edit: and, not only is their spending bipartisan. a quick browse looks like they give between $1-10,000 to ALL incumbents. They give to everyone... and a few non-incumbents who they think might win.