Slashdot Mirror


Democrats Defeat Online FOS Act

not so anonymous writes "The Online Freedom of Speech Act was defeated in the House of Representatives yesterday. The Act would have immunized political bloggers from having to comply with hundreds of pages of FEC rules." From the article: "In an acrimonious debate that broke largely along party lines, more than three-quarters of congressional Democrats voted to oppose the reform bill, which had enjoyed wide support from online activists and Web commentators worried about having to comply with a tangled skein of rules. The vote tally in the House of Representatives, 225 to 182, was not enough to send the Online Freedom of Speech Act to the Senate. Under the rules that House leaders adopted to accelerate the process, a two-thirds supermajority was required."

782 comments

  1. Lovely Omission by ackthpt · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ok, so I'm dusted. I see that the most liberal of parties opposes what is effectively Free Speech and the party which brought us the Patriot Act is advocating the it.

    This means there's some reason other than what this post appears to say 'Hey, Democrats hate free speech!', like something has been attached which allows oil drilling in Yosemite National Park. From TFA:

    The Federal Election Commission is under court order to finalize rules extending a controversial 2002 campaign finance law to the Internet. Unless Congress acts, the final regulations are expected to be announced by the end of the year. (They could cover everything from regulating hyperlinks to politicians' Web sites to forcing disclosure of affiliations with campaigns.)

    Opponents of the reform plan mounted a last-minute effort to derail the bill before the vote on Wednesday evening. Liberal advocacy groups circulated letters warning the measure was too broad and would invite "corrupt" activities online, and The New York Times wrote in an editorial this week that "the Internet would become a free-fire zone without any limits on spending."
    Ah, there's the Why, a loophole for Campaign Finance law.

    The heading Democrats Defeat Online FOS Act and omission of the Why certainly colours this article. Why the omission? It appears the article poster favours websites/blogs which are covert mouthpieces of a particular interest group spouting dubious facts and leaving out highly relevant facts. Slashdot has effectively been trolled. Was this intentional, Zonk?

    When black apears white or pigs appear to have sprouted wings, there's usually politics behind it, that's where Critical Thinking separates the herd. The Fine Print: We're probably not responsible for content, but in any event we are, we'll deny it.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:Lovely Omission by gregjmartin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      of course with the global-ness of the web, isn't it nuts to think that the Us can somehow enforce our laws there? If I really want to, can't I just blog to a uk site and get around all this? So opening the loop hole just formalize what's already the de facto law?

    2. Re:Lovely Omission by eln · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's pretty disturbing that such an obviously slanted article summary was posted here without the editors even bothering to check the facts. The whole summary basically says "Democrats hate Free Speech." I've come to expect dupes, glaring ommissions, and outright falsehoods from Slashdot, but up until now it had resisted posting blatantly partisan rhetoric.

      The linked article appears to be factual and fair, but the article synopsis certainly isn't.

    3. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      lets look at this another way as well, shall we. Recently the blog community has decided that it wants the legitimacy of professional journalism. That it wants the protection of freedom of the press to protect sources. Perhaps holding them to the same types of standards as professional news sites is a good thing. They can not just say anything, they are not exempt.

      Its a choice that has to be made, are they covered under the same rules as journalists, in which case they should face the same restriction, or are they just individuals posting what they think, with the implication that what they say better be backed up and there is no protecting sources.

    4. Re:Lovely Omission by ackthpt · · Score: 2, Insightful
      of course with the global-ness of the web, isn't it nuts to think that the Us can somehow enforce our laws there? If I really want to, can't I just blog to a uk site and get around all this? So opening the loop hole just formalize what's already the de facto law?

      Oh, no doubt about it. You could have your site with .tv tld and most people wouldn't even assotiate it with Tuvalu and you could put whatever you like on it and host it in China or Cuba or Venezuela.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    5. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why does our Congress allow for bills to have riders, etc? Why can't we say "there must be one and only one agenda" on a bill?

    6. Re:Lovely Omission by Random+BedHead+Ed · · Score: 1

      Thanks for clearing this up. The Why was my very first question - obviously bills in Congress are massive things with many facets, and opposition would obviously be related to something not in the article above. The Why was an important inclusion in this post, and I share your surprise that /. didn't amend it.

    7. Re:Lovely Omission by Mayhem178 · · Score: 1

      That was my very first thought. Everyone seemed to be on the wrong side of this debate, if their records have anything to say about it. Either way, the bill was a waste of time. We don't need a bill to protect our Constitutional rights. Slashdot is often a large grounds for political debate. It'll be a cold day in Hell before I defer my political opinions on here because a bunch of Democrats are tired of getting ragged on in blogs. It's exactly this kind of behavior that leads people to label them as whiny and rag on them in the first place.

      --

      "You will pay for your lack of vision..." - Emperor Palpatine to Ray Charles

    8. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Well, most of the time Slashdot does have a political slant. It's just that this articles slant is not like the rest of them, and is slanted in a different direciton.

    9. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I submitted the article, and I titled it "Free Speech Rights Taken Away By Politicians". My synopsis was fairly short: "The Online Freedom of Speech Act was defeated in the House of Representatives yesterday. The Act would have immunized political bloggers from having to comply with hundreds of pages of FCC rules." The rest was added by the editors, including the title.

    10. Re:Lovely Omission by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 0
      It appears the article poster favours websites/blogs which are covert mouthpieces of a particular interest group spouting dubious facts and leaving out highly relevant facts.

      Like moveon.org and michaelmoore.com, right?

      This was a bill to protect everyone's Free Speech. It appears as though your argument (and the Democrats') is that this is a Bad Thing because it would defend the rights of conservatives as well.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    11. Re:Lovely Omission by ackthpt · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Why does our Congress allow for bills to have riders, etc? Why can't we say "there must be one and only one agenda" on a bill?

      It's the "Old Game"

      Like the Fillibuster, both parties have benefited from it over the years and are unlikely to put a stop to it, lest it come back to haunt them. Interestingly the GOP moved to end Judicial Fillibustering, which many old party members were loathe to do, even as the Dems frustrated them. They could find, in a decade, a reversal of political fortunes and find they can't stall appointments of judicial candidates far to liberal for their tastes.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    12. Re:Lovely Omission by magarity · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Ah, there's the Why, a loophole for Campaign Finance law
       
      Which still makes it odd for Democrats to oppose it as far as I can tell. In my state the best funded 527 groups are liberal groups.
       
      And this open a completely different can of worms: Campaign spending "reforms" are, IMO, unconstitutional nonsense. There's nothing in the freedom of speech clause that says its only free speech up to a certain artificially imposed spending limit. Things like yelling "fire" in a crowded theatre and libel/slander aren't meant to be restrictions on free speech the way campaign spending restrictions are meant. And there are equally deep pockets on both sides willing to spend to get their side heard.
       
      The few people I've ever know anyone dumb enough to be swayed by a last minute campaign nasty-ad are also the people who don't trouble themselves to go vote anyway.

    13. Re:Lovely Omission by Politburo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Everything has a slant. There's no such thing as "unbiased".

    14. Re:Lovely Omission by CaptCovert · · Score: 3, Informative

      I know that it's still a cottage industry in many ways, but I'm surprised that web hosting companies in the US aren't up in arms about this. To eliminate Free Speech on the web would be enforcable against US companies, and could possibly send some out of business (SpeakEasy comes to mind).

    15. Re:Lovely Omission by Politburo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually, if you were paying attention, this bill was brought up under a rule that did not allow amendments.

      Bills have amendments for obvious reasons. If someone submits a bill and in the debate it is determined that there is a better way, the bill can be amended.

      There's a few problems with "one and only agenda". First you have to have a defined agenda for the bill. Then you have to decide what falls in and what falls outside of that agenda. One important thing to remember is that it's impossible to amend a bill without the consent of the majority. You don't need a special rule to block 'riders', you just need Congresspeople who will vote against the amendments when they come up.

    16. Re:Lovely Omission by estebanf · · Score: 1

      Oh, no doubt about it. You could have your site with .tv tld and most people wouldn't even assotiate it with Tuvalu and you could put whatever you like on it and host it in China or Cuba or Venezuela. Why is Venezuela next to China and Cuba in your statement?

      --
      DON'T STEAL MUSIC!
    17. Re:Lovely Omission by IAmTheDave · · Score: 1

      Much love to parent and GP for taking the wind out of the sails of this rediculous sumbission. I am so tired of good bills having riders attached that basically ruin what was to be a good law.

      I also fail to see why it is that we NEED a law like this. If anyone read the constitution, it's covered there, and that should (read: should) be enough.

      It's like the Equal Rights Amendment which I am strongly strongly against. To say that we need an amendment to our constitution which states that all people are equal, is to say that the Consitution doesn't say that very thing to begin with - which I believe it does. Slavery and a lack of rights for women and minorities was against the Consitution.

      Free speech should be exactly what the Constitution says it is, and that we need additional regulations to protect it means that the Consitution is being shit on, and that makes me sad.

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
    18. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I've come to expect dupes, glaring ommissions, and outright falsehoods from Slashdot, but up until now it had resisted posting blatantly partisan rhetoric.


      What the hell planet have you been on?

    19. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, we can hardly blame the editors for replacing your awful, awful headline. You don't really know anything about writing, do you? "Rights taken away?" Awful, awful. You might as well have headed it "Activity Enjoyed By Some."

    20. Re:Lovely Omission by antibryce · · Score: 1

      Except for this bill, which was a single line.

    21. Re:Lovely Omission by pizzaman100 · · Score: 1
      I don't see why this bill (or free speech in general) has to be a partisan issue. In fact, Harry Reid (Democrat Senate Leader) was a co-sponsor of this bill.

      The New York Times wrote in an editorial this week that "the Internet would become a free-fire zone without any limits on spending.

      Seems to me that the NYT has a conflict in this issue too, as the blogs are in competition with the NYT. Keep in mind also - that under current FEC rules any editorial can be considered as an 'in kind contribution' to proponents or opponents of a bill. So the NYT would be wise to watch their back on this one.

    22. Re:Lovely Omission by giorgiofr · · Score: 1

      Yes sirree, you know what? It's a conspiracy!
      They really *are* out there, trying to get you!

      ... boy, the feats people like you can achieve in order to deny reality keep astonishing me. But I guess you'd even cry GNA-GNA-GNA-I'm-not-hearing-you rather than face reality.

      --
      Global warming is a cube.
    23. Re:Lovely Omission by LordKazan · · Score: 1

      the ERA is a clairification and reiteration of rights already in the constitution so that certain doublespeaking individuals who claim to support the constitutions origional intent have zero wiggle room

      --
      If you cannot keep politics out of your moderation remove yourself from the Mod Lottery.. NOW!
    24. Re:Lovely Omission by soulsteal · · Score: 1, Funny

      So you're saying this article should have gone on backSlashdot?

    25. Re:Lovely Omission by ackthpt · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Why is Venezuela next to China and Cuba in your statement?

      Just another state which is unlikely to bend to the will of America.

      There was some good analysis of Venezuela and South American politics in general on the BBC World Service this morning.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    26. Re:Lovely Omission by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      I have to agree. My slashdot subscription recently lapsed. I may not renew it now.

    27. Re:Lovely Omission by timeOday · · Score: 4, Informative
      Well, the Democrats did defeat the bill. About the best the editors could have done is put the title of the bill in scare-quotes.

      This is how it always works. It's called a poison pill, and both sides do it. You put together a basically good-sounding bill with some riders which are either pork or serve special interest groups. Then if it doesn't pass, you say "Look! The other side is against national security / eductation / freedom of speech / whatever."

      Besides, the fact is the campaign finance law does regulate speech. It limits parties' freedom to "speak" (e.g. buy advertising) for a candiate. Now, I happen to be in favor of this particular restriction of speech because I think it serves a greater good in preserving democracy (including free speech) in the long run... but you have to realize a lot of people are against the campaign finance laws and see them as an unwarranted limitation on free speech.

    28. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      isn't it nuts to think that the Us can somehow enforce our laws there?

      It's far from "nuts" to think that the US can enforce its laws against US political parties. The location of any web servers they use doesn't come into it.

    29. Re:Lovely Omission by giorgiofr · · Score: 0

      Free speech should be [blah] we need additional regulations

      Yeah right. Everybody knows regulating is the way to go when you want freedom. Additional regulations would probably include all of the nice laws made by Russia, Cuba, China and whatnot in order to, uh, make free speech easier?

      --
      Global warming is a cube.
    30. Re:Lovely Omission by SengirV · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Exactly. /. and it's posters lean so far left that in the RARE instance an article leans the other way, it sticks out like a sore thumb.

      This says more about those objecting to this article than it does about the article itself.

      --

      Prof. Farnsworth - "Oh a lesson in not changing history from Mr I'm-My-Own-Grandpa!"

    31. Re:Lovely Omission by dantheman82 · · Score: 1

      No, let's leave that partisan rhetoric to the +4 and +5 Insightful comments...which usually target GWB and the Republicans. But I haven't seen you complain when /. editors post "news" in the political arena that often includes a summary that disses Bush & Republicans.

      --
      This sig donated to Pater. Long live /.
    32. Re:Lovely Omission by terrymr · · Score: 1

      Seems it would have been better named the "Online freedom to astroturf act"

    33. Re:Lovely Omission by RobotRunAmok · · Score: 4, Interesting

      D00d, Slashdot article summaries, particularly in the Politics and YRO sections, are slanted and biased ALL THE TIME. You just don't notice it cuz they're biased in the direction you clearly favor.

      It's pretty disturbing

      So see a shrink, and be sure to let us know how that works out for you. I think it's pretty AMAZING that this story got through with such a reverse slant in play. Is /. merely going for the pageviews this will engender? Is small-town-video-game-reviewer-turned-overnight-ma jor-site-front-page-editor Zonk just asleep at the console? Or is it something more... interesting? (There is no user registered as "not so anonymous" -- what up with dat?)

    34. Re:Lovely Omission by goodmanj · · Score: 5, Informative

      In Slashdot, always read TFA, not just the comments on it. In politics, always read TFB (The F'ing Bill). What it says, and what people *say* it says, are often two different things.

      The bill doesn't say "bloggers can post what they like." It says "all Internet communications are immune from federal election rules." That includes not just bloggers, but major media corporations and advertisers.

      The community here knows that there's nothing magical about the Internet. Why should CNN or Fox be restricted in what they show on cable TV, but be unrestricted in streaming live online video to me over the same damned cable?

      TFB needs to be more precise. But amendments weren't allowed, so it was voted down.

    35. Re:Lovely Omission by cbelle13013 · · Score: 1

      You must be one of those "open minded liberals" we hear so much about...

    36. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've come to expect dupes, glaring ommissions, and outright falsehoods from Slashdot, but up until now it had resisted posting blatantly partisan rhetoric.

      Is there another Slashdot that I don't know about?

    37. Re:Lovely Omission by feepness · · Score: 1

      When black apears white or pigs appear to have sprouted wings, there's usually politics behind it, that's where Critical Thinking separates the herd.

      Translation: When my underlying assumptions are questioned, I can get pretty creative when it comes to dismissing any alternative ideas.

      Both parties are two sides of the same coin. It is the equivalent of professional wrestling where they want you to "root for your guy and hate the other guy" so it's all "black or white". They don't care who you root for, as long as you pay admission for the match (ie: don't vote third party).

      Sorry, reality is a bit more complicated and takes true critical thinking.

    38. Re:Lovely Omission by stlhawkeye · · Score: 2, Funny
      It's pretty disturbing that such an obviously slanted article summary was posted here without the editors even bothering to check the facts.

      Yes. It's always very disturbing that Slashdot article summaries contain clear political slants. At least, it's disturbing when the slant is biased against whatever political cults I happen to agree with. When it's slanted in their favor, it's just good journalism.

      --
      "I have never won a debate with an ignorant person." -Ali ibn Abi Talib
    39. Re:Lovely Omission by e_slarti · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I have to agree. When you say "Democrats Defeat Online FOS Act" in regards to this article, there's an agenda. I know slashdot is full of politics (both ways, both annoying) but realistically, that's similar to the rhetoric surrounding The Patriot Act. There's so much more to it than what the bill title and proponent summary is.

      Why do people keep falling for political dog-and-pony shows like this? There are obvious reasons they voted against this, not because "Dems hate free speech!" crap. I'm absolutely sure that most people (Democrat, Republican, Green, Independent, etc.) would like to keep free speech, so just give that part a rest.

      In a related question, when did people start believing that politicians were altruistic and truthful, and that being uncompromising was a sign of validity and truth?

      "If, of the many truths, you select only one and follow it blindly, it will become a falsehood, and you a fanatic."

      A truth unto itself, but don't follow it blindly ;)

    40. Re:Lovely Omission by DonVictor · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The idea that the Democratic party naturally "favors free speech" and the Republican does not, is simple minded. Both parties favor free speech. Both parties "love freedom". People of both parties occassionally bake and eat apple pies. And both parties talk about all of these images and ideas as if they had a patent on them.

      The differences between parties are political philosophy, philosophy of government, and cultural identity. "Policy" is boring to most people, emotion sells. So if you can't or wont think on the level of policy, you are left with emotion. In this case, what you believe about which party is "freedom" oriented, against racism, kisses babies, "cares about regular people", defends the little guy, etc. etc. etc, is simply a matter of which side you listen to. The emotional messages of both parties are nearly the same, but most people listen to "their" party. It's sort of a tribal instinct.

      Policy: The Republican party is stronger on allowing political free speech (this is why they are considered less politically correct, and why they oppose campaign finance reform, which is ultimately an attempt to regulate political speech.)

      Policy: The Democratic party tends to favor "broadening" the definition of free speech to include things like controversial photographic materials, non-word-based self-expression (flag burning, certain kinds of disruptive protests), and other quasi-speech areas.

      Don't get caught in the simple-sugars message of nice-people and selfish-people that both parties spin out for people who don't want to think things through. Rule of thumb: If it feels like an "iMac" commercial, it's empty propaganda. If it feels like a credit card bill, or a draft card, its reality.

    41. Re:Lovely Omission by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      "It's pretty disturbing that such an obviously slanted article summary was posted here without the editors even bothering to check the facts."

      As if this were a first. Oh my...or is it just a rare occurrence of you being on the opposite side of the slant?

    42. Re:Lovely Omission by danheskett · · Score: 5, Informative

      I've got to call BS on your comments:

      Slavery and a lack of rights for women and minorities was against the Consitution.

      This is just patently false.

      1. Article IV Section II establishes slavery as a legal institution:

      "No person held to service or labor in one state, under the laws thereof, escaping into another, shall, in consequence of any law or regulation therein, be discharged from such service or labor, but shall be delivered up on claim of the party to whom such service or labor may be due. "

      2. Article I Section II establishes the disparate value of free whites and "all other persons":

      "Representatives and direct taxes shall be apportioned among the several states which may be included within this union, according to their respective numbers, which shall be determined by adding to the whole number of free persons, including those bound to service for a term of years, and excluding Indians not taxed, three fifths of all other Persons."

      The original Constitution emphatically does not provide for the equal rights of all citizens: it differienates between free and non free, recognizes forced labor and the ownership of forced laborers and generally does not do anything which you claim!

      Free speech should be exactly what the Constitution says it is, and that we need additional regulations to protect it means that the Consitution is being shit on, and that makes me sad.
      I wish I could just blindly say I agree, but the Constitution is intentionally vague. Does reporting on your financing abridge your right to a free press? How about forcing food manufactuers to print a lable and put that on their product? How about requiring porn makers to label their stuff with a legal notice? Are these all equal abridgements of the 1st amendment?

      If it really were so black and white I think you'd be sorry.

    43. Re:Lovely Omission by petabyte · · Score: 1

      Slashdot has effectively been trolled. Was this intentional, Zonk?

      I sort of think Zonk's job is to be as inflamatory as possible. Take a look at all of the articles his posts in comparison to the rest of the editors. His articles are always phrased or titled in such a way to cause the most outrage. He's sort of the fox news of slashdot.

      Great for click throughs and ad views; not so good for journalistic integrity.

    44. Re:Lovely Omission by lys1123 · · Score: 1

      Isn't restricting free speech based on money changing hands still restricting free speech though?

      Critical thinking here just points out that when Republicans take our freedoms they are usually working for the interests of big business, and when the Democrats take our freedoms they are doing it to "protect us" because we, like small children, need to be told that what we read on the Internet might be biased.

      But either way, this was a vote against personal freedom. The slant of the article was, therefore, justified.

    45. Re:Lovely Omission by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Since when did the press have any freedom to protect sources? There have been lots of cases of journalists going to jail because they wouldn't reveal their sources, including one just recently. There's no such freedom in this country.

    46. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, most of the time Slashdot does have a political slant. It's just that this articles slant is not like the rest of them, and is slanted in a different direciton.

      You took the words right out of my mouth. I thought the world was coming to an end when I saw something that wasn't Bush bashing on slashdot. Within the first few posts were people defending the democrats though. Doing that with the opposite spin gets an instant negative mod. Ironically...the modding down of someone with the opposite political belief is anti-free speech in itself. Readers need to hear both sides of a story. I just wish meta-modding worked. Biased negative mods always get an unfair from me no matter if it's left or right.
      (posting anonymously because left will definitely mod this down).

    47. Re:Lovely Omission by TopSpin · · Score: 1

      omission of the Why certainly colours this article

      This is selective scrutiny. The Why behind opposition to so-call 'Campaign Finance Reform' is rooted in Free Speech. You're conditioned to attribute this opposition to a desire to protect corruption through influence peddling but, believe it or not, the non-wealthy on the other side really do believe that McCain-Feingold is damage. I doubt that particular Why would have ever occurred to you when evaluating a typical MSM scree about 'wealthy special interest' opposition to Campaign Finance Reform.

      It appears the article poster favours websites/blogs which are covert mouthpieces of a particular interest group spouting dubious facts

      A non-liberal slant in a Slashdot article is such a rare occurrence that you think you're in bizarro world. What does this tell you about the slant present in all of the other stuff?

      Critical Thinking

      You're flattering yourself. That you are oblivious to the possibility that the bill is entirely self consistent while attempting to both compromise Campaign Finance Reform and explicitly exempt bloggers from regulation is evidence of a deep bias that precludes any Critical Thinking.

      It's just us morons doing our level best to fuck up the world for you Critical Thinkers.

      --
      Lurking at the bottom of the gravity well, getting old
    48. Re:Lovely Omission by cmacb · · Score: 1

      HAHAHA!

      Very good one.

    49. Re:Lovely Omission by john82 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I've come to expect dupes, glaring ommissions, and outright falsehoods from Slashdot, but up until now it had resisted posting blatantly partisan rhetoric.

      You've got to be kidding. Slashdot has been blatantly partisan for years. Because it was leaning in a direction you agree with you obviously either missed it or ignored it.

      So when a similar light-on-the-facts, misleading headline article appears to say something equally heinous about Republicans, that's okay. But if it happens to Democrats that constitutes a conspiracy?

      Staying more on topic, I'd like to know why ANYONE in Congress is allowed to attach a rider that doesn't have a thing to do with the original bill. Congress would have to change their rules to prevent it, but both major parties apparently are addicted to this sort of nonsense.

    50. Re:Lovely Omission by stupidfoo · · Score: 1

      I see that the most liberal of parties opposes what is effectively Free Speech and the party which brought us the Patriot Act is advocating the it.

      Yes, who voted for the Patriot Act again? Oh... both parties? Interesting.

      The left is in full support of free speech, as long as they agree with what you're saying. If not, then you're a racist, religious zealot, homophobe, or a myriad of other terms the left uses to marginalize the speech of those it does not agree with.

      As far as this bill goes... who was against it? Oh... the MSM. Which party is beholden to the MSM? And which party does the MSM act as a organ of? It's no the ones who were in favor of this bill, that's for sure.

    51. Re:Lovely Omission by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 1

      Good old Status Quo.

      The easiest thing to do would be to go back to the Founding Father's intentions, and have no concept of the political party. Each rep either votes their concience, or votes the will of their electorate (gasp) rather than voting the will of their party, or voting to frustrate the other party.

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
    52. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      George Soros is weeping.

      Better luck nect time George!

    53. Re:Lovely Omission by syrinx · · Score: 1

      but up until now it had resisted posting blatantly partisan rhetoric.

      Someone already posted the "you must be new here" joke, but... You must have completely ignored the site in the months leading up to last year's US election, as well as selectively ignoring plenty of articles since then, to say something like that. For Elbereth's sake, there was an article summary last year that basically made the claim that if Republicans stayed in power they were going to outlaw elections. (I remember it because it's the one that caused me to give up on the "politics" section and take it off my front page at least until after the election) You don't think that's "blatantly partisan rhetoric"?

      --
      Quidquid latine dictum sit, altum sonatur.
    54. Re:Lovely Omission by dAzED1 · · Score: 1

      First of all, an expensive, fancy, flashy, movie-filled portal talking about the wonders of oil, how lovely tax breaks are, and etc...doesn't have really any more reason to have high traffic than a simple, text-only page walking about hugging trees. It's not like TV or radio where the advertizements are exceptionally disruptive. Black popups, ignore the banners (or block them too), and voila! Who the hell then cares how much they spend?

      Secondly...the Dems were the ones that had the massive online campaign stuff - moveon.org ring any bells? The Republicans would have done well for moveon.org to have been restricted. This act would have eliminated those restrictions. Now, all those political blogs (which are more of a Dem thing) have to deal with all that junk. They shot themselves in the foot.

      To sum: you're full of BS. The notion that the Dems are the party of "free speech" is absurd. Both parties could care less.

    55. Re:Lovely Omission by dAzED1 · · Score: 1

      freakin-A I have a lot of goobered letters in there. It can still be read, grammar and spelling-nazis. Leave it be. ;)

    56. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He should have said that slavery and voting rights for women are against the Declaration of Independence. Unfortunately, the Declaration of Independence is not a legal document and has no application to federal or state law. It would nice if it was.

    57. Re:Lovely Omission by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 1

      When black apears white or pigs appear to have sprouted wings, there's usually politics behind it, that's where Critical Thinking separates the herd.

      We need a +6 or +7 for posts like this. Either that or I've been here too long.

      --
      "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    58. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I'm not mistaken, "mainstream" journalism is exempt from much of the campaign finance reform law, under the mistaken idea that it is not biased and is presenting facts in a neutral way. Since much reporting is obviously skewed (fake CBS memos...), bloggers would like the same freedom. Personally, as an individual, I do too. I don't think the press should be "more free", just free.

    59. Re:Lovely Omission by Cat_Byte · · Score: 1

      I don't have the exact wording in front of me but it does exist to an extent. The only exception is when ordered to reveal the source by a judge and it takes a hearing to prove it is necessary.

      Here is a good link with plenty of info on who has been ordered to reveal sources and why they would like even more protection.

      The recent one is just rediculous based on getting people fired without even having enough evidence to indite (yeah I probably misspelled that...I'm not a lawyer).

      --
      Two roads diverged in a wood, and I - I took the one the bus load of girls just went down.
    60. Re:Lovely Omission by dAzED1 · · Score: 1

      I was almost thinking that they were just being sarcastic...since, well, the facts weren't presented falsely.

    61. Re:Lovely Omission by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Why should CNN or Fox be restricted in what they show on cable TV, but be unrestricted in streaming live online video to me over the same damned cable?

      Good point. All restrictions on the abilities of the press to deliver information - regardless of medium - are patently unconstitutional and should be removed immediately.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    62. Re:Lovely Omission by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 2, Informative

      The bill (One of the shortest you'll see) says:

      Paragraph (22) of section 301 of the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 (2 U.S.C. 431(22)) is amended by adding at the end the following new sentence: `Such term shall not include communications over the Internet.'.

      The existing law section 22 is:

      (22) Public communication. The term 'public communication' means a communication by means of any broadcast, cable, or satellite communication, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mass mailing, or telephone bank to the general public, or any other form of general public political advertising.

      So yeah, the Democrat's are against Free Speech on the Internet. The (GP) argument that they are also against Free Speech in general and Free Political Speech in particular isn't some sort of massive loophole trying to be created, it just means that they are being consistent in their opposition to Free Speech.

      Those of us who agree with the Constitution that "Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances." wish the bill was simply to delete all of the laws that prohibit political speech in the U.S. That way maybe people who aren't billionaire liberals like George Soros might be able to compete without having to hire a bunch of lawyers first to find the loopholes.

      And yes, "paying for advertising"="speech".

      --
      The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
    63. Re:Lovely Omission by Arandir · · Score: 1

      Imagine this bill wasn't about the internet, but about newspapers. Now let's rewrite that quote:

      "The New York Times wrote in an editorial this week that "newsprint would become a free-fire zone without any limits on spending."

      Why are blogs persecuted, but newspapers are not? What's to keep some Evil Republican from buying up the front pages of every newspaper Murdoch owns? Dammit, it's time we repealed the first ammendement! Think of the children!

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    64. Re:Lovely Omission by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 1
      Hey, Democrats hate free speech!

      Democrats do hate free speech, or at least, free speech that they disagree with. Who are the ones who tried to get the FCC to cancel Rush Limbaugh's broadcast license? Who are the ones who get "hate speech" laws passed? Who are the ones who push "campaign finance reform", which is really restrictions on what people can spend money on? (and make no mistake -- money is the fuel of free speech).

      Not that Republicans of are clean on the subject either, but it's far more common for Democrats to try and PASS LEGISLATION (key phrase) to restrict speech. On the other hand, it's more common for Republicans to condemn things they disagree with, though not legislatively. (and yes, I know that you can find exceptions to these rules, but this is based on my observation).

      --
      Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
    65. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Amen!

      I wonder, though, if Zonk's purpose is simply to tick the other side off (whatever side that may be) so that the comments are always hoppin'.

    66. Re:Lovely Omission by justasecond · · Score: 1

      OK, how about this question: Why is it that Democrats are always trying to close loopholes? Campaign finance "loophole". Gun show "loophole". Tax shelter "loophole". Free speach "loophole".

      Did you ever stop to think that people were using these "loopholes" because the underlying law was unfair, partisan and just plain poorly defined weaseling around the back door of the Constitution?

      Stop with the "loophole" bullshit and just admit that you want to control everything everyone says, purchases, hears and thinks.

    67. Re:Lovely Omission by Arandir · · Score: 1

      Obviously the Democrats paid you to write that. I think I should make a phone call to the FEC and have them audit you.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    68. Re:Lovely Omission by justins · · Score: 1
      Ok, so I'm dusted. I see that the most liberal of parties opposes what is effectively Free Speech and the party which brought us the Patriot Act is advocating the it.

      Ah, don't worry. Both parties hold you in the same high esteem, and will put you behind barbed wire if you go to protest at one of their conventions.
      --
      Now before I get modded down, I be to remind whoever might read this that what I am saying is FACT. - bogaboga
    69. Re:Lovely Omission by jalefkowit · · Score: 1
      It's pretty disturbing that such an obviously slanted article summary was posted here without the editors even bothering to check the facts.

      You must be new here...

    70. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I see that the most liberal of parties

      Right.

      The democrats and the republicans have dominated US politics for the better part of a century now. Neither party has dominated alone over this period; they have dominated together. This period (the last 50-100 years) gave rise to the most oppressive expansions of government since the United States was formed.

      Now, considering that the democrats and respublicans share the responsibility for this near-exponential expansion of state power , I'd hardly call the democrats liberal (meaning respectful of the individual's god-given right to freedom).

      If the democrats are the most "liberal" of parties, I'd sure hate to meet the most oppressive.

    71. Re:Lovely Omission by Procrastin8er · · Score: 0

      Wow, a post on /. that is not slanted to the left....Now some of you left wingers can see how it feels.

      --
      Slashdot - Where the slash is most definitely to the left.
    72. Re:Lovely Omission by Wellspring · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Excellent point. I appreciate your honesty about this, because there's a lot of noise out there that tries to obscure the core issue.

      For the rest of you, if you're in favor of regulations on free speech, then just come out and say so. Explain your reasoning, talk about extenuating circumstances, just like timeOday has done. Stop pretending that this isn't a limitation on free speech.

      The Supreme Court has struck down numerous campaign finance laws over first amendment issues (Buckley vs US, anyone?). Former house majority leader (Democrat) Dick Gephardt responded by suggesting that the First Amendment be changed to allow campaign finance limits. The current SCOTUS has ruled that campaign finance IS a limitation on free speech, but that extenuating circumstances (making things appear less corrupt) justifies it.

      For my part, I'm opposed to any attempt by do-gooder meddlers to limit free speech just because they think that paid advertising == mind control. Inevitably, this is an attempt to control and limit debate and free discussion. The FEC has ruled that blogs will be regulated and controlled by the campaign finance laws, and the defeat of this bill (to stop the menace of banner ads and popups) reaffirms that this is the Law of the Land.

      If you're a Democrat, do the decent thing and be embarrassed. Your party isn't right all the time, any more than Libertarians or Republicans are. Admit that your side got this one wrong, contribute to the EFF, and go to local party meetings and tell them that as a loyal democrat you're astonished that you'd see normally smart good people doing this.

      I'm a Republican, but I try to have the intellectual honesty to admit when my party has it wrong-- which we often are. You're doing your party a service by keeping them honest.

    73. Re:Lovely Omission by incom · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Wrong. Slashdot is certainly far left , in the realm of freedoms and social issues , but quite the opposite in financial matters. It's been said before, the slashdot average is close to libertarian, although there are vocal minorities of all stripe. Just because the majority here are anti-bush, doesn't make the majority here far-left liberals, no matter how oft repeated the assertion.

      --
      True genius is grasping a situation like a peice of fruit, and peircing it just right so that it drains dry.
    74. Re:Lovely Omission by terrymr · · Score: 1

      oh yeah, who paid you to reply to me ?

    75. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've been reading Slashdot articles and comments for some time now and the best comments come when readers disagree with the article. Many of these disagreeing comments have a personal twist but many facts are pointed out. This differs when readers agree with the article, then not much additional information is presented.

      If that bill was just about the freedom of speech on the internet, and it had passed, there wouldn't be much to say about it. But since it didn't pass because its tied to finance laws, and the article does have a slant going against what most internet users hold dear, there is very good, very informitive comments being posted.

    76. Re:Lovely Omission by Greatmoose · · Score: 1

      Excellent post. Kudos. One thing though, this is slashdot: intellectual honesty not spoken here.

      --
      Clearly I forgot to equip my +5 Codpiece of Karma.
    77. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Democrats do hate free speech, or at least, free speech that they disagree with.

      Do you know what a straw man argument is? Dems don't hate free speech and you know it. Don't act like an idiot. Look up straw man argument. Then next time you listend to Rush, notice that's about the only kind of argument he uses. It's easy to lie about those you disagree with, then prove they are wrong based on your lies.

      You do know that there is an organized conservative group filing complaints against liberal broadcasts with the FCC. The only person I know forced of the air due to a 1/2 million dolar fine was a liberal. I'm not aware of any organized liberal groups going after conservatives. I thought about filing a complaint against Rush when he made a clear violation, but decided it wasn't right to go down to that level.

      Note, even though I said that some conservatives file FCC complaints, I'm not as stupid as you to imply that means all conservatives agree with them. Liberals don't have a borg mind. When you hear Rush say, "Liberals xyz". Understand that he is wrong 100% of the time. Any statement starting with "All liberals think" is just as wrong as any blanket statement about conservatives. Get your head out of your ass.

    78. Re:Lovely Omission by saltydogdesign · · Score: 1

      It's quite possible to have a political slant without distorting the facts.

      --
      // This is not a sig.
    79. Re:Lovely Omission by saltydogdesign · · Score: 2, Insightful

      1) A great many slashdotters are libertarians, which != lefty.
      2) The reason the summary sticks out like a sore thumb is because it is so obvious that it is hiding an essential fact about the article. If someone posted an article stating that the Republican party was trying to create a tax system with 25 brackets, someone here would nail that too.

      --
      // This is not a sig.
    80. Re:Lovely Omission by saltydogdesign · · Score: 1

      This is just patently false. 1. Article IV Section II establishes slavery as a legal institution:

      Ever heard of the 13th Amendment?

      --
      // This is not a sig.
    81. Re:Lovely Omission by ackthpt · · Score: 1
      The easiest thing to do would be to go back to the Founding Father's intentions, and have no concept of the political party. Each rep either votes their concience, or votes the will of their electorate (gasp) rather than voting the will of their party, or voting to frustrate the other party.

      That, dear friend and patriot, would require a revolution, which the current office-holders would have you rounded up and sent to Gitmo for. Funny how that works. As soon as you recognize your government is corrupt and serves interests other than the people they, the government, would label you subversive and imprison you or have you executed.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    82. Re:Lovely Omission by Procyon101 · · Score: 1

      Why are you "strongly against" something you admit is a clarification of the status quo? Can you envision the creation of laws under the potentially amended constitution that you find objectionable that would not be possible under the current?

      Personally, I think the proposed amendment should include a race clause also and end any future debate.

    83. Re:Lovely Omission by geoffspear · · Score: 1
      "free" as in beer that you pay for.

      I don't care what the courts say, I kind of doubt James Madison was thinking "freedom to bribe officials as much as you want" when he wrote "right to speak" in his draft proposal for the first amendment. Money isn't speech.

      Bloggers shouldn't be restricted in what they write. However, the people giving money to politicians so those politicians will do their bidding should be thrown in prison.

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    84. Re:Lovely Omission by Golias · · Score: 1

      Ah, there's the Why, a loophole for Campaign Finance law.

      Which calls to attention the fact that all attempts to protect unrestricted political speech will create loopholes in Campaign Finance law, because the purpose of Campaign Finance law is the restriction of free political speech.

      The Frist Amendment is dead. McCain/Feingold now decides what you can say and how you can say it.

      Fuck gun control. Campaign Finance law should be enemy number one to all libertarian crackpots (like me) who believe that freedom is the best trait America has going for it.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    85. Re:Lovely Omission by Politburo · · Score: 1

      I'd like to know why ANYONE in Congress is allowed to attach a rider that doesn't have a thing to do with the original bill.

      It turns out that it's extremely difficult to determine what "has to do with the original bill" and what doesn't.

    86. Re:Lovely Omission by linuxfanatic1024 · · Score: 1

      (posting anonymously because left will definitely mod this down).

      Because some people moderate in this subjective way, I always browse Slashdot with a threshold of -1. I want to read everybody's posts, not just the "good" ones. Sometimes a negative statement about Linux gets a negative mod just because the moderator was biased (yes, I am a Linux fan), but I read it anyway because at least 50% of the time, those negatively modded comments are valid. I even sometimes mod anti-Linux comments up if I agree with them. Yes, it's true, a Linux fan on Slashdot who actually acknowledges that Linux, like any other piece of software, is not perfect. But I digress slightly.

      Biased negative mods always get an unfair from me no matter if it's left or right.

      Amen to that.

      --
      Microsoft-free since March 28, 2004
    87. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Ok, so I'm dusted. I see that the most liberal of parties opposes what is effectively Free Speech and the party which brought us the Patriot Act is advocating the it.

      This means there's some reason other than what this post appears to say

      Or it could be that the Democrats oppose the bill because they get spanked online more than they're praised and spreading the truth about what they say has caused them to lose seats in the house and senate for the last 10 years and lost them the last 2 elections. But of course liberal politicans couldn't be that selfish could they? I'm sure those career politicians like John Kerry wouldn't vote against something just because it might be bad for their party would they?

    88. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with your assessment in this particular case but it should be noted that the GOP tends to get the fat end of these types of rhetoric posts (on Slashdot). I say this despite the fact I probably trust the GOP less than the Democrats (there doesn't appear to be an alternative party in America that I like at the moment)

      Everything is so polarized in US politics. I like how the GOP stress independence AND I also like how the Democrats try to equalize the playing field to allow for fair competition. These are not mutually contridictory concepts unless an individual chooses to view them that way.

      My main problem with both parties is that they basically draw false lines in the sand and force their members to assume ridiculous intellectual postures because of it.

      E.g.

      Let's say I like to make my curtains pink with purple polka dots-- but also want the right to be pissed if mega-corp builds a 5000 story curtain factory that blocks the sunlight to my farm.

      Far rightwing - If I want to have ugly curtains I must therefore allow them the freedom to build their factory where they want too. (that will rob my ability to compete and effectively make me one of their employees) If I don't like it-- their version of fairness it that I dedicate my entire waking life to building my own mega-corp and hire lobbiests to affirm myself as one of what they "objectively" self-describe as the elite.

      Who said I wanted to do that? I just want the freedom to farm.

      Far leftwing - If we allow you to have ugly curtains mega-corps will build factories that will force you into servitude. But I like my curtains though and I like having mega-corps that are capable of pooling human resources to achieve wonderful products--- like my lovely curtains.

      The answer of course is I have the right to protect my interests but also as the owner of a mega-corp I can have the common sense not to build curtain factories where I know its going to flagrantly piss off the neighbours. Big institutions are to be held to a higher bar because they have resources to limit the pain factor.

            If they don't then they too should be prepared to have pain inflicted on them. (Which of course ends up in bloody revolutions--- which replaces one set of parasites for another till the gene pool has thinned enough) There are plenty of ways for a moral person to be constructive and express themselves--- without flagrantly (keyword) and consciously destroying another persons ability to compete and simply survive. (unless of course that is their desire). Its a tough line to walk (especially for the real elite)-- but once you cross it you no longer fall in the realm most of us call moral.

      So to end this meandering post.... beware of both types of droids looking for simplistic absolute descriptions of reality to account for gazillions of different types of situations. People try to apply Occam's razor to politics but it doesn't work completely especially in an poorly defined language.

    89. Re:Lovely Omission by el+americano · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why is Venezuela next to China and Cuba in your statement?

      Are you feigning surprise? The comparison to Cuba is especially obvious. The way things are going, you can expect to be mentioned in the same breath with Zimbabwe, Iran, Libya, North Korea, and Syria.

      Try not to be surprised.

      --
      Those are my principles. If you don't like them I have others. -Groucho Marx
    90. Re:Lovely Omission by fupeg · · Score: 1

      I think it's a good omission. So what if there's a why behind it. It doesn't change the fact that it is a strike against free speech. Here's a new flash, all campaign finance laws are anti-free speech. Anytime you limit what people say, you are limiting free speech. Anytime somebody wants to limit freedom, there's always a why.

    91. Re:Lovely Omission by d3ac0n · · Score: 1

      Bravo Sharp'r, bravo!

      About time someone around here finally figured that out and explained it in a clear and concise manner.

      Mcain-Feingold doesn't do jack to stop the wealthy special interests from donating as much as they want, but it does stop the middle class and small business owners from making worthwile donations.

      Since we now understand that Buying Ads = Speech, we should all now understand that Mcain-Feingold LIMITS most people's free speech, not expands it. This (to many like myself) is a direct violation of the Bill of Rights and the Constitution.

      The fact that Republicans want to stick with a Constitutional Contructionist view of how political speech is handled, and Democrats want to have a more "fluid" concept of speech (read: change it to what fits our agenda at the time) really shouldn't surprise anyone who has been following this.

      I salute you sir, well said.

      --
      Official Heretic from the "Church of Global Warming". Proven right thanks to whistle blowers. AGW = Flat Earth Theory
    92. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, the party that brought you Tipper Gore and Joe Lieberman couldn't POSSIBLY BE AGAINST FREE SPEECH.

      It's got to be the Republicans' fault.

      BTW the bill was only one page long. It couldn't have possibly contained any pork barrelling.

    93. Re:Lovely Omission by love2hateMS · · Score: 1

      Amendments can also be used to slow down or kill a bill. Often a very unpopular amendment is added to a bill, by either party, in order to make the whole bill unpalatable.

    94. Re:Lovely Omission by Arandir · · Score: 1

      Karl Rove of course!

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    95. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, if the Bill gets rejected, vote it down, then send it back to a committee f/retooling, and resubmit it f/approval. That's how Canada does it. It would only slow the process in the short term. In the long run, all it would do is increase *latency* in terms of drafting time to getting a bill passed.

      No, it seems clear that the only reason for having things work the way they do now, is so that the process can be highjacked by a competing partisan agenda. If the Members don't like the rider, well... No new law for you, Neddie. How about we try exercising a little partisan restraint and dicipline in the process for a change, hmm?

    96. Re:Lovely Omission by CosmeticLobotamy · · Score: 1

      If someone submits a bill and in the debate it is determined that there is a better way, the bill can be amended.

      Plus it's harder to attach something that says you can only wear blue hats on Tuesdays and call it part of a free speach bill if they don't allow amendments, and most legislators oppose that on moral grounds. If you can't tack on unconscionable laws to good bills, how are you ever going to get them passed? This kind of thing can't be allowed to happen.

    97. Re:Lovely Omission by thePowerOfGrayskull · · Score: 1

      The community here knows that there's nothing magical about the Internet. Why should CNN or Fox be restricted in what they show on cable TV, but be unrestricted in streaming live online video to me over the same damned cable?

      Right! And while we're at it, let's start imposing fines for people who say inappropriate things in newspapers, books, and magazines. With that single sentence above, you're effectively attempting to justify a bad idea by saying, "Well we already do it for broadcast and cable, so let's extend it to different mediums."

    98. Re:Lovely Omission by GiSqOd · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The community here knows that there's nothing magical about the Internet. Why should CNN or Fox be restricted in what they show on cable TV, but be unrestricted in streaming live online video to me over the same damned cable?

      I think your point is well intentioned, but there are a few difference between what's shown on TV and what's available on the internet:

      1. Most TV news is available over public airwaves, web content is available at privately owned websites. If Bob, Fox News, or MoveOn.org want to put up something on their own website, what's the federal government's interest in regulating that?

      2. Watching campaign ads via television is a pretty passive experience. I'm watching a show, and suddenly I'm unexpectedly watching a commercial about how Senator So-And-So eats babies and burns down orphanages. That's fine, comes with the territory, but it's not like I asked to be shown a political ad. On the internet, however, if I'm reading a story about Senator So-And-So's views on an issue, it's really likely that I went looking for that information on my own.

      In my experience, it's always a good idea to err on the side of more free speech rather than less. While reducing the ability of rich parties and rich people to unduly influence elections is a noble goal, campaign finance reform has been a real mixed bag vis-a-vis free speech. Maybe you can make the case for regulating political speech on television (equal time, etc.), but regulating it on the internet is asinine.

      If the GOP/Dems want to prop up a bunch of phony blogs touting how great their platforms are, let them live and die based on the strength of their arguments. People will continue to read the blogs they've come to know and trust. Do you read spam blogs now? If not, why would you read a hollow party-machine political blog in the future? And if (by some minor miracle) one of these big-money blogs makes a valid, interesting point, how has that adversely impacted the free exchange of ideas?

      Let anyone put up whatever website they want. We can think for ourselves.

    99. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Everything has a slant.

      This is true. But not entirely true. I would say it's about 50% accurate.

    100. Re:Lovely Omission by virago81 · · Score: 1
      the party which brought us the Patriot Act is advocating the it.

      1. What tripe. Let's look at the Senate vote on the Patriot Act and what do we see? Every single Democratic Senator present except one (Feingold) voted for the Patriot Act. The vote was 98-1-1. Now who was it that brought us the Patriot Act again?

      2. The reason that Democrats want to restrict political spending on the Internet is not because the Republicans have more soft money to spend on Internet ads than the Democrats. (McCain-Feingold places no restrictions on "hard money" contributions). As the vast Right-Wing conspiracy bastion Slate.com has reported, the Democrats raise more soft money than Republicans. The reason that Democrats want to quash paid political blogging is that the Republicans are undisputably much more effective at it than Democrats. Anyone care to look at the hit statistics for The Drudge Report, Powerline or Little Green Footballs vs. The Daily KOS or any other liberal blog?

      --
      Technological progress has merely provided us with more efficient means for going backwards. -- Aldous Huxley
    101. Re:Lovely Omission by binarybum · · Score: 1

      yeah, but then Heraldo Rivera would give away every military secret we've got and the name of every CIA agent out there.

      --
      ôó
    102. Re:Lovely Omission by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      That way maybe people who aren't billionaire liberals like George Soros might be able to compete without having to hire a bunch of lawyers first to find the loopholes.

      You mean to tell me that billionaires, as a rule, are liberals? Or perhaps, just perhaps most of them are priviledged former trust fund kids, or sociopathic worshippers of greed and who are so far to the right on the political spectrum that they rub shoulders with one Adolf. Selfish, arrogant and willing to claw their way to the top over the backs of others, willing to put their interests ahead of the society's, lacking of any scruples: those are basic pre-conditions to becoming a billionaire. George Soros probably has gotten a severe case of guilty conscience. Most of billionaires are far more viciously callous then he and they will not blink to outspend him 100 to 1 on their favourite, extreme-right-wing causes.

    103. Re:Lovely Omission by Obfuscant · · Score: 1
      For my part, I'm opposed to any attempt by do-gooder meddlers to limit free speech just because they think that paid advertising == mind control.

      Unfortunately, in many cases, paid advertising IS mind control.

      Not for all people, and not for all advertising, but if advertising wasn't convincing people to do something they wouldn't otherwise have done ("buy Tide" or "vote for Frank", e.g.) corporations (and campaign teams) wouldn't be paying for it.

      Companies work best that profit most. Why spend money on ads if they don't work? Ads that don't work are lost profit.

      Inevitably, this is an attempt to control and limit debate and free discussion.

      No, actually it's an extension of the existing laws to control spending in political elections, which just happens to wind up limiting free speech. The ATTEMPT was to limit over-the-top spending, but the RESULT was limiting speech.

      Perhaps this argument will make it clearer to those in power that the campaign finance laws (which are Federal Election Commission rules and not FCC rules) are stupid and ineffective and should be repealed. The mainstream media didn't object, but now if the bloggers and other net users speak up, maybe something good will happen.

    104. Re:Lovely Omission by IAmTheDave · · Score: 1

      My biggest concern is pandering to any group - the constitution should not seperate anyone out based on anything. Now granted, one of the replies to my initial post did make exception to those owned by others, but luckily it didn't say anything about a particular race or creed or sexual orientation or sex or religion...

      I guess if the ERA must move forward, lets just make it vauge enough to read "no person" - not "women" or "african americans" or "homosexuals" or whatever. Because in 20 years, we'll be divided along yet another barier I'm sure.

      --
      Excuse my speling.
      Making The Bar Project
    105. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      "Unfortunately, in many cases, paid advertising IS mind control."

      Bullshit. First, if you're thinking the unwashed, stupid, naive, and influenced need protection, or shouldn't have as much of a say as you (aka fascism). That's normally the line of some hypocritical conservative, not a liberal.

      Paid advertising to me is not mind control. It's information. I can edit out ads on recordings (usually legal except DMCA issues), change the channel or tune out, get up to get a snack or go to the bathroom, etc. If I get a negative ad, I do research to see if any facts have been distorted, who the organization (e.g. moveon.org) is that supported it and which candidate they are backing, etc.

      Second, I would even dare say that many of these "mind control" ads did the exact opposite they were intended to do, which is great evidence that they are NOT mind control. Moveon.org ads pissed off a lot of conservatives, so much so that a lot got off their asses and voted FOR George W.

    106. Re:Lovely Omission by bannerman · · Score: 1

      2. Article I Section II establishes the disparate value of free whites and "all other persons":

      "Representatives and direct taxes shall be apportioned among the several states which may be included within this union, according to their respective numbers, which shall be determined by adding to the whole number of free persons, including those bound to service for a term of years, and excluding Indians not taxed, three fifths of all other Persons."


      Aside from excluding Native Americans from the census (they weren't and in many cases still aren't citizens of the USA) it seems that they were just giving a break to states with a high population of slaves. It doesn't mention race. The point is, free black people seem to be given the same value here as whites. Not that it has anything to do with the main topic...

      --
      I keep forgetting my place. Jesus is for losers. Why do I still play to the crowd?
    107. Re:Lovely Omission by Procyon101 · · Score: 1

      You still need a "based on" clause, since some things (like criminality) should be segregated in the law in most people's opinion. The current text, Section 1, "Equality of rights under the law shall not be denied or abridged by the United States or by any state on account of sex." seems appropriate, not singling out women. I'd like that last part to read "on account of race, sex, religion, or foreign national origin", but that might be asking for an unrealistic freedom utopia :) The current text of the 15TH allows congress to restrict or grant rights to individual races as long as they don't interfere with their right to vote.

    108. Re:Lovely Omission by floorgoblin · · Score: 0

      Just to point this out, although I shouldn't have to, the parent of this was refering to the actual constitution because IT'S parent was stating his belief that the Equal Rights Amendment is unnessecary, which is a statement that a lot of freed slaves might have disagreed with.

    109. Re:Lovely Omission by kmactane · · Score: 1

      You expected the editors to actually check the facts first? You must be new here.

    110. Re:Lovely Omission by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 1

      I just don't happen to know any billionaires off the top of my head who are active politically and primarily support Republican, conservative or libertarian causes in the U.S. with hundreds of millions (or billions, since you suggest a 100 to 1 ratio) of dollars every year. They may exist, as I only personally know the politics of a few billionaires.

      However, I'm sure with your opinions, you'll be able to come up with a few. Here's a list of billionaries as a starting point for you.

      I'd like to hear about this breed of billionaires you speak of. Maybe I can hit one up for some money for a good cause.

      Back in reality, the Democratic party in the U.S. gets much more of it's contributions from large individual contributions than the Republican party does, both in terms of percentage of contributions and in terms of total contributions.

      --
      The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
    111. Re:Lovely Omission by StopSayingYouSir · · Score: 1
      1. Most TV news is available over public airwaves, web content is available at privately owned websites.

      Ah, but web content often passes through public networks to get from the server to you.

      2. Watching campaign ads via television is a pretty passive experience. I'm watching a show, and suddenly I'm unexpectedly watching a commercial about how Senator So-And-So eats babies and burns down orphanages. That's fine, comes with the territory, but it's not like I asked to be shown a political ad. On the internet, however, if I'm reading a story about Senator So-And-So's views on an issue, it's really likely that I went looking for that information on my own.

      You might have had a point about 10 years ago, before banner ads, pop-ups, and flash ads existed. Internet advertising is becoming increasingly passive as time goes on. Just yesterday I visited a site which started playing a commercial -- an actual made-for-TV commercial, audio and all -- in flash form in the corner of the screen. Completely unsolicited by me, and completely unrelated to the content of the page I was trying to view.

      The internet is becoming more and more like TV every day (and vice versa, to some extent). I think it's entirely appropriate that they be treated similarly.

    112. Re:Lovely Omission by MrFrank · · Score: 1

      And this got modded up how?

      Good call, let us compare conservative billionaires to a man who killed millions of people for no reason other than their relgious backgroud, color of their skin, or personal beliefs.

      It is time people stepped back and quit comparing people to Hitler. It only goes to bolster his image amongst the fruitcakes.

      I don't agree with the GP about billionaires only being liberal. But lets use some common sense here.

    113. Re:Lovely Omission by Coniptor · · Score: 1

      "Staying more on topic, I'd like to know why ANYONE in Congress is allowed to attach a rider that doesn't have a thing to do with the original bill. Congress would have to change their rules to prevent it, but both major parties apparently are addicted to this sort of nonsense."

      My parents are Republican. I have registered as Republican and Libertarian and am now leaning towards independant. I find my self agreeing more with Libertarian views than Republican or Democrat views although I agree with them over Libertarian views on occasion. Anyway I agree with you on what I quoted from you above. I don't have the time in my life right now to look into this but would gladly help and work with others who have the time if we could get this damned loophole or whatever anyone wants to call it CLOSED. It's not good for either of the two major parties or any of the smaller parties. I'm a member of the EFF and FSF and would love to sign on with anyone organizing to start doing something about problems in the system such as this. Has anyone organized over this who isn't dormant and still has steam?

    114. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Everything has a slant. There's no such thing as "unbiased".


      Hmm...I'd say that was relatively unbiased. Except...maybe you're just biased against unbias.

      Unbiased biased unbias hater!

      [english parser stack overflow...brain dumped...please press enter]
    115. Re:Lovely Omission by glasseyetiger · · Score: 1

      "Those of us who agree with the Constitution"... "wish the bill was simply to delete all of the laws that prohibit political speech in the U.S. That way maybe people who aren't billionaire liberals like George Soros might be able to compete without having to hire a bunch of lawyers first to find the loopholes."

      Are you really serious? You want to remove limits to campaign contributions so that campaigns will cost LESS? Either you're engaging in doublespeak, or you have NO clue how the world works! Without limits to campaign contributions, every add you saw on TV would be a campaign add, because they'd have trillions of dollars!

    116. Re:Lovely Omission by sustik · · Score: 1

      I am confused and not sure who is a 'blogger' and what is a blog anymore. I thought that a blog basically is a web page by some individual. (Do I need some special blogging software if I want to be a blogger?)

      So what is not clear is why anyone is restricted by putting up a web page with their opinion on it? This is in no way at odds with restricting what someone can say who is PAID (compensated) for it, and so I thought that is what the campaign finance reform addresses.

      For example a conservative(liberal) talk show host can say what they want as long as they express their opinion and they are not subsidized by some party, political group etc. (under the scope of the campaign finace laws), that is he/she is not paid for the content but for the service as a talk show host. From the media company's point of view they should simply pay someone whose opinion/drivel draws in audiences that pays thier bills. The media company should not care what these opinions are actually (within law, like no CIA agent identity revealed in the process, etc.) and should not air or suppress opinions,because someone handed them some money.

      So briefly, why this decision restricts me from putting up political speach on my website?

    117. Re:Lovely Omission by dangitman · · Score: 1
      For the rest of you, if you're in favor of regulations on free speech, then just come out and say so.

      But it's not. It's regulation of political funding, not speech. It doesn't cost anything to run a blog. So, who's stopping you from expressing yourself, just because you don't get paid to run disguised political ads? Calling this a "freedom of speech" bill is just propaganda.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    118. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hate it when you dipshits post JEs and then disable comments so people can't embarrass and expose you as the moron you are.

      POP QUIZ: How many of the people quoted in your JE launched a pre-emptive invasion of Iraq on false and manipulated intel?

      Oh, yea, thought so, dumbass.

    119. Re:Lovely Omission by SengirV · · Score: 1

      Have you gone into the Political part of /. ? I have an turned tail as I quickly saw critical thinging as a laibility there. I did however notice that you do not object when there are glaring omissions in the left leaning articles cited there.

      --

      Prof. Farnsworth - "Oh a lesson in not changing history from Mr I'm-My-Own-Grandpa!"

    120. Re:Lovely Omission by Tetsujin28 · · Score: 1

      Ok, so I'm dusted. I see that the most liberal of parties opposes what is effectively Free Speech and the party which brought us the Patriot Act is advocating the it.

      Oh, you mean the Patriot Act which every voting Democrat senator supported, except one?

      --
      - - - -
      The real Tetsujin 28 is a giant robot.
    121. Re:Lovely Omission by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      However, I'm sure with your opinions, you'll be able to come up with a few

      A few? Most of them do that, although their activities are usually marked "special interest", like, say, the Walton's anti-public-school campaigns which are both a "republican" and a "libertarian" cause. Speaking of Waltons, they alone comprise something like 20% of the list of billionaires and you cannot find more fanatical right-wingers then they are.

      Back in reality, the Democratic party in the U.S. gets much more of it's contributions from large individual contributions than the Republican party does, both in terms of percentage of contributions and in terms of total contributions.

      Yes, specially the likes of Howard Dean, no? Speaking of contributions, where do you pull your numbers out of, your ass as usual? Here is what Washington Post has on this, which mentions a 3:1 ratio of big businesses and their owners (read: billionaires and millionaires) support for Republicans vs Democrats (in 2002). Unless of course you consider organized labour being "a billionaire".

    122. Re:Lovely Omission by ShagratTheTitleless · · Score: 0
      Ah, there's the Why, a loophole for Campaign Finance law.

      Free speech IS a loophole for campaign finance law. As it always has, democracy will rely on peoples ability to separate purchased "opinion" and that tainted by self interest from unbiased truth. I look forward to the day that John McCain and his ilk from across the isle will have their cure all elixir of Finance Reform and Speech Limits rammed down their throat by a wiser public.

      --
      Sometimes at night I imagine the darkness is filled with horrible things with too many teeth, like Julia Roberts.
    123. Re:Lovely Omission by nwbvt · · Score: 1
      "The heading Democrats Defeat Online FOS Act and omission of the Why certainly colours this article."

      It did say why. Its in the second sentence of the summary.

      The Online Freedom of Speech Act was defeated in the House of Representatives yesterday. The Act would have immunized political bloggers from having to comply with hundreds of pages of FEC rules.

      Now what rules other than those dealing with political campaigns would the FEC enforce against political bloggers? If you read the words "Freedom of Speach" and automatically thought they were talking about the heinous act of banning curse words instead of the admirable act of banning talk about politics, thats your problem.

      No, it didn't specify exactly why Democrats opposed it, but then again it didn't specify why Republicans supported it, either. Try reading the summary before you cry about how horrible it is that /. sides with the Republicans on one single issue.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
    124. Re:Lovely Omission by rho · · Score: 1
      Man, doesn't it suck when media bias swings against you?

      Kind of how it gets annoying when every article concerning Iraq begins, "The utter failure of the Bush administration in Iraq has produced a new horror today. Two people were killed in a car bomb, overshadowing the Iraqi vote for a new Constitution."

      --
      Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
    125. Re:Lovely Omission by rho · · Score: 1

      I haven't noticed much of a right, or even center-right economic leaning in 5 or more years on Slashdot. That you think Slashdot has much of a right-leaning anything says quite a lot about you and your politics.

      --
      Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
    126. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Libertarians aren't righty either, you can't really place Libertarians on a political spectrum as they end up being Social lefty and Economic righty, so which side do you place them on?

    127. Re:Lovely Omission by UserGoogol · · Score: 1

      Hmm... I don't know. Speech is not an excuse for any action. For example, it's illegal to kill people, even if you're killing people as a form of expression. Thus, you need to look at both the speech and non-speech aspects of an action.

      Campaign financing is not merely the expression of an idea, but also the giving of money, and that second part is very serious and perhaps even dangerous. First, that seems to make it commerce, thus putting it under the domain of the commerce clause. (And it seems to me that since national elections are an activity between the states, logically if money is exchanged during that proccess they become a form of "commerce between the states.")

      But more generally, giving money can be considered to be giving power. Power is very integral to the nature of a politician, and by extension the nature of government. Thus from a philosophical perspective, regulating the powers of politicians seems like a perfectly sensible act of self-regulation.

      (I suppose my exact phrasing would thus make it only possible to regulate the campaign contributions of people who eventually win, which might be an interesting distinction from the current system.)

      --
      "Never attribute to malice that which can be adequately explained by stupidity." -- Hanlon's Razor
    128. Re:Lovely Omission by kbielefe · · Score: 1
      You're forgetting that campaign finance regulations are self-imposed. Don't think of the regulations as the government restricting the people's freedom of speech, think of them as the result of the leading members of both parties compromising on a set of rules to make it easier to estimate and control their budget and prevent corruption within their own ranks. The original act was passed during the Nixon administration, so I think we've had enough time to determine if it is unconstitutional. I'm as conservative as they come, but I don't want any of my representatives to feel obligated to someone because of the size of their campaign contributions.

      As for people who want to endorse or oppose a candidate in their blog without soliciting contributions, just make it clear that no candidate approved your statement. If you receive more than $1000 a year to make a site dedicated to one candidate or party, and spend more than $250 a year operating the site, then you want to make sure you're following the laws.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank.
    129. Re:Lovely Omission by MagusSlurpy · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but then Big Brother's little brothers will come aknockin' at your door, and when they're done with you, we'll never hear from you again ;)

      --
      My sister opened a computer store in Hawaii. She sells C shells by the seashore.
    130. Re:Lovely Omission by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1

      And I just run across of this little piece of in-depth analysis of Waltons' activities to better illustrate the extensive efforts of the billionaire's in support of various etxreme right-wing causes and the fillantropic disguises they employ to do so.

    131. Re:Lovely Omission by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      Well, it could be the Sean Hannity rule of truth.

      No matter how false soemthing is, keep hammering at it and it'll be true enough in your mind eventually.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
    132. Re:Lovely Omission by Alaska+Jack · · Score: 1

      I basically agree with what you say, with one important distinction (and you may know this already):

      The famous "three-fifths" clause is a little misleading, since southern slaveowners wanted slaves to be counted as a *full* human being, and northern abolitionists didn't want them to count for *anything*. This is because the argument was: How should a state's population be determined, when deciding representation in the House? Obviously, the southern states wanted as large a representation as they could get.

      Like I said, you may know that already, but I think a lot of people probably don't.

            - AJ

    133. Re:Lovely Omission by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      the most liberal of parties opposes what is effectively Free Speech

      Since when are Democrats "the most liberal of parties"? What about socialists?

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    134. Re:Lovely Omission by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 1

      George Soros can spend pretty close to 100% of his income and assets on political speech if he wants.

      That's because he can afford to pay 0.01% of that total on lawyers to setup as many cookie-cutter 527's and campaign commitees as he likes. He also doesn't need to pool his funds with anyone else to afford an expensive advertisement.

      If you want to to the same thing (assuming you aren't as rich), you'll need to also come up with the money for lawyers to find loopholes in campaign finance laws for you. You'll also find that if you want to get together with some other like minded people or give to candidates you like, it's literally a federal offense to spend much unless again, you pay the lawyers.

      That's the problem with the elections regulations we have. It doesn't really stop anyone from spending the money, it just pushes the money into places that lawyers find for their clients, screwing people who can't afford to hire a bunch of lawyers.

      How come the owner of the NY Times can editorialize all he wants in favor of candidates and issues and publicize it to millions of people right up to election day, but you personally and your friends aren't legally allowed to buy an ad in that same paper 30 days before an election? It doesn't sound like that's "protecting" your speech at all, just the speech of big players, primarily to benefit incumbants.

      --
      The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
    135. Re:Lovely Omission by asdfghjklqwertyuiop · · Score: 1

      Ah, but web content often passes through public networks to get from the server to you.


      It does? How often is often? Give examples please. I can't remember seeing a traceroute in the US in recent history that touched anything but private networks unless one of the endpoints was a public institution.

    136. Re:Lovely Omission by Bill+Dog · · Score: 1

      It is time people stepped back and quit comparing people to Hitler.

      I like it. As mentioned by a previous poster, the side of the political spectrum that goes around comparing people to Hitler in doing so end up defeating themselves, by turning swing voters off with their crazy talk. Since I'm on the other side of the spectrum, I say keep up the hysterics.

      --
      Attention zealots and haters: 00100 00100
    137. Re:Lovely Omission by Obfuscant · · Score: 1
      First, if you're thinking the unwashed, stupid, naive, and influenced need protection,

      And just where did you see me say anything even close to this?

      Paid advertising to me is not mind control. It's information.

      It's wonderful that you trust the advertisers to provide accurate information in their advertisements. Please tell me, what "information" is contained in the phrase "zoom zoom zoom"? Please explain what the information that XYZ vaccuum cleaner can pick up a bowling ball if you use a funnel for the attachment means to anyone? Do you believe that people actually need a vacuum cleaner to pick up all the stray bowling balls laying around the house?

      I can edit out ads on recordings (usually legal except DMCA issues), change the channel or tune out, get up to get a snack or go to the bathroom, etc.

      I fail to see the relevance.

      Second, I would even dare say that many of these "mind control" ads did the exact opposite they were intended to do,

      That is why I was explicit in saying not all ads and not all people. The fact that some people voted or buy opposite from what the ads tell them does nothing to disprove that there are a large number of people who are affected by ads and do something they otherwise would not have done. Whether you call that response "mind control" or just "persuasion", it doesn't matter. Advertising works, IN GENERAL, and that is why it is still around. It works just like push-polling works, and spam, and telemarketing, even though lots of people are smart enough to recognize the latter three and react accordingly, a lot do not. That you are able to do so doesn't change the effectiveness overall.

    138. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      I'm a Republican, but I try to have the intellectual honesty to admit when my party has it wrong-- which we often are.

       
      Yeah, I've noticed your party doing that a lot. On Iraq. On Bush. Etc... No, wait, that hasn't happened at all.

    139. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FYI, dems are more anti-free speech than repubs. Dems want to put restrictions on political speech (and enact speech codes -- aka political correctness). Ok, so some repubs want to keep pr0n away from their kids. That is not nearly as bad as trying to put a lid on political discourse (or more accurately dems want to put a lid on political speech they disagree with). Oh, well live in your fantasy world that libs are actually for free speech.

    140. Re:Lovely Omission by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 1

      The Republican Party gets more in "Hard Money" contributions. Even more since BCRA was passed. These are limited to 2K/person/campaign.

      The Democrat Party gets a higher percentage from "Soft Money" contributions and contributions to 527's. These are mostly large dollar contributions by people exceeding the hard money caps.

      Recently, they've had around a 4:1 advantage in 527's. You know, the loop hole in BCRA.

      Also, your washington post article doesn't say what you said it does about 2002.

      --
      The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
    141. Re:Lovely Omission by PenguiN42 · · Score: 1

      The few people I've ever know anyone dumb enough to be swayed by a last minute campaign nasty-ad are also the people who don't trouble themselves to go vote anyway.

      Perhaps, but I bet that in 2004 you knew several people who wouldn't vote for Kerry because he was a "flip-flopper" -- a term that was essentially the kernel of the GOP campaign strategy (hell, they even had a flash animation on their official campaign site called the "flip flop olympics"!!!)

      --
      The following sentence is true. The preceding sentence was false.
    142. Re:Lovely Omission by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 1

      The anti-Walton biased article is able to come up with about 2-3 million in potitical donations, and whines about all their charitable donations not being to the charities The Nation prefers.

      That's not exactly the claimed 100 times what Soros spend politically every year. Soros spent 27 million just to try and defeat Bush in the last election.

      Heck, liberal Bill Gates spends more on liberal causes than the whole family of Walton's do on politics. Not to mention Paul Allen, etc...

      --
      The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
    143. Re:Lovely Omission by kalinh · · Score: 1

      > Since when are Democrats "the most liberal of parties"? What about socialists?

      You can't be seriously so out of touch with political discourse to think liberalism, at any point along it's centuries of history, let alone as a whole tradition has anything to do with socialism. Socialists are anti-liberal almost by definition.

      Hit the books young man!

      --

      Metamuscle.com - News in the Iro

    144. Re:Lovely Omission by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      Recently, they've had around a 4:1 advantage in 527's. You know, the loop hole in BCRA.

      And the "conservatives" and "libertarians" had a severe advantage in stealth donations outside of direct political contributions to institutions such as Heritage Foundation, Cato Institute, Christian Right organizations and many, many others, completely hidden from these inane BCRA regulations. They also outright own the FOX TV network and Clear Channel, both explicitely tasked with "conservative" propaganda mission, which amounts to hundreds of radiostations thoughout USA and also have major editorial control over CNN and other "mainstream" media, which is doubly disturbing in the light of an incessent propaganda campaign by the right-wingers to label all media not completely controlled by them as "liberally biased". There is at this point no major media distribution network in the US which is not under "conservative" control (save the Internet) and that situation should be counted as an extreme case of campaing contributions by the owners of those networks (in billions of dollars per year). George Soros can't hold a candle to these people.

      Also, your washington post article doesn't say what you said it does about 2002.

      Quote:

      In 2002, with the end-of-the-cycle reports still to be filed, the flow of cash to Democrats has fallen slightly to $121 million, while contributions to Republicans have ballooned to nearly $213 million.

      That is nearly 2:1 advantage. (I made a typo saying 3:1, as 3:1 applies only to the drug industry).

    145. Re:Lovely Omission by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      and whines about all their charitable donations not being to the charities The Nation prefers.

      No it "whines" about these "charities" being stealth contributions to the "conservative" or "libertarian" causes, far outsripping the "official" contributions, made in order to hide them, and to create a misleading impression vs. someone like George Soros who does not play these dishonest games with his donations. If one gives a huge pile of money to Heritage Foundation or Cato Institute, even though they are not explicitely labelled "For Republicans" these donations are political and to right-wing causes. You can pretend and call them "charity" all you want but it fools noone.

      That's not exactly the claimed 100 times what Soros spend politically every year. Soros spent 27 million just to try and defeat Bush in the last election.

      Which is a puny fraction of money donated by the likes of Waltons, for example, to fund an effort to privatize education (to the tune of over $100 million per year to various anti-public school organizations alone).

      Heck, liberal Bill Gates spends more on liberal causes than the whole family

      Gates? Liberal? What causes? Last time I heard that weasel was desperately trying to appease everybody to create his "legacy" image of a great "phillantropist" (and to stuff his pockets some more in the process as a side effect of his "donations").

    146. Re:Lovely Omission by instarx · · Score: 0, Troll

      Oh, no doubt about it. You could have your site with .tv tld and most people wouldn't even assotiate it with Tuvalu and you could put whatever you like on it and host it in China or Cuba or Venezuela.

      Except that YOU live in the US. I think the rationalizaton that it would be easy to circumvent the US law is wrong. You create your blog in the US at your keyboard and then just post it offshore. I wouldn't bet my next 10 to 15 years of freedom on the legal theory that the US wouldn't have jurisdiction. I imagine the prosecutor and judge would both have a good laugh when someone tries to use it as a defense. It would be a lot like saying, "Yo, Judge. Yes, I robbed the bank in the US, but I kept the money in the Cayman Islands - you have no jurisdiction!"

    147. Re:Lovely Omission by tarogue · · Score: 1

      And yes, "paying for advertising"="speech".

      The difference is the "paying" part. It's not free if you have to pay to be heard.

      --
      Life sucks, but death doesn't put out at all. -- Thomas J. Kopp
    148. Re:Lovely Omission by ZaMoose · · Score: 1

      Here's the problem: the FEC and Congress have been making noises about "in kind" contributions - i.e., ones that don't cost money but are of some perceived value. If the DailyKos links to a Democrat's campaign site, the FEC would like to claim that that is, in fact, a campaign contribution "in kind" because it will drive eyeballs to a candidate's site. Imagine the laws they'd put in place on this sort of contribution. Say, for instance, that I, a smalltime blogger, link to a candidate's site. I will drive, at most, a few tens or hundreds of eyeballs to that site per day with my endorsement. DKos gets hundreds of thousands of hits per day, meaning they could drive that many eyeballs to the candidate site of their choice. Now, obviously, a link from DKos (or Instapundit, Olliver Willis, Little Green Footballs, etc.) will be "worth" more than a link from my site, meaning that over the course of an election cycle, the FEC could conceivably limit DKos to a single link, whereas I could well post hundreds based upon the "in kind" "contribution" of a link.

      It's pedantic, it's insane, and the whole McCain-Feingold piece of excrement should have been tossed out by the SCoTUS. Our only hope now is to fire Sen. McCain into space on a rocket-powered Barcalounger and then turn to the rest of the Congress and say "Who's next? Who else wants to limit my speech"?

      --
      I wish I had a kryptonite cross, because then you could keep Dracula and Superman away.
    149. Re:Lovely Omission by saltydogdesign · · Score: 1

      I didn't object to this, actually. I merely defended the person who did. Fact is, glaring omissions rarely get past the group, and that's the important thing -- I'm not an editor, I don't read every article, and I'm not responsible for anything that goes on here except my own comments.

      Frankly, the fact that you would go back and check my comments to see if I raised objections to left leaning articles is a bit bizarre. Besides the kinds of assumptions you have to make to get that to stand up, you clearly have too much time on your hands.

      --
      // This is not a sig.
    150. Re:Lovely Omission by InfoVore · · Score: 1

      And this open a completely different can of worms: Campaign spending "reforms" are, IMO, unconstitutional nonsense. There's nothing in the freedom of speech clause that says its only free speech up to a certain artificially imposed spending limit.

      The Supreme Court caused this horrific mess when they ruled that Money is Speech. If we did not consider money to be speech, then FEC and others would have absolutely no hook to regulate individual speech, other than by the candidates and their campaigns. They could still easily regulate money/contributions, but it would eliminate the "hey, their speech is unfair" effect we see coming to a head in this legislation.

      By declaring that money is a form of speech, SCOTUS effectively birthed a system which makes speech and money interchangeable. This means every time someone modifies how money speech is handled, it slops over onto free speech. Free speech is being attacked by the monied interests because they can now argue that free speech gets an unfair advantage AND violates spending regulations (since free speech is now legally equivalent to money in a campaign, money regulations should apply even if no actual money is involved... its only fair). This essentially mutes any non-monied political players, eg anyone not plugged into one of the big-money organizations/parties/groups/etc.

      We need to call a Constitutional Convention and make a few updates to the U.S. Constititution. One of those amendments should get rid of the whole idea of money-as-speech. Its killing our republican democracy.

      -I.V.

      --
      "These laws they're passing won't even compile anymore, let alone execute." - anon
    151. Re:Lovely Omission by Marxist+Hacker+42 · · Score: 1

      You can't be seriously so out of touch with political discourse to think liberalism, at any point along it's centuries of history, let alone as a whole tradition has anything to do with socialism. Socialists are anti-liberal almost by definition.

      No, that's libertarianism, not liberalism...I'm talking the classing left-to-right spectrum, not just American politics.

      --
      SJW: a person who perceives an injustice, and while correcting it, commits a greater injustice.
    152. Re:Lovely Omission by glasseyetiger · · Score: 1

      So your solution is to throw out the rules, remove all the stopgaps? I really fail to see how that's going to make campaigns cheaper. Sure, contributors wouldn't be hiring lawyers, but come on. Look, the reason I don't make significant contributions to political campaigns (besides the fact that there aren't many candidates that i can get behind) has nothing to do with the expense of lawyers -- it's that, like most Americans, the amount that i could afford to contribute would be a drop in the bucket compaered to what major contributors give. The only people who are annoyed at having to give lawyers a cut are the super rich who HAVE ridiculous amounts of disposable income.

    153. Re:Lovely Omission by revery · · Score: 1

      I respect your honesty on this, but if you read the Constitution, nothing short of an Amendment can allow the Federal government to prevent any speech or press activities. Not even "yelling fire in a crowded theatre" is allowed to be prevented. What is allowed, is that Congress can pass laws that hold people responsible for their actions. Libel, slander, damages and injuries caused by a party yelling fire in a crowded theatre, all of these are acceptable. but as soon as Congress decides to ignore the method for amending the Constitution in favor of just ignoring it altogether (which definitely did not happen for the first time today) then there becomes no issue on which they can't/won't consider ignoring it.

      Campaign finance law, regardless of its desirability or merits, without a question, violates the following part of the First Amendment: Congress shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press, and as such, should only be allowed through a Constitutional Amendment.

    154. Re:Lovely Omission by phlinn · · Score: 1

      It will not make campaigns cheapers, but it will reduce the gap between the power of large and small contributers, and can let poor individuals have a lot more influece via the internet. Money definitively does NOT determine influence in the blogosphere.

      Let D=Donation size
      S=effective speech of a donation
      f(D) is a function determining the overhead cost of donating to a political campaign, from the campaign's point of view.
      S=D-f(D)

      If f(D) is something like "5 log D" (this could also be a constant, or some other function of D), then donating $1024 nets you $974, and donating 256 would net 216. Spending 4 times as much gets you 4.5 times the influence. The cost of carefully documenting donations doesn't matter much to you, but it matters quite a bit to who you are donating to. If they get around limits by having a secondary group do it's own collecting a spending (527 groups for instance) it further insulates politicians from individuals. With totally unlimited campaign requirements, then you can easily donate time and effort instead of money.

      --
      "Pulling together is the aim of despotism and tyranny! Free men pull in all sorts of directions" -- Havelock Vetinari
    155. Re:Lovely Omission by phlinn · · Score: 1

      There was no poison pill here though. There were no admendments or riders. All it did was exempt the ineternet from one exisiting bill which restricts paid political speech.

      --
      "Pulling together is the aim of despotism and tyranny! Free men pull in all sorts of directions" -- Havelock Vetinari
    156. Re:Lovely Omission by StopSayingYouSir · · Score: 1

      So what you're saying is that it never happens, because you haven't seen it happen recently... except for the times when you have?

    157. Re:Lovely Omission by asdfghjklqwertyuiop · · Score: 1

      So what you're saying is that it never happens, because you haven't seen it happen recently... except for the times when you have?


      No. Not what I said at all. Let's break it down a little simpler for you:

      - I find his statement rather unlikely in my experience.

      - I asked him to substantiate his claim, which he hasn't.

      - Almost all of the times I have seen Internet traffic in the US pass through a public network were when the endpoints themselves were public institutions. Think about that for a minute. It doesn't negate my suspicion at all.

      And to clarify "recently": let's say the past 10 years.

    158. Re:Lovely Omission by asdfghjklqwertyuiop · · Score: 1

      s/him/you/g. My bad.

    159. Re:Lovely Omission by _Sharp'r_ · · Score: 1

      I included the couple of hundred thousand they listed for Heritage Foundation or Cato Institute in my "political" contributions total.

      The article pointed out 2-3 million in political contributions and a bunch of charitable stuff. That's all a biased article can come up with, which is a far cry from your supposed 100 times Soros' 27 million plus.

      --
      The party of stupid and the party of evil get together and do something both stupid and evil, then call it bipartisan.
    160. Re:Lovely Omission by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      Good call, let us compare conservative billionaires to a man who killed millions of people for no reason other than their relgious backgroud, color of their skin, or personal beliefs

      You perheaps did not notice but Hitler's racist views were separate from his socio-economic views, which are, for the most part, compatible with the musings of some of the prominent, present-day right-wingers. Pretending that because his evil is nearly universally accepted that it somehow means that the right-wingers could never, ever be even close to his ideas in these specific matters is a dishonest device designed to render any exposition of these positions impossible, lest one "sullies" himself with the comparisons that "bolster one's image amongst the fruitcakes". Whom then to compare the jolly support for unrestrained corporatism, phony "patriotism", "pre-emptive" wars based on lies and all the other striking and major similarities to Hitler? Mussollini? Would that make it more acceptable?

    161. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I sense a deeply buried hurt, a barely-suppressed rage in your writings. Why are you so angry, Nick?
      --
      Sick of pompous windbags? Change "Karma Bonus" modifier to -1 penalty.

    162. Re:Lovely Omission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sry 4 the anonymous bit. I just wanted to translate one of that chaps paragraphs. I am a conservative. I am open about that fact. I find it ironic that the very people who accuse conservatives of being intolerant seem to be the most intolerant...

      So here goes with the translation:

      The heading Democrats Defeat Online FOS Act and omission of the Why certainly colours this article. Why the omission? It appears the article poster favours websites/blogs which are covert mouthpieces of a particular interest group spouting dubious facts and leaving out highly relevant facts. Slashdot has effectively been trolled. Was this intentional, Zonk?

      "colours" translates to "I don't like this person's socio-political viewpoint, but I don't have the cojones to say it outright." "covert mouthpieces" translates to "media orginisations which represent a view other than mine so I'll attempt to discredit them with pejorative language." "particular interest group" translates to "non-liberal (qasp) interest group. So they must be the devil's spawn." I'm not even going to touch spouting...roflmao. Here's the best part. "dubious facts" translates to facts/information/opinions I disagree with." and "leaving out highly relevant facts" translates to "leaving out facts/information/opinions I agree with." Really, I got a good laugh. Finally, "Slashdot has effectively been trolled" translates to "OMG OMG there is a conservative among us!!! DISPARAGE NOW. If we can insult and destroy his reputation quickly maybe he'll go away."

      hit me up at delta778 @ gmail.com
      if you disagree

    163. Re:Lovely Omission by benjamindees · · Score: 1

      Your post is mostly correct, but slightly confused. The Constitution as originally written referred to citizens without defining who citizens were.

      While it most certainly provided for the equality of all citizens, not all people were citizens. It never distinguished between "free" citizens and "non-free" citizens, just citizens and "people" or "residents".

      When born, you were a citizen of your state. US citizens were something else entirely. It wasn't until the Civil War and the 14th Amendment that this issue became confused and the privileges of US citizenship were extended to anyone "born or naturalized in the United States".

      --
      "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
    164. Re:Lovely Omission by Dannon · · Score: 1

      Why are blogs persecuted, but newspapers are not?

      Because, for some reason, the courts and congress have, in their infinite wisdom, decreed that "freedom of the press" applies only to those news media in which an actual printing press is used.

      I'm sure the fact that most such printing-press-related operations tend to be pro-government is completely un-related.

      --
      Good judgment comes from experience.
      Experience comes from bad judgment.
    165. Re:Lovely Omission by leoPetr · · Score: 1

      There are degrees of bias, and there is a huge fucking difference between trying to be objective and trying to lie. Perfect objectivity may be strictly impossible due to the limits of human language, but it can be approximated well enough if one tries.

      --
      My other body is also not wearing any.
  2. FEC....not the FCC by cdrudge · · Score: 4, Informative
    The Act would have immunized political bloggers from having to comply with hundreds of pages of FCC rules.
    FCC - Federal Communications Commission
    FEC - Federal Election Commission

    FCC tells you what you can say on the airwaves. FEC tells you what a politician can say (during elections).

    Learn the difference.
    1. Re:FEC....not the FCC by grimJester · · Score: 1

      Just another way the summary failed to convey that this is about influencing elections. Come on, the name, "Online Freedom of Speech Act" should get the warning bells ringing. It's clearly picked to pre-emptively smear anyone opposing it as "against freedom of speech".

    2. Re:FEC....not the FCC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps you could have simply corrected the individual instead of being a complete dick?

      "Learn the difference."

      Don't be an asshat. People generally have more respect for individuals with low UID's. Don't be that guy.

  3. It's not just blogging! by Kelson · · Score: 5, Interesting

    From TFA, here's the full text of the bill:

    Paragraph (22) of section 301 of the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 (2 U.S.C. 431(22)) is amended by adding at the end the following new sentence: `Such term shall not include communications over the Internet.'.

    That means that, if it had passed, anything posted on the Internet would be exempt from campaign finance laws. That means advertisements, editorials, etc. That means it would be perfectly legal for a political party to use campaign donations to hire people to write political blogs that they might not otherwise have written on their own time, initiative, and opinions. That means hiring people to comment on message boards and other people's blogs. In other words, it means astroturfing.

    You may think this is a good thing, in which case it ought to be extended to the print and real worlds -- just remove all those limitations in the first place. But if you think we should be limiting the effect that money has on election campaigns, what makes the Internet special?

    As it stands, anyone blogging on their own time already has free speech on the internet. So let's not cast this as a blogbing issue.

    1. Re:It's not just blogging! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "That means that, if it had passed, anything posted on the Internet would be exempt from campaign finance laws. That means advertisements, editorials, etc. That means it would be perfectly legal for a political party to use campaign donations to hire people to write political blogs that they might not otherwise have written on their own time, initiative, and opinions. That means hiring people to comment on message boards and other people's blogs. In other words, it means astroturfing."

      Nope, still don't care.

    2. Re:It's not just blogging! by Steve+B · · Score: 5, Insightful
      But if you think we should be limiting the effect that money has on election campaigns, what makes the Internet special?

      The fact that it is uniquely easy for J. Random Citizen to disseminate his own message of rebuttal.

      --
      /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
    3. Re:It's not just blogging! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh no!!!

      FREEDOM to post anything I want on the internet using whatever amount money I feel like spending in order to do it!

      *gasp*

      Good thing that we don't have anything like the right to free speech or anything like that. Because if we had the freedom of speech because then crap like this:

      You may think this is a good thing, in which case it ought to be extended to the print and real worlds -- just remove all those limitations in the first place. But if you think we should be limiting the effect that money has on election campaigns, what makes the Internet special?

      wouldn't make sense.

    4. Re:It's not just blogging! by Whafro · · Score: 1

      I agree with most of what you just said, even though I don't really mind this "astroturfing."

      The only possible objection I would have to removing the limitations on print media, etc. is that there are certain kids and styles of media that actively engage the consumer, and others that passively wait to be engaged by the consumer.

      When you're watching television, and a political advertisement comes on, you did not opt into receiving that communication. You did not seek it out, you did not take the initiative to view it. The same is true of direct mail-- it came into your mailbox, and so you're going to at least give it a cursory look.

      Blogs and many other types of print media are of the passive variety. Rarely do you actually stumble onto a blog, or feel compelled to go searching the blogworld for political rantings. This is the kind of stuff you actively seek out, and I don't mind there being no limitations on that kind of thing, since its value as a mass marketing tool is far weaker than the more active kinds of media.

      So yeah, I would be in favor of removing limitations on blogging, handing out leaflets, publishing pamphlets and such that are handed out at booths or left in accessible places for people to take if they want one.

      I can see the harm in one candidate spending millions on television advertising and the other spending thousands, and likewise with direct mail, telephone solicitations, and radio advertising. But I can't see someone saying "damn, he won because he had sixteen blogs going, and we only had four!" Nor can I see someone saying "those leaflets that he was handing out left and right really just killed our chances!"

      Passive media* is just not effective enough to have a drastic effect on an election, in my opinion. Things may change, and I might reconsider at that time, but right now, I'd advocate the removal of such restrictions.

      *(I'm just making that term up, it may be an actual term that I've consistently used incorrectly throughout, and apologize if that's the case)

    5. Re:It's not just blogging! by Irish_Samurai · · Score: 1

      I'm going to do something that doesn't happen alot on /. - I'm going to say that I don't really understand how this affects me. I have a crappy little website where I do the typical rant and rave thing on any subject that I fancy to. During election times I like to call all of the canidates idiots and such and point out their shortcomings. You know, real mature stuff.

      How does this affect me? Will I be told to stop if some political group decides that I have been funded to say such things? Will someone attempt to have my host locked down the domain during elections?

      I am truly ignorant here and would like to know if I need to start saving money for a lawyer or not.

    6. Re:It's not just blogging! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
      That means it would be perfectly legal for a political party to use campaign donations to hire people to write political blogs that they might not otherwise have written on their own time, initiative, and opinions. That means hiring people to comment on message boards and other people's blogs.
      You mean like MoveOn.org does already?
    7. Re:It's not just blogging! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you underestimate the power of the internet. If one wants to make decisions about a subject, one tries to find information about said subject.

      If this passed could media outlets do interviews with political bloggers as independents and not subject to the laws of equal time? Could one essentially get paid people on television with campaign money by creating 'experts' in the blog world that could then not be restricted to the same rules as normal paid people?

      There seem to be a lot of ways to channel campaign money into the foray using this, it will make a difference.

    8. Re:It's not just blogging! by mtaht · · Score: 1

      Hear, Hear! The railroad for this bill was at full steam and at least is now temporarily off the tracks. It's not about free speech, but about paid-for political speech - anyone remember the scandals about secret payoffs to bloggers from last election? Passing this bill as is would lead to political splogging on an intense scale. Yuck.

    9. Re:It's not just blogging! by TGK · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think that you've touched on something really important here without even realizing it.

      When you're watching television, and a political advertisement comes on, you did not opt into receiving that communication. You did not seek it out, you did not take the initiative to view it. The same is true of direct mail-- it came into your mailbox, and so you're going to at least give it a cursory look.

      What makes those different than the so called "astroturfing" that is mentioned in the grandparent? Quite simply, it is that these are overt and obvious attempts by a campaign to sway your opinion. Astroturfing and blogs (at present) don't have the same kind of restrictions.

      I'm not saying that J. Random Citizen's blog should say "Paid for by J. Random Citizen" at the bottom of each post, but if J. Random Citizen is, in fact, J. Random Campaign Employee, then it definately should make very clear that these views are being paid for by a campaign.

      When Senator Kerry or President Bush's ads ran last year, we saw the "I'm John Kerry/George Bush and I approved this message" at the end.

      Slap that kind of a regulation into place and then rewrite the law to indicate that only individuals not compensated by, or directly volunteering for a regulated political party/action committee/organization are exempt.

      Otherwise, you're turning a decent law into a gaping loophole.

      --
      Killfile(TGK)
      No trees were killed in the creation of this post. However, many electrons were inconvenienced.
    10. Re:It's not just blogging! by div_2n · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Which should not be affected by this anyway. What WOULD cause J. Random Citizen problems is if he was being paid by a political candidate or related entities. Free speech is what it is. Paid speech isn't. Unless I'm missing something.

    11. Re:It's not just blogging! by Kelson · · Score: 1

      I have a crappy little website where I do the typical rant and rave thing on any subject that I fancy to. During election times I like to call all of the canidates idiots and such and point out their shortcomings.

      It shouldn't affect you at all. As long as you're not getting money from the official campaigns, you can rant all you want -- with or without this legislation.

    12. Re:It's not just blogging! by Whafro · · Score: 1

      What makes those different than the so called "astroturfing" that is mentioned in the grandparent? Quite simply, it is that these are overt and obvious attempts by a campaign to sway your opinion. Astroturfing and blogs (at present) don't have the same kind of restrictions.

      I have absolutely no problem with a campaign trying to sway your opinion. That's what they are supposed to do.

      What I may have a problem with is taking a limited resource (time on the airwaves, signs in Times Square, for instance) and consuming a large percentage of that, when the consumers aren't making the choice to become consumers of that information.

      Actually, I would be perfectly fine with a campaign being given a television channel all to themself, where they could put up propaganda 24 hours a day. You'd have to seek it out and actively choose to partake in viewing it. It would be a flop-- no one would watch it, no one would care about it.

      Blogs are the same to me. It's an unlimited resource. You're not walking down the street and seeing a major storefront plastered with campaign signs. You're not taking up one fifth of the available commercial time during Monday Night Football. It's just another site, one of billions, and a practically infinite number more can be made by almost anyone. People will seek it out and read it if they care, and if they don't, they'll never know that it was there in the first place.

      People aren't given the opportunity to read a blog, they seek the opportunity. So who cares?

    13. Re:It's not just blogging! by Kelson · · Score: 2, Informative

      As I recall, MoveOn is an organization like, say, Swift Boat Veterans for Truth which has an agenda that aligns with a political party but (theoretically) isn't officially tied to that party's fundraising machine. If either group got money from the Bush or Kerry campaign, that's a violation, but as long as they do their own fundraising, they're already exempt -- whether they're on the Internet or not.

      It's all about where the money's coming from.

    14. Re:It's not just blogging! by Kelson · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Good point about limited vs. unlimited resources. If we're just talking about blogs, or individual websites, it comes down to the poster's honesty. ("I'm saying X because I believe it" vs. "I'm saying X because the campaign paid me to say it.")

      But we're not just talking about blogs and individual sites.

      This bill would have made it perfectly legal for the Democratic party to buy every single ad space on CNN. Obviously this is an extreme case -- it would be too expensive and wouldn't return on the investment -- but it should illustrate the point that any regulation that affects print, television, etc. would have been circumvented simply by distributing something over the net. And we're moving toward distributing everything over the net.

      Radio? Broadcast over the web instead of the air, and your restrictions are gone.
      Newspapers? Switch from paper to the web. Same thing.
      TV? We keep hearing about broadband becoming the new method of distribution, and we're starting to see it with ITMS.
      Movies? Same as TV.
      Phones? VOIP.

      Think of anything that campaign finance laws limit. Now, pretend you want an IT patent and add the words "on the Internet."

    15. Re:It's not just blogging! by Irish_Samurai · · Score: 1

      Thanks.

      Off to waste the potential of my useless corner of the internet.

    16. Re:It's not just blogging! by Damek · · Score: 1

      ...it is uniquely easy for J. Random Citizen to disseminate his own message of rebuttal.

      Kind of. It still takes time to do it, time to publicize/advertise it so people actually come look at it, and money to pay for bandwidth/server space. Yeah, it's easier for J. Random Citizen to disseminate his own message, but not if J. Citizen needs to hold down a paying job in addition to doing this.

      V. Wealthy Entity can come along and pay tens or hundreds of people to spend all day writing blogs and comments and what have you, and suddenly they have the advantage.

      Money still makes a difference.

    17. Re:It's not just blogging! by ifwm · · Score: 1

      You are

    18. Re:It's not just blogging! by spitzak · · Score: 1

      J Random Citizen will have a pretty hard time doing that if the Internet is swamped with paid-for political messages.

    19. Re:It's not just blogging! by oni · · Score: 1

      As it stands, anyone blogging on their own time already has free speech on the internet.

      You're going to end up eating those words. The FEC or FCC or some overbearing federal department is going to come down on your ISP and say, "you host web pages that benifit a particular candidate. Those web pages are an in-kind donation to that candidate. Therefore, you have to pay taxes on those donation, limit the donations, fill out all this paperwork, etc. etc. ISPs are going say, "screw this!" and just change their TOS and cut you off if you have political content on your website.

      If you were really honest with yourself, you have to admit that you would support this if the democrats were behind it. As for me, I'm a die-hard Libertarian. I think it should even be legal to shout fire in a crowded theater, to use the oft-sided excuse for limiting your rights (though it should be illegal to falsely incite panic).

    20. Re:It's not just blogging! by Procyon101 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Doubtful. The internet is swamped by paid for porn advertisments and penis enlargement pills... but I still found your comment to reply to. The signal to noise ratio on the internet is very low and no amount of legislation will change that. DISTINCT messages still seem to get through (thanks to search technologies and "reputation"). Constricting new content is not the way to improve signal.

    21. Re:It's not just blogging! by dangitman · · Score: 1
      You're going to end up eating those words. The FEC or FCC or some overbearing federal department is going to come down on your ISP and say, "you host web pages that benifit a particular candidate.

      You're just being ridiculous. And ISP is not a poltical candidate. I believe there are also communication regulations about "common carriers" which isolate ISPs from the content they host.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    22. Re:It's not just blogging! by TGK · · Score: 1

      My point was that in traditional media the campaign has to SAY that the communication is from the campaign. No such laws exist for internet based communication.

      --
      Killfile(TGK)
      No trees were killed in the creation of this post. However, many electrons were inconvenienced.
  4. That's a switch by gregjmartin · · Score: 0

    I thought the Dems were the standard bearers for free speech...

    1. Re:That's a switch by jeremycobert · · Score: 3, Insightful

      they are, as long as you agree with them :)

    2. Re:That's a switch by mrchaotica · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but they aren't the standard-bearers for astroturfing.

      (At least not in this case, anyway)

      --

      "[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz

    3. Re:That's a switch by kalel666 · · Score: 1

      They are, just ask Lawrence Summers.

      --
      I HAVE CUBIC WISDOM THAT TRANSCENDS AND CONTRADICTS ONE DAY GODS
    4. Re:That's a switch by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    5. Re:That's a switch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As usual, we have trolls who don't RTFA, know what they are responding to, and like to shoot from the hip!!

      I'm so glad today is like every other day!!!

    6. Re:That's a switch by dgatwood · · Score: 2, Informative
      Even the Democrats believe in time, place, and manner restrictions, which the FEC rules fall within.

      There are lines between political speech and paid political speech. As long as somebody is speaking his/her mind without being paid, free speech for political reasons is nearly absolute (short of slander and libel, but even then, the burden of proof bar is set pretty high). As soon as money changes hands (e.g. a person being paid to say that a candidate is wonderful, someone being paid to say that they use brand x toothpaste when they really use brand y, etc.), the rules change dramatically and always have.

      The bill, as written, would have substantially blurred those lines. If you are taking money from any political group, whether through ad revenue or otherwise, you have an obligation to disclose this fully. That's what these laws are about. It's that simple. Exempting bloggers and online communication would just mean a whole new flock of internet advertising with no money trail, potentially with the ability to say nearly anything, no matter how outrageous, and get away with it. Astroturfing is just the tip of the iceburg. Under the relaxed rules proposed, we could see all-out news stories that border on political party-financed libel, again with no disclosure.

      I'm not saying that I think bloggers should have to go through the same legal hurdles as somebody doing ad copy for the RNC, but to say that all internet communication across the board is exempted, and to not put -any- rules on blogging (including blogging that is paid for by advertising dollars from political groups) would be disastrous.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    7. Re:That's a switch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It just figures that someone would mod this 'flamebait.' If the same were said of the Republicans, it would have been modded 'insightful.' Once you realize that both parties have only one agenda--to get or stay in power--you also realize that their suppossed positions on issues are merely means to that end. Because both parties pander to the 80% who are easily swayed in this mindless war of demagoguery and rhetoric, the first casualty is usually the truth. Democracy is doomed.

    8. Re:That's a switch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Knowledge is power...

      Liberals hate that!

    9. Re:That's a switch by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      That's the amusing part about liberals. They claim all the time how tolerant they are, how intolerant everyone else is, and how all about free speech they are.

      But if you disagree with them, they'll hold petitions and scream in your face, call you an idiot, throw Oreo cookies at you (Democrats threw cookies at a black Republican politican and called him "Uncle Tom"), and make commercials comparing you to Hitler.

      Liberal tolerance extends so far as the party line. :) In truth, they're as intolerant as everyone else who has a political viewpoint. And they're funded by big shadowy billionaires like George Soros, so the "greedy" claims they make about Republicans and their money also falls apart.

      Yep, Virginia, you're all idiots too. :)

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    10. Re:That's a switch by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is up to when the speech is against them.... Politics is still politics. Most if not all politicians no matter what party hate being cast into a "bad" light so they want to ban all negative press or speech against them so they could stay in office longer for their poltical cronnies where as we don't have the money or say now.

    11. Re:That's a switch by stlhawkeye · · Score: 1
      I thought the Dems were the standard bearers for free speech...

      They aren't, because they are politicians and politicians are never the standard bearers of free speech. People are. And politicians aren't people!

      --
      "I have never won a debate with an ignorant person." -Ali ibn Abi Talib
    12. Re:That's a switch by samschof · · Score: 1

      You are missing the point. If you are paid to shill by a candidate, you should disclose it. The problem with campaign finance restrictions is when you are paying to speak your mind. Say you run a popular blog and pay $500 a month for bandwidth. By endorsing a candidate you may violate campaign finance rules since you are contributing money, in the form of advertising and bandwidth, to a candidate. This is the problem. It becomes more pronounced for the larger blogs (Daily Kos, Instapundit, etc) whose bandwidth costs are substantial and require outside funding to pay the bills. They can easily pass monetary thresholds required for enforcement of the laws.

      A recent case in Washington illustrates exactly this problem. Radio personalities in Seattle had been speaking out against a gax tax proposal. The local government decided that amount to an in-kind contribution to the anti-gas tax campaign, so they violated campaign finance rules. They were expressing their own opinion and were not paid to by gas tax foes. This same scenario applies to internet speech. If you pay for bandwidth and express an opinion, you may be violating election laws.

      I don't think this is what free speech in a democracy is: say what you want, just don't spend too much money doing it, and be careful in which format you choose to speak, and try not to mention candidates by name.

    13. Re:That's a switch by dgatwood · · Score: 1
      I'm not missing the point. The law that the Democrats rejected would have allowed paid shills to do so without disclosure as long as they operated exclusively on the 'net. The loophole introduced was orders of magnitude too broad, and as such, was ripe for abuse.

      Creating protection for bloggers must be very, very carefully written to avoid creating such massive holes in campaign finance laws. Adding the words "except for communication on the Internet" to the existing laws doesn't meet that standard....

      The radio personality issue is a grey area. I won't attempt to give an opinion, as I don't have all the information presented in that particular case.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    14. Re:That's a switch by samschof · · Score: 1

      The point of the legislation was to remove the ambiguity regarding in kind contributions with respect to internet sites. If you believe that government should not allow people to spend too much money to advocate their position, then you can argue that this particular exemption was overly broad, but it does not alleviate the obvious need for free speech protections for individual bloggers. You should read the brief submitted by the EFF in regards to FEC regulation of the internet.

    15. Re:That's a switch by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Here's what I believe. I believe our election system is fundamentally broken at nearly every level. I believe that those restrictions are a good start towards where things need to go.

      In my ideal election system, people would be required to get a certain number of signatures to appear on the ballot. The government at the appropriate level should allocate a portion of their budget to creating a fund. This fund should be distributed equally to anyone who has obtained sufficient signatures by a certain date.

      Apart from advertisements paid for by those funds, I believe political advertising should be abolished, including -all- third-party campaign ads promoting the election of an individual. (Third-party ads for ballot initiatives are probably okay, since those are inherently fairly local.) I believe that private funding of campaigns should be abolished, since all it really does is ensure that, with very rare exceptions, only career politicians and very wealthy individuals can run for any office above the local (or sometimes state) level.

      If this sort of campaign finance limit were put into place, and third parties (PACs, etc.) were disallowed from paying for advertisements, then this wouldn't be an issue at all, as all candidates would have equal opportunities to advertise, and thus equal opportunities to influence the media, etc. through their contributions.

      Given that such a change to the system is unlikely, though, there are some very narrow changes that could help bloggers without resulting in overly broad loopholes:

      1. The law should allow an exemption for any communication (internet or otherwise) if the person or company receives compensation through a blind trust. For example, if a blogger contracts out to a third party to handle advertising revenue and simply sees the revenue as an aggregate check each month.
      2. The law should provide caps for the amount of money that any organization can give to a single blind trust as a percentage of that trust's total income. The legal burden would thus rest on the shoulders of the manager of that trust. This would limit the ability of a political organization to give money through a blind trust to "pump up" the popularity of someone who agrees with them.

      Without the first change above, free speech is compromised. Without the second change, the system fails to achieve what campaign finance laws are trying to achieve. The problem is that this bill did not contain the second limit.

      And, of course, bloggers with political agendas can steer clear of the situation by simply not accepting advertisements from political groups. If they are popular, they will be able to get plenty of advertisements from other groups wanting their share of those eyes. This avoids the problem entirely. This is not only the most legally safe bet, it is also the most ethical way to proceed, and thus should be encouraged.

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  5. The Relevant Information by byteCoder · · Score: 3, Informative
    Here is the past Slashdot discussion at the bill's introduction. The bill text for HR 1606 can be found here. The bill simply says:
    Paragraph (22) of section 301 of the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 (2 U.S.C. 431(22)) is amended by adding at the end the following new sentence: `Such term shall not include communications over the Internet.'.
    The law being modified can be found on page 11 (PDF page 25) of this (warning: large PDF) document, which simply defines "public communication" as:
    (22) Public communication. The term 'public communication' means a communication by means of any broadcast, cable, or satellite communication, newspaper, magazine, outdoor advertising facility, mass mailing, or telephone bank to the general public, or any other form of general public political advertising.
    1. Re:The Relevant Information by demonbug · · Score: 1
      ...or telephone bank to the general public, or any other form of general public political advertising.

      `Such term shall not include communications over the Internet.'.



      Hmm, phone banks, internet... unrestricted massive batches of VoIP political party calls avoided?

  6. Strange... by ericdano · · Score: 0

    Strange, you'd think the Republicians would have been the ones to oppose it. Things are very strange around the world now....

    --
    It's either on the beat or off the beat, it's that easy.
    I moderate therefore I rule!
    --
    1. Re:Strange... by pl1ght · · Score: 0

      I was thinking the same exact thing actually. I am surprised it was republicans pushing and democrats opposing. this sounds like a liberalized bill imo.

    2. Re:Strange... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only thing strange here is you being befuddled at yet another ridiculously miswritten summary on slashdot that muffs what actually occurred and spouts tenous conclusions that would be spurious even if the core "facts" stated in the summary were in fact true, instead of gross misrepresentations.

    3. Re:Strange... by MrHyd3 · · Score: 0

      Amazing how the media works in the Democrats favor. Democrats love free speech as long as it's "their" speak. If not, you're labeled a Racist, Biggot, Homo-phobe, Nazi, insert-here.

      --
      -------- Of all the things I've lost, I miss my mind the most. --Ozzy
    4. Re:Strange... by smooth+wombat · · Score: 1

      While your thoughts is correct there is a reason that the Democrats opposed this. With the nomination of Alito the White House has asked all the conservative blogs out there for their help in shaping public opinion.

      While this is nothing new, both sides have been doing this since they realized the power of blogs, this also translates to the nonsense that went on in the last presidential election.

      The Republicans ran a better smear campaign but were able to disavow any association with those who opposed Kerry while simultaneously providing these folks with information. Thus the best of both worlds.

      The Democrats don't want a repeat of this and so objected, and now defeated, this measure.

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    5. Re:Strange... by Cereal+Box · · Score: 1

      Don't worry. In a few month's time the Democrats will find a way to make the public think that the Republicans were responsible for this. Remember the draft bill proposed by two Democrats that was widely believed to be Republican sponsored?

    6. Re:Strange... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The Republicans ran a better smear campaign but were able to disavow any association with those who opposed Kerry while simultaneously providing these folks with information. Thus the best of both worlds."

      Gee..'yet another right-wing conspircy'..
      Evident please?
      Hmm..didnt think so..

      Asking for facts of liberals is just begging to be mod'd down..
      In..3..2...1.
      Modded: -4685

      Liberalism: Its the 'alternate' reality!

    7. Re:Strange... by Arandir · · Score: 1

      With the nomination of Alito the White House has asked all the conservative blogs out there for their help in shaping public opinion.

      Wow. I didn't get that memo. Usually I get all my talking points from Georgie, but not this one. I wonder if I've fallen out of grace with Rush? While I did get the memo from Bush telling all us conservative bloggers to vociferously criticize Meiers, I simply do not recall the latest one telling us to shape public opinion around Alito. I'm checking my in-box now... Nope, not there.

      Could you please forward me that memo? Or at the minimum provide a link to objective evidence that there ever was such a memo or order or command from the White House?

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    8. Re:Strange... by smooth+wombat · · Score: 1

      You presume too much.

      Having worked on several campaigns including a presidential campaign, I'm more than qualified to know a smear campaign when I see it.

      Note I didn't say that I supported Kerry. I merely made an observation based upon my experience.

      Nice knee-jerk reaction though.

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    9. Re:Strange... by smooth+wombat · · Score: 1

      Actually, I misquoted. It is not the White House per se but rather the Republican party. I heard the comment the other day. Maybe even the day Alito was nominated.

      I did a quick search after I posted but couldn't find the specific quote I was looking for but I haven't given up. I am still looking for it.

      Bear with me.

      --
      We will bankrupt ourselves in the vain search for absolute security. -- Dwight D. Eisenhower
    10. Re:Strange... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One hand raised.

    11. Re:Strange... by deanj · · Score: 1

      Why would you think the Republicans would oppose it? The Democrats have been having a hemorage about talk radio for years now, and have made several attempts to stop it. From my perspective, if they thought what was being said on talk radio was BS, they should get the facts and point it out at every opportunity, NOT restrict free speech. That'd be as bad as Republicans trying to shut down that liberal talk radio syndicate, Air America. They should BOTH exist. Let the people talk.

      Is it because you think the Democrats always do the right thing?
      Far from it. For example, lately they've been doing things like this:

      http://www.statesman.com/news/content/shared-gen/a p/National/Maryland_Racial_Politics.html

      Not exactly enlightened in this day and age.

    12. Re:Strange... by Arandir · · Score: 1

      [patiently waiting]

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    13. Re:Strange... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Smear campaign" implies telling lies about your opponent. What lies were told about John Kerry? He chose to dodge his (ultra-liberal) Senate voting record and run as a patriot on his war record. The other side simply pointed out that he wasn't so patriotic and his war record wasn't as impressive as he'd lead you to believe. You may be more than qualified to know a smear campaign when you see it, but you're not honest enough to refrain from miscalling one. The only one being false in the last campaign was John Kerry. About himself.

      Besides, a liberal complaining about the other side running smear campaigns is like the wolf complaining that the three little pigs are out to eat him. That's the only thing you guys run on now. Which is why you're losing now.

    14. Re:Strange... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is all just a simple mixup. I can explain. See, the Democrats develop and disseminate weekly "talking points", that they all march in lock-step on on the Sunday talk shows and other media interviews that week. Not knowing any better, they naturally assume the Republicans do the same. Kind of like when Hillary complained about the "vast right-wing conspiracy". It's called "projection". Here's an example: Say you're a kook who likes to peep at your neighbors. You'll likely be very resentful of them, because you'll assume they're peeping at you. And because you're a kook, you won't realize that you're the only creep in that neighborhood. See?

  7. What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is a joke. The Republicans control the House. In the House, the majority does what it wants. While the bill was brought up under a rule that required 2/3rds majority, the Republican leadership could right this very second bring it up as a normal bill that requires only a simple majority.

    It is impossible for the Democrats to stop anything in the House.

    1. Re:What a joke by hanshotfirst · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It was the democrats who stopped this, in this case. Under your premise, if a simple majority were required the bill would have passed the House. According to the heading, the voting was pretty much along party lines, so let's assume that simple majority vote was republican.

      If only a simple majority was needed, the bill would have passed. Instead, the rules required a supermajority, which meant that it would need support from BOTH parties, not just the republican majority. Since the democrats apparently opposed it, that super-majority was not met, thereby blocking the bill by the democrats' action.

      The supermajority requirement actually enabled the minority party to stop the bill, rather than make it impossible.

      --
      Why, oh why, didn't I take the Blue Pill?
    2. Re:What a joke by pmike_bauer · · Score: 1

      You are almost correct. It is impossible for the Democrats to stop anything in the House on their own. If the Republicans don't all band together, the Democrats have enough votes to derail certain bills.

      --
      I read /. for the (Score:-1, Conservative) comments.
    3. Re:What a joke by gsfprez · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The Rs also control the senate, but there are 44 Dems in the Senate...

      and while every single Democrat is against the war today - how was it that the authority to go to war went 99 to nothing in the senate?

      I find it funny that on the War and the Patriot Act, the Dems VOTED lock-step with the Republicans, while a mere 2 years later, are violently opposed to the very things that they voted for?

      Both parties suck in so many ways, its frightening.

      Adults Vote Libertarian.

      --
      guns kill people like spoons make Rosie O'Donnell fat.
    4. Re:What a joke by lbrandy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Is there a bigger indictment of Slashdot's blatant liberalism? +5 insightful for a post that blames Republicans for a Democratic derailment of a bill... Somehow you've actually found a way to blame the Republicans because a bill they supported didn't get passed....

      How clever of those Republicans... to secretly not want the bill passed, and make the Democrats do all the work and take the publicity hit of shooting it down...

    5. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      FYI - you're not going to win people to your cause by calling them children. Good luck, though!

      A lot has come out since the vote on the authorization for Iraq. You already know it's not as simple an issue as you make it out to be, so I won't explain it again for you. As for the PATRIOT Act, there was no time to read the bill due to the way it was proposed. Days after 9/11, Democrats weren't about to vote against a bill that claimed to provide tools for fighting terrorism.

    6. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 1

      Correct, but it's intellectually dishonest to ever say "Democrats defeat bill in House". The Democrats cannot defeat anything.. it will always take some R help.

    7. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 1

      You didn't read. I didn't say a simple majority was required in this case. The bill was brought up under the Suspension Calendar rule, which requires 2/3rds majority. However, nothing is stopping the House leadership from bringing it in under normal procedures, which require only a simple majority.

      The supermajority requirement is a red herring, in this case. I'm not sure why that approach was used, unless it was explicitly designed to make it look like the Democrats are against free speech.

    8. Re:What a joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "..how was it that the authority to go to war went 99 to nothing in the senate?"

      They were lied to, obviously. As were both Dem and Rep on the Patriot Act vote. Welcome to your new pseudo-reality. Pass the Soma.

    9. Re:What a joke by pmike_bauer · · Score: 1

      If they went to a simple up/down, then yes, you couldn't place the responsibility for the bill not passing on the Dems. However, do you actually think the Republicans will change the 2/3 rule they imposed on this bill? Can you imagine the outcry from Polosie and Ried if they did this? Even with the majority, the Republicans are pretty weak in the knees when it comes to bucking the Dems foot dragging.

      --
      I read /. for the (Score:-1, Conservative) comments.
    10. Re:What a joke by gsfprez · · Score: 1

      >A lot has come out since the vote on the authorization for Iraq. You already know it's not as simple an issue as you make it out to be, so I won't explain it again for you.

      i also don't think its as complicated as you make it out to be.. I listed to both sides from 1998-2003, and it wasn't until 2003 that either side made mention that Saddam was NOT, in fact, developing WMDs.

      "Saddam Hussein has been engaged in the development of weapons of mass destruction technology which is a threat to countries in the region and he has made a mockery of the weapons inspection process."
      Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D, CA), Dec. 16, 1998

      "Iraq's search for weapons of mass destruction has proven impossible to deter and we should assume that it will continue for as long as Saddam is in power."
      Al Gore, Sept. 23, 2002

        "The last UN weapons inspectors left Iraq in October of 1998.
      We are confident that Saddam Hussein retains some stockpiles of chemical and biological weapons, and that he has since embarked on a crash course to build up his chemical and biological warfare capabilities.
      Intelligence reports indicate that he is seeking nuclear weapons..."
      Sen. Robert Byrd (D, WV), Oct. 3, 2002

      "I will be voting to give the President of the United States the authority to use force-- if necessary-- to disarm Saddam Hussein because I believe that a deadly arsenal of weapons of mass destruction in his hands is a real and grave threat to our security."
      Sen. John F. Kerry (D, MA), Oct. 9, 2002

      So, we already know that Bush "lied" when he said that Saddam was trying to build WMDs, it turns out that the Democrats, from ex presidents, senators, and presidential canidates for the Democrats lied as well - (seeing as both had the same intel in the Senate Intelligence Committee, they knew better that there were no WMDs.)

      But like i said, i listened to both sides - and they were both saying he was making WMDs - so who was i supposed to believe?

      As a libertarian, i would like to see a massive crash program on nuclear power, drive a hydrogen-powered A4, and let the arabs and jews go back to doing whatever it is that they do to each other out in the dirt of the middle east. I don't care if they hate each other - i just wish we didn't have to get dragged into it.

      --
      guns kill people like spoons make Rosie O'Donnell fat.
    11. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 1

      Look, it's a simple fact that under the House rules, the minority has no power. I challenge anyone to dispute that. If the GOP wanted this bill, it would have been through the House by now. I challenge anyone to dispute that, also.

      How clever of those Republicans... to secretly not want the bill passed, and make the Democrats do all the work and take the publicity hit of shooting it down...

      Agreed.

    12. Re:What a joke by badmammajamma · · Score: 1

      1) they didn't vote for war. They voted for the option for war AS A LAST RESORT. Which for Bush meant "lets wait a week, then invade...". In truth, I'm sure most dems knew that voting for that bill most likely meant war so I won't excuse them.

      2) the "PATRIOT Act" was handled in the most underhanded way imaginable and was released for review by congress at like 3 AM to be voted on in the morning and it's over 300 pages long. Both sides had negotiated exactly what text was to be in the act and there was supposedly agreement on the comprimises. The Dems assumed the Repubs updated the text as agreed and voted accordingly. Oh, and at that time voting against something called the "PATRIOT Act" was political suicide. On this, I completely blame the Republicans.

      --
      Any man who afflicts the human race with ideas must be prepared to see them misunderstood. -- H. L. Mencken
    13. Re:What a joke by giorgiofr · · Score: 1

      As for the PATRIOT Act, there was no time to read the bill due to the way it was proposed. Days after 9/11, Democrats weren't about to vote against a bill that claimed to provide tools for fighting terrorism.

      Yeah I mean, it's not like it's their well-paid job or anything... They're not supposed to be the finest examples of politicians around...

      --
      Global warming is a cube.
    14. Re:What a joke by NaruVonWilkins · · Score: 1

      Every single one of those Democrats said, when voting to allow the President to use the military, that it was because if they didn't, and Saddam had nukes or chemical weapons and used them, it would have been their asses. They also made it very clear in debate that they were trusting the President not to be lying to the American people.

    15. Re:What a joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually I heard that a democrat recently was against the Be Nice to Cuddly-Wuddly puppies act sponsored by Rick Santorum.
      Ain't that just like one a them stinkin' Dems.

    16. Re:What a joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What he's really saying is that many Republicans didn't support the bill either.

    17. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 1

      You're on another planet. First off, the GOP uses parliamentary tactics everyday to do what they want in the Congress. I've got nothing wrong with that.. those rules have been in place for over 200 years, and I think they work well and shouldn't be changed. If the GOP wants to bring up the bill under a normal rule, they can freely do that. I don't know why they chose the Suspension Calendar.

    18. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 1

      I didn't say anything about Bush lying.. you've put that in my mouth. All I said was that a lot of information has come out since then.

      A Republican President, Republican House and divided Senate went forward with war. Clinton and other Democrats made statements about Saddam, yes. They all agreed that we needed to keep an eye on him, which was what the Congressional Resolution was about. What Clinton didn't do was start a war. Note that in the statement you paste above, Kerry says "I will be voting to give the President the authority." That doesn't mean that Bush had to use that authority. Democrats didn't want to end inspections and go home. They wanted inspections and the program to continue. Bush said that the time for inspections was over and it was time for war.

      The reason you didn't hear until 2003 that he wasn't making weapons is because thats when inspectors were let back into the country and they didn't find anything remotely close to a weapons program. They noted that there were discrepancies in inventory and that some weapons were unaccounted for. It would appear that those weapons were destroyed, but we cannot say that with any certainty.

    19. Re:What a joke by Procyon101 · · Score: 1

      On your second point, "I didn't read the bill before I voted for it" is an unacceptable excuse. Sure, I don't expect my representative to read every line of legislation before voting on it, but I *DO* expect every line to have been givin a cursory reading by a member of his staff and glaringly questionable lines brought to their attention so they CAN read it. In the case of 3am releases for 8am votes... screw that, voting yes on such a thing should be political suicide.

      I don't care if the martians just invaded New York, executive power can take care of the today, representative government needs to be reading the frickin bills and any representative who uses the "I didn't read it" on anything is blacklisted in my book.

    20. Re:What a joke by masdog · · Score: 1

      Political suicide? The one senator who voted against the Patriot act was re-elected by an overwhelming majority.

    21. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 0

      Have you ever read a Congressional bill? This thing was 342 pages long and very little time was given to review the final bill before final passage. It doesn't matter how much you're paid. There's simply a limit to how fast one can read and comprehend words.

    22. Re:What a joke by lbrandy · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Look, it's a simple fact that under the House rules, the minority has no power. I challenge anyone to dispute that.

      Disputed.
      That is catagorically not a fact. It is a conclusion drawn, logically, from a set of assumptions. Those assumptions may or may not be true in any particular case. Yes, in a perfectly party-aligned partisan decision, with normal house rules, the minority has no power. I agree. You have made an implied assumption, not stated it, in an attempt to represent a stronger conclusion then is otherwise supportable.

      If the GOP wanted this bill, it would have been through the House by now. I challenge anyone to dispute that, also.

      Disputed.
      You define "wanted" as a binary condition. There are very clearly not equal levels of 'want'. If the Republicans wanted to circumvent the current rules in place, go through the trouble, and get the bill into law, they would. The democrats (and you) would then be whining about abuse of power, and circumvention. There may be bigger tradeoffs at play here, involving why those rules are in play, and what compromises have been reached. I have no idea what the Republicans would have to give up, in terms of agreed compromises, to remove the current set of rules, but I imagine the situation is not nearly as simplified as your oversimplication implies.

      You also conviently forget the opposite position, as well:
      If the Democrats wanted this bill, it would have been through the House by now.

    23. Re:What a joke by pmike_bauer · · Score: 1

      A lot has come out since the vote on the authorization for Iraq.
      Days after 9/11, Democrats weren't about to vote against a bill that claimed to provide tools for fighting terrorism.
      You can't have it both ways. You are claiming that the reason they voted with the Republicans before the '04 election was that they weren't informed and also claim it was because they feared political backlash for opposing the (at the time) popular Patriot act/war/etc. To do this you must also conceed the Dems are ill-informed and tend to have no convictions.

      --
      I read /. for the (Score:-1, Conservative) comments.
    24. Re:What a joke by lgw · · Score: 1

      Time to read it, what about time to write it? You do know Kerry wrote one title of the act, and other Dems contributed, right? Heck, Kerry officially supported the USA-PATRIOT act in his campaign and on his campaign website. I'm with your sibling post: both parties suck in so many ways.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    25. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 1

      You haven't disputed my points. Members of the minority have no power in the House. It takes members of the majority -- the GOP -- to move forward or, with the assitance of the minority, block action. The minority alone has no power. Saying the the Democrats stopped any action in the House is intellectually dishonest.

      The GOP would not have had to circumvent any rules to bring this bill up under normal rules. It's that simple. Why Suspension Calendar was used, I have no idea. The assertions I made are not in dispute. Ask anyone familiar with how Congress works.

      If the Democrats wanted this bill, it would have been through the House by now.

      The reasons why Democrats voted against it have been hashed out in the discussion: Under some interpretations, the bill would have allowed unlimited internet donations.

    26. Re:What a joke by hanshotfirst · · Score: 1

      No argument here, you didn't say that... the heading did (poor wording on my part perhaps?). My point was if it had not been under the Suspension Calendar rule it would have been easier to pass, if that was the goal. Under the rule it was harder to pass, conversely, easier for one (either) party to block.

      --
      Why, oh why, didn't I take the Blue Pill?
    27. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 1

      It's not both ways, it's the same way. OP wanted to know why Dems voted for Iraq and PATRIOT and then some time later turned against them. Both parties were ill-informed. Only one party realizes it, so far.

    28. Re:What a joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean; is there a bigger indictment that the majority of Slashdot readers are liberal. Why is the "liberal media" blamed for the public conscious?

    29. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 1

      Many changes were made by the GOP leadership behind closed doors before the final bill was trotted out in the middle of the night for a quick vote. The final bill was not what went into conference.

      As for Kerry supporting PATRIOT.. there are many things in PATRIOT that are benign. It's really only a few portions of the bill that people object to. Kerry said that as President he would have lobbied Congress to withdraw the PATRIOT Act and pass a new Act similar to PATRIOT but without the controversial provisions.

    30. Re:What a joke by pi_rules · · Score: 1

      You're making my brain bleed. There were 3 votes on Nov 2, 2005.

      http://clerk.house.gov/evs/2005/ROLL_500.asp

      All 3 were following the same rules as this bill. This bill was the only one shot down. The ones that passed: HR 4061 (Department of Veterans Affairs Information Technology Mangement Improvement Act) and HR 1691 (John H. Bradley Department of Veterans Affairs Outpatient Clinic).

      Dirty dirty Republicans... using their trickses to keep bills from passing. Good thing that the evil scheme failed for the other two! Muahahahaha!

    31. Re:What a joke by Jason+Hood · · Score: 1


      Saying the the Democrats stopped any action in the House is intellectually dishonest.


      Have you lost your mind? They voted no on a measure that required a 2/3 vote.So basically if you vote no and you are in the minority its the majorities fault that the measure did not pass? That is just nuts, my brain hurts.

      --
      Are you intolerant of intolerant people?
    32. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Better get someone to fix that hematoma.

      Suspension Calendar is designed for bills that will have little to no objection, hence the limited debate and restriction on amendments. The two bills that passed are bills that the Suspension Calendar was designed for. Why the GOP chose Suspension Calendar for a bill that would obviously raise objections, I don't know, but thanks for helping me make my point.

    33. Re:What a joke by kindbud · · Score: 1

      Is there a bigger indictment of Slashdot's blatant liberalism?

      Is there a bigger indictment of Slashdot's myopic self-importance? +5 insightful for another stupid partisan retort to another stupid partisan rant? You even managed to mangle the language yet again and call such a thing "liberal."

      Just drop all the pretense, and yell "Go Team!" If they do the NFL in HiDef, why not C-SPAN?

      --
      Edith Keeler Must Die
    34. Re:What a joke by lbrandy · · Score: 1

      If you don't understand how pointing out your sophisty and fallacious logical assertions is "disputing", then we are need in of a longer discussion. For instance, the excellent use of the "common knowledge" fallacy is quite textbook. I am right... ask anyone....

    35. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 1

      You're missing, or ignoring, the critcal point. It is the GOP leadership that decides what rules bills will come under. The only reason this bill required 2/3rds vote in the first place was because the GOP said so. Now, the GOP leadership must be aware that they don't hold 2/3rds of the House and that subjecting the bill to the Suspension Calendar rule could jeopardize its passing. Why they used the Suspension Calendar, I don't know.. it's like starting a chess game without your pawns.

    36. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 1

      First, you made some petty arguments based on logical technicalities. I'm not going to play that game.

      Second, I'm sorry but I simply don't have time to go through the Rules of the House and point out the 8,000 instances where it is made very clear that the majority has all the power. That simply cannot be disputed and I'm not going to do the work for you to make a 'logical proof' or whatever bullshit you're looking for.

      The majority chose to use the Suspension Calendar rule, which opened the bill up to possible defeat. If the GOP wanted this passed, they simply would not have used Suspension Calendar. You don't see them bringing up drilling in ANWR under Suspension Calendar, do you?

    37. Re:What a joke by lgw · · Score: 1

      That's about as close to an informed opinion on the politics of PATRIOT as on'es likely to find on Slashdot. You should probably add the fact that there were no new police powers created by the PATRIOT act, however; all the most absurd and abusive stuff was *already there*. The only difference is that now the cops can call you a terrorist *or* a drug dealer to ignore your rights. Bad but not new.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    38. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 1

      That's about as close to an informed opinion on the politics of PATRIOT as on'es likely to find on Slashdot.

      I'm pretty sure that's not a compliment..

      My understanding is that the main change in procedure was the removal of the FISA oversight court for warrants and the introduction of 'administrative warrants' that can be issued by the Attorney General and reviewed at a later time by the FISA court.

    39. Re:What a joke by lbrandy · · Score: 1

      I don't want a logical proof, I want a logical reason. How about, isntead of the paranoid conpisracy bullshit, we apply Occam's Razor like a rational person. Maybe the reason they brought it up under these rules is because they expected it to pass without any difficulty? Maybe in three weeks they will rewrite the bill, and bring it up under normal rules, and it will pass. ANd this time, they will have plenty of time to prepare talking points, and get up a far bigger headline about how the Democrats oppose Free Speech. Then, you can go off on another paranoid, poorly reasoned, tirade about Republican chicanary and abuse of the media.

    40. Re:What a joke by ifwm · · Score: 1



      "As for the PATRIOT Act, there was no time to read the bill due to the way it was proposed."

      So what you're saying is that the Democrats knowingly passed a bad bill because they were afraid of the consequences. Sounds like a great bunch of leaders.

      It's nice to see you're finally figuring the Dems out.

    41. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 1

      Abuse of the media? Now you're just making shit up. And you were doing so well.

      It's certainly possible that they simply miscalculated. I never dispute that. I have consistently said in no less than 5 of my posts that I don't know why Suspension Calendar was used. While I do insinuate that it may be a GOP trick, I don't claim to know the truth of the matter.

      They wouldn't be able to use your scenario to the extent that they can use the current scenario. Under your scenario, the bill would pass, even if Democrats voted against it. So the GOP could try to argue that Democrats are against free speech because they voted against the bill, but because the bill still passes, the political impact is much less. It makes maximum impact under the current situation. The bill doesn't pass, and you can claim that Democrats blocked it, even if those of us with a clue know it's a complete lie. Also if the exact same bill was brought up under a normal rule, Democrats would offer an amendment to change what they feel were the shortcomings of the bill, further strengthening their position (even though the amendment would likely fail).

    42. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 1

      I won't dispute that it was a great play by the GOP. Vote against the bill and you're against fighting terrorism. Vote for the bill and you get all sorts of shit you didn't want. Vote for the bill and talk about how a there are one or two bad parts? Then you get your attack.

    43. Re:What a joke by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but you left out the " no convictions" part. As in, the Dems (according to you) didn't want to go to war, but had to because of the potential backlash if they didn't.

      So, let's see how you spin that.

      Listen, it's obvious you're a partisan, who only has one goal, rewrite history so the Dems don't look complicit. How incredibly fucking sad that you continue to make excuses for a gaggle of cowards who wouldn't vote down a bad bill becuase they were afraid of how they would look to voters.

    44. Re:What a joke by ifwm · · Score: 1

      So, again, you are stating that playing politics are more important than voting your consicence. The Dems decided to play politics, when they should have led.

      I have no idea why anyone would ever support a group of people who place their own re-election above the good of their constituents.

      But apparently you would.

    45. Re:What a joke by badmammajamma · · Score: 1

      One senator does indicate a trend. Plus it doesn't change the fact that they were mislead.

      --
      Any man who afflicts the human race with ideas must be prepared to see them misunderstood. -- H. L. Mencken
    46. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 1

      You're making your arguments on the false assumption that the Congressional action was a vote for war. It was not a declaration of war. The resolution gave authority to the President to back up his actions at the UN. However the President chose to ignore the UN and used the Congressional authorization to wage war.

      wouldn't vote down a bad bill becuase they were afraid of how they would look to voters.

      If you think the both sides don't have politics in their mind at all times, you're a fool.

    47. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 1

      As I said elsewhere, to discount politics is foolish. I don't particularly like it, but that's the way it works.

      I have no idea why anyone would ever support a group of people who place their own re-election above the good of their constituents.

      And as I said elsewhere, if you think the GOP isn't the same way, you're a fool.

    48. Re:What a joke by ifwm · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      "It is impossible for the Democrats to stop anything in the House."

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filibuster

      Nice try though, playing the victim. You are perfect Democrat material.

    49. Re:What a joke by geoffspear · · Score: 1
      Oh, please. A vote that closely along party lines is never a surprise to either party.

      Actions in Congress are so carefully pre-planned and scripted that no one even bothers to show up most of the time.

      --
      Don't blame me; I'm never given mod points.
    50. Re:What a joke by ifwm · · Score: 1

      "Look, it's a simple fact that under the House rules, the minority has no power. I challenge anyone to dispute that."

      Look, I helped you with this once already.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filibuster

      READ IT please. You'll see that you're completely wrong.

    51. Re:What a joke by archaiclinuxuser · · Score: 1

      Filibusters are ownly allowed in the senate not the house even then its only a procedural filibuster which can be overridden by a 2/3 majority. Learn history. Learn government.

    52. Re:What a joke by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Libertarianism is a pack of half-truths for confusing teenagers.

      Mature people, who have had time to study the world, think about it, and understand that the world is a messier place than libertarian ideologues would claim, vote green.

    53. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You're high. There is no filibuster in the House.

    54. Re:What a joke by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      Couldn't help butting in, I've been following this joker's (ifwm) comments since an exchange a couple days ago... I'm trying to learn not to feed the troll. I recommended fark.com to him... no luck yet.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    55. Re:What a joke by Spectra72 · · Score: 1

      Maybe Congress should remember the fact that they are a separate and equal branch of government and should act like it for once. Their role in blunting the executive power is paramount in our government, otherwise we would have just kept a King.

      The actions of all the Representatives and Senators in the period immediately after 9/11 should be on everyone's mind come election time. Are you going to vote for someone who apparently doesn't read bills (Patriot Act) and votes to cede war-making authority to the executive branch?

      The lot of them should be run out of town on a rail.

    56. Re:What a joke by deanj · · Score: 1

      and while every single Democrat is against the war today

      This is a false statement. They might not like the way things are being handled, but not one Democrat in the Senate has gone on record that they oppose the war. If they have, please point out the official (not a blog) web page where they state it.

    57. Re:What a joke by deanj · · Score: 1
      Note that in the statement you paste above, Kerry says "I will be voting to give the President the authority." That doesn't mean that Bush had to use that authority.


      Sorry, but that doesn't make sense. If Kerry didn't want him to use it, he shouldn't have voted to give him the authority. If you give someone the authority to do something, there aren't strings attached, unless it said so in that vote. It didn't, there weren't.


      The main opposition to the war, and the UN, were hip deep in Saddam's pocket. Take Galloway for example. Pretty damn said that people would support a facist state instead of deposing it.

    58. Re:What a joke by bluGill · · Score: 1

      True, but that doesn't excuse the democrats (or republicans) from passing it. If anything it is a perfect excuse to vote against it: Well I support the idea, but I had no clue what was in it, so I didn't dare vote for it.

      They however are more interested in re-election than being a leader who always does the right thing no matter what the cost.

      There was opposition to the patriot act on slashdot before it passed, just based on parts we knew of.

    59. Re:What a joke by PenguiN42 · · Score: 1

      how was it that the authority to go to war went 99 to nothing in the senate?

      Because the bill authorized violence as a last resort after all diplomatic channels had been exhausted.

      But George didn't exhause the diplomatic channels. He didn't even allow the friggen inspections to complete. He abused the power that the bill gave him.

      I would be pissed, too.

      --
      The following sentence is true. The preceding sentence was false.
    60. Re:What a joke by Shihar · · Score: 1

      Under the rule it was harder to pass, conversely, easier for one (either) party to block.

      I imagine that was the point. Set up a bill that expands free speech. Set up the rules for the vote so that the Democrats can sink it. Let the Democrats sink it. Bring the bill back up under normal rules pass the bill.

      What does this accomplish? The Democrats who voted against the bill (rightfully) look like assholes that sank a free speech bill. This is what would happen even if the bill is passed, BUT because the bill was actually rejected, democrats collectively will get blame for killing off the bill. There will be a news blurb about democrats killing off a free speech bill that would not normally have gotten aired if the bill had simply passed on a Republican majority. Finally, after the Democrats get done looking like fools, the Republicans will just pass the bill under normal rules and declare victory over pro-censorship Democrats.

      Personally, I am amazed at how stupid the Democrats were for getting themselves in this position. True, they can slap, "I voted for campaign finance reform" onto their commercials, but believe me, that won't hold a bucket against Republicans slapping "I prevented the Democrats for censoring the blogs" on their commercials. The only way humanly possible that this makes any sense for the Democrats is if they can push through their own bill to do what the Republicans tried but with a few strings attached before the Republicans resubmit the bill under normal rules.

      Of course, I don't know why I even bother to try and understand their actions. They are all slimy. I vote every election, and I always feel like shit for doing it. I know that in the end I either voted for someone who isn't going to win, or is the lesser of two evils.

    61. Re:What a joke by phlinn · · Score: 1

      Except for Russ Feingold, whom I have a great deal of respect for, even though I almost certainly disagree with his politics.

      --
      "Pulling together is the aim of despotism and tyranny! Free men pull in all sorts of directions" -- Havelock Vetinari
    62. Re:What a joke by phlinn · · Score: 1

      The put it under the Suspension Calendar rule because they didn't want amendments or substitutions. As written, it was a clear consise bill. Since it failed, it went back to committee.

      --
      "Pulling together is the aim of despotism and tyranny! Free men pull in all sorts of directions" -- Havelock Vetinari
    63. Re:What a joke by Politburo · · Score: 1

      They could have used a closed rule if the goal was just to prohibit amendments. Also, Suspension Calendar bills generally bypass committee. Thomas record for this bill shows that it was referred to committee but never considered (Committee on House Administration, Bob Ney chair).

  8. Freedom of speech had nothing to do with it by R2.0 · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The Dems must have decided that the Republicans get more advantage from blogging than they do.

    No principles here, move along...

    --
    "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
    1. Re:Freedom of speech had nothing to do with it by Politburo · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Wrong! The bill was brought this up under the Suspension Calendar rule which allows a short debate and no amendments. Democrats had problems with the wording of the bill. Because they could not amend it, they had to vote against it.

    2. Re:Freedom of speech had nothing to do with it by theSpaceCow · · Score: 0

      I humbly, and with great fear of my own imminent downmodding, wonder why this was marked as flamebait. Although it might not have been the reason for the outcome of THIS particular vote, I think it's as naive as naivete gets to think that politicians don't vote on certain topics based on whether they or their opponents gain more from a particular piece of legislation.

      I think it's also a totally valid criticism to state that a politician's personal views are sometimes at odds with what stands to benefit them politically, and that they could potentially sacrifice the former for the latter.

      --
      I support the separation of oil and state.
    3. Re:Freedom of speech had nothing to do with it by R2.0 · · Score: 1

      Don't get me wrong - I don't think for a minute that the Republicans were proposing it from principles either. Right now, I believe the consensus among the political parties is that blogging has helped Republicans more than Democrats - the CBS memo fiasco comes to mind. Republicans see an advantage in unrestricted blogging; the Democrats don't. Thus, the vote tally.

      Would you really stand there and state that, if the Democrats thought blogging was working better for them than the Republicans, that this still wouldn't have passed? Conversely, that the Republicans would have even brought it up?

      --
      "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
    4. Re:Freedom of speech had nothing to do with it by Politburo · · Score: 1

      Most people on both side of the aisle don't want to see the Internet regulated for political speech and agree that donations made on the Internet are no different from donations sent in the mail.

      Democrats are way better off with the internet, imo. The gains in donations they made during the 2004 elections and since are due almost solely to the internet. We're doing much better with message shaping and influencing our elected officials. Note that several influential politicans post regularly on the DailyKos site. The CBS memo fiasco was an exception, not the rule. Democrats don't want to shut down political blogs due to an exception.

      The reason why this didn't pass is because it may have allowed unlimited donations over the Internet. The bill couldn't be amended, so Democrats had to vote against it. It's that simple.

    5. Re:Freedom of speech had nothing to do with it by STrinity · · Score: 1

      Right now, I believe the consensus among the political parties is that blogging has helped Republicans more than Democrats - the CBS memo fiasco comes to mind.
       
      Trent Lott's comments at Strom Thurmond's birthday party were barely noticed by the mainstream media until bloggers started raising a fuss, and the story kept going long enough to topple Lott in large part because bloggers kept stoking the fires.

      --
      Les Miserables Volume 1 now up with my reading of
  9. Legislation is one thing, enforcement is another.. by dfn_deux · · Score: 2, Interesting

    While I'm as big a proponent of free speech as the next guy, I have to say this will likely have little to no impact on actual internet speech. There won't be a "chilling effect" as some would have you believe. In the end there just isn't the budget or the manpower to enforce the same FCC political advertising guidelines online as are enforced in major boradcast media. and the big topper is that the first time Big Brother tries to enforce this we will quickly see it in front of 9 of the US's top justices whom will in all likelyhood vote to remove FCC regulation from the whole realm of internet publishing.... Anyone who tells you otherwise is just a chickenlittle...

    --
    -*The above statement is printed entirely on recycled electrons*-
  10. The complexity of the issue by Dark+Paladin · · Score: 5, Interesting
    This issue is really very complex, and do make it a simple "up or down" measure I think betrays the very issue of free speech that we're dealing with.

    According to the Supreme Court, campaign finance laws do not violate the 1st Amendment. The argument basically goes like this:

    You can't restrict campaign finance, because that limits free speech.

    SCOTUS: Yes, you can, because then it gives all powers of speech into the hands of the few who can massively pay for it, and restricts "pure" free speech - but if you limit the amount each person/group is able to contribute, then it levels the playing field for speech. It's the equivalent to saying that the guy who can buy a 100 foot tall speaker is just exercising his free speech by drowning everybody else out.


    So, now we're talking about the Internet. And here's the problem:

    If someone has a political blog, that is probably free speech.

    If someone pays a large number of people to have political blogs to support their view, is that still free speech, or is that diluting free speech?

    What's the difference between paying for an advertisement on television saying that "Candidate so-and-so likes to have sex with black people and make bastard babies, don't vote for him!" and a company buying up advertisement on the Internet saying the same thing?

    So, while I don't think that either the Dems or the Repubs have noble interests at heart, this is an interesting challenge. Do you just say "The Internet doesn't have to worry about campaign finance", and give the possibility of the delution of "pure" free speech as discussed by the Supreme Court and previous campaign finance laws, or do you try and put some language saying "If you get money based on your political views, you have to reveal who did it and how much and can only accept X amount".

    I'd rather see a law like the "truth in advertising" - if you're getting money for writing the blog/hosting an ad, you have to state on your web site where that comes from and how much. This way people who are just running ads can say "Google adsense", and those getting it from campaign groups can disclosed if they are a hired gun or not. Granted, there is more to the language than this, but this is just my thumbnail sketch, so if you need to split hairs, at least come up with your own complete language to cover the complexity of the issue :).

    It's an interesting question, and one that *should* be debated for a good and long time. If you notice, this was the failure not of a majority but of a "mega-majority" of 2/3 to pass the bill. Some further debate and clarification of the language should make it palatable to that majority in the end, which I believe is perfectly reasonable.

    Of course, this is just my opinion - I could be wrong.
    1. Re:The complexity of the issue by crush · · Score: 1
      I'd rather see a law like the "truth in advertising" - if you're getting money for writing the blog/hosting an ad, you have to state on your web site where that comes from and how much.
      Sounds clear, sensible and fair. You'll never have a career in politics!
    2. Re:The complexity of the issue by Dark+Paladin · · Score: 1

      No kidding - I keep thinking about running but then realize that I don't have the money to do it anyway, and most of my debates would boil down to "I'm sorry - did you actually hear the question or are you incapable of a straight answer?".

    3. Re:The complexity of the issue by moviepig.com · · Score: 1
      I'd rather see a law like the "truth in advertising" - [those] getting money...have to [disclose it]. ... if you need to split hairs, at least come up with your own complete language to cover the complexity of the issue

      Even such disclosure seems not to address the original issue of fair-vs.-financed speech. I.e., disclosure still lets the well-heeled drown out the merely honest... OTOH, pursuing only 'fairness' per se would permit, say, zero free speech as a possible outcome -- which is, after all, as "fair" as it gets.

      Seems that tackling the true issue must begin by modelling the voting public's attention as a medium with limited bandwidth, of which any point-of-view demands a certain quantum in order to be presented coherently. (Engineers can take it from there...)

      --
      Seeing bad movies only encourages them. Watch responsibly
    4. Re:The complexity of the issue by roystgnr · · Score: 1

      if you limit the amount each person/group is able to contribute, then it levels the playing field for speech.

      No, it doesn't. People and groups with enough money don't need to "contribute" it to anyone - they can buy their own advertisements and commericals. It's only us poor schlubs who have to give money to other groups before we can pool enough in one place to buy an ad. Limiting political contributions just tilts the playing field even more.

      It's the equivalent to saying that the guy who can buy a 100 foot tall speaker is just exercising his free speech by drowning everybody else out.

      So we'll ban 100 foot tall speakers... or will we? People are going to hear about candidates and issues somehow, and until the collective IQ rises a few dozen points my bet is that "somehow" will still be "biased mass media" - your 100 foot tall speakers. You can't ban biased political media; you can just try to restrict who gets to produce it - and all the proposed restrictions I've seen are likely to backfire. They hit the poor first (by limiting political contributions and thus restricting political speech to non-collective entities) and the non-connected rich next (by restricting political speech to "the news" rather than the commercials). Here are the untouched 100 foot tall speakers that will still be able to drown everybody else out; the best we can hope for after "campaign finance reform" is that the individual oligarch's biases will cancel each other out.

    5. Re:The complexity of the issue by Mainusch · · Score: 1

      Government regulated free speech is an oxymoron.

      If the government decides who gets to speak, and about what, and how they are doing the speaking, how can that be called "free speech"? If I am barred by the federal government from hiring someone to get my message out, then the government has trampled on my constitutionally guaranteed right to free speech.

      The "free" in "free speech" has nothing to do with monetary cost. It's about a lack of interference from the government.

      It goes like this:
      "You can speak your mind about anything.... unless you're paying someone to help you do it, and it's about political subjects, then we must prevent you from speaking in order to guarantee your right to free speech".

      Kinda like burning down the village in order to save it.

      How stupid do they think I am?

      --
      Joe Mainusch http://www.weber-amps.com
    6. Re:The complexity of the issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      To tag along with your perspective, does "PAID SPEECH" = "FREE SPEECH"???

      I would not say so(bad pun, I know). The moment ANY entity pays another to support that primary entities opinion/stance/position(synonym ...) on SPEECH, it no longer falls under "FREE SPEECH", but ADVERTISING!!!

      Since we are dealing with elected officials here, and entities that monetarily support said elected officials "ADVERTISING", there should be limits on EVERY communications medium that exists. Why should the Internet be excluded???

      To suggest otherwise lays the framework for COMMUNIST, SOCIALIST, and FASCIST (insert .IST here) states, that every GOP has ever announced as evil against democracy, to fall into place.

      /in choosing your leaders, all politicians are hypocrits
      //Its just a matter of who is least hypocritical, and whether or not you can live with their hypocrisy running YOUR government

    7. Re:The complexity of the issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "This way people who are just running ads can say "Google adsense"..."

      You bring up a fascinating point. One would expect that pages funded by Google Adsense could be relied upon to be somewhat neutral. But since Adsense pays out according to how many clicks the ads get, an unscrupulous organization could make an agreement with a blogger that ensures the blogger more clicks on ads in exchange for writing specific blog content. Then the organization can pay some third parties to provide the ad clicks, perhaps written off as "internet research". Thus, the advertising service acts as a facade/laundering service. It's probably too inefficient to work, but possible nonetheless.

    8. Re:The complexity of the issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't restrict campaign finance, because that limits free speech.

      SCOTUS: Yes, you can, because then it gives all powers of speech into the hands of the few who can massively pay for it, and restricts "pure" free speech - but if you limit the amount each person/group is able to contribute, then it levels the playing field for speech. It's the equivalent to saying that the guy who can buy a 100 foot tall speaker is just exercising his free speech by drowning everybody else out.


      The fallacy here is that the guy with the 100 foot speaker "drowns out" those without... the analogy does not hold, because contrary to leftist myth, you can't buy elections anymore than you can "brainwash" people via media bias... if you could, the Left would have taken over decades and decades ago, or Steve Forbes/Ross Perot would have been a two-term president.

      But no, look, we've gone over 200 years without CFR, especially during the so-called "robber baron" years, and looky here... the dreaded "rule by the rich" hasn't materialized. You don't suppose it's because of the First Amendment, eh?

      CFR presumes this bad premise. By logical necessity, it prsumes that people are so stupid that they'll vote with whomever speak loudest instead of whomever speaks *truth*. That presumption -- that people can't be trusted to think and judge for themselves -- underlies all invasions of individual liberties, consistently enough to be a reliable indicator that something bad is afoot.

      This is even more true on the Internet, where the only real limiting factor is someone's hosting bandwidth. As Slashdot itself shows, it is overwhelmingly CONTENT, not "loudness", that matters.

      The only thing that can really "drown out" someone is if he were physically shut up, prevented from speaking. And hey, guess what the CFR rules do? They declare that freedom of speech becomes null and void whenever money becomes involved; in other words, freedom of speech is sacrosanct, but its *means* is not. How can you be said to have freedom of speech if you are not free to utilize your available means of speech to its fullest?

      This idea that my ability to shout louder than you somehow shuts you up, is just bunk.

      Freedom of speech, means freedom from government censorship. It means that they cannot interfere with your speaking. It means they cannot take away your loudspeaker if you have one, nor can they interfere if you contract freely with the owner of a loudspeaker. That one man has a loudspeaker and another not, does not affect the latter's freedom of speech in any way, simply because he still has his mouth, and will still be heard by anyone looking for new *ideas*.

      And it sure as hell doesn't give you a right to any specific means of speech beyond what is rightfully yours. If you can't freely persuade others to help you acquire those means -- if the people next to you don't think you're worth being heard -- then perhaps you aren't saying anything worth broadcasting to the rest of us, no?

      Money is not speech. It is merely a *means* of speech. Regulate the means, regulate the activity. No way around it.

    9. Re:The complexity of the issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Sounds clear, sensible and fair. You'll never have a career in politics!

      Nor advertising. Arguably no different, so just mark me redundant

    10. Re:The complexity of the issue by Bryansix · · Score: 1

      SCOTUS: Yes, you can, because then it gives all powers of speech into the hands of the few who can massively pay for it, and restricts "pure" free speech - but if you limit the amount each person/group is able to contribute, then it levels the playing field for speech. It's the equivalent to saying that the guy who can buy a 100 foot tall speaker is just exercising his free speech by drowning everybody else out.

      This is not true with the Internet. While having marketing money for a website drives traffic, that does not drown out anyone elseon the Internet. In fact any little blog can be heard on the Internet just as well as a major website paid for by political interests. In the end it is the content that counts. If people like what the blog says then they will visit it often. So in the end all the views can be heard equally as well and the analogy that is brought up by this argument is shot down.

    11. Re:The complexity of the issue by Dark+Paladin · · Score: 1

      I think the idea behind most campaign finance laws is not to stop contributions, but limit them. Same thing here - you can go ahead and pay for web sites and bloggers, but you can't spend millions upon millions of dollars just to overwhelm the Google search system that would equate Candidate X with "child molester".

      So I'm not calling that all political speech on the Internet is bad - just that it needs some kind of limit that way that television/radio ads are suppose to be. (Granted, that system is screwed up thanks to loopholes, but at least the attempt is there.)

  11. Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by the_skywise · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sites like the Daily Kos can now be subject to campaign finance laws. Which means, essentially, their speech can be regulated during election seasons.

    1. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Politburo · · Score: 1

      What are you talking about? The final Rules haven't been promulgated yet. This bill would have shaped the upcoming rules, not changed any existing rules. (Note: Rules are different from Laws/Statutes).

    2. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Only if they accept campaign money, of course. If they don't they can say anything they want. Where's the problem with that?

    3. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by ROU+Nuisance+Value · · Score: 5, Informative

      And Daily KOS supported the bill's passage. The actual story is *slightly* more complicated than the /. headline would suggest.

    4. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by ackthpt · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Sites like the Daily Kos can now be subject to campaign finance laws. Which means, essentially, their speech can be regulated during election seasons.

      Under campaign finance laws they would only be required to divulge sources of funding.

      Even that could be well hidden, say, a voting machine vendor who heavily favors a certain presidential candidate could take out a lot of lucrative ad-space on a site, so long as the views expressed on the site coincide with those of the company.

      *wink* *wink* *nudge* *nudge*

      Right?

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    5. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by pizzaman100 · · Score: 1

      Courts have already determined that the rules apply to existing media. A recent example is the gas tax initiative in Washington State. Two radio hosts came out against the gas tax and were promoting their view over the air waves. But a judge muzzled them by ruling that they did not have free speech rights to oppose the initiative on air, as this would be an 'in kind contribution' to the proponenents of the initiative.

    6. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Politburo · · Score: 1

      Gosh.. what paper is so stupid to not include the date of the article? 10/27?

      In any case, there's a wrinkle because one (both?) of the hosts is a principal supporter of the campaign. Also, the matter is under appeal.. until that is exhausted, we don't know if the original ruling was the correct interpretation of the law.

      Anyway, FEC was ordered to clarify its rules and how they apply to the internet. That process is currently on-going.

    7. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Rei · · Score: 2, Informative

      As they don't take money, they're not subject. This bill is all about trashing campaign finance reform laws. The passage of this bill would mean that corporate donors could pump unlimited soft money into *paid* online promotion of their agendas.

      Individuals can say whatever they want. The problem comes when they're spending gobs of money from a few, wealthy vested interests to promote their ideals. There's a popular concept in America that money shouldn't win elections; that's what campaign finance law is for. This is simply a bill that is designed to plow a hole into the McCain-Feingold act wide enough to sail the Jahre Viking through, and the summary that Slashdot gave is an heavy distortion of the truth.

      --
      "99 dead duelists of Dios on the wall. 99 dead duelists of Dios! Take one's ring, pass it around..."
    8. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by gb506 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      This bill is all about trashing campaign finance reform laws.

      No, it isn't. It's about exactly what it says it's about, which is exempting some opinionated dude in his pajamas from having to hire lawyers and accountants in order to exercise his first amendment right to free speech. The fact is that in the last election cycle the Dems got their asses handed to them due to their inability to uphold the status quo, which is (was) being able to rely on the main stream media to play the role of gatekeepers w/ regard to the message being put forth by a candidate or organization.

      This isn't about trashing McCain Feingold, it's about preserving an idividual's freedom of speech within the political process. There is no difference between a blogger and some dude in a bar rattling on about politics.

    9. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Morinaga · · Score: 1

      This is still done. This does not stop that money. It now gets laundered through other political interest groups like Swift Boat Vets and Moveon.org. A corporation can give unlimited dollars to these groups. Soros for example is not limited to a $2000 individual contribution in this manner. McCain Feingold was feel good legislation that did nothing but limit the transaprency of political contributions directly toward politicians.

    10. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Arandir · · Score: 3, Interesting

      There's a popular concept in America that money shouldn't win elections

      Actually, money doesn't win elections in America. That's why we didn't get Perot as President. It's why Forbes didn't get the nomination.

      Correlation does not imply causation. Read "Freakonomics". It covers this specifically in one section, and shows you the statistics. Money is not the cause of winning elections.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    11. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Daily KOS supported the bill's passage.

      Did Daily Kos happen to mention the huge whack of cash he received from the Democrats for "consulting work" during the last election?

    12. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Golias · · Score: 4, Insightful

      This isn't about trashing McCain Feingold, it's about preserving an idividual's freedom of speech within the political process.

      That's too bad, because the more I look at it, the more convinced I become that it's not possible to preserve an individual's freedom of speech without first trashing McCain/Feingold.

      Upholding Campaign Finance law was the second-biggest mistake of the Supreme Court in the last ten years. The first, obviously, was their brain-dead Emminent Domain ruling. Why is it that the so-called "progressives" in American politics seem to be the ones in the biggest hurry to take my rights away?

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    13. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by xSauronx · · Score: 1
      except that, of course, thousands or millions can view a blog at once while they post advertisements all over the site, and at a bar well...theres an occupation limit and signs for budweiser or guiness.

      im all for free speech, i can understand the arguments on both sides, but your final statement there was simply untrue, and you should have known it.

      --
      By and large, language is a tool for concealing the truth. -- George Carlin
    14. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by CoreWalker · · Score: 1

      Your first paragraph is full of passionate statements. Fortunately, acting mad doesn't make you necessarily correct. The parent post makes good points. Your post is not much more than a series of inflammatory and unsubstantiated statements. However, I'm not much interested in left vs. right debate, but I do want to address your last sentence.

      There is no difference between a blogger and some dude in a bar rattling on about politics.

      As I see it, the big difference between a blogger and some dude in a bar rattling on about politics is that the blogger has a potential audience of millions, while the dude in the bar is lucky if his audience is more than 5. Because of this, there is a possibility that the blogger is getting paid a couple hundred thousand dollars to state his "opinion" on his site. Also, there is not much of a chance that your dude in the bar is really a major political candidate in disguise, whereas the blogger could vary well be any number of people on a candidate's staff posing as someone else.

    15. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by bluGill · · Score: 2, Interesting

      No, but if you read the article, and the links it shouldn't be a surprise. They said they were betrayed by their own side (this doesn't say which side is theirs, you have to read more to guess). In other links from that page the listed all the democrats who voted for this, and asked supporters call and thank them - no mention of republicans. There was no mention that most republicans supported this.

      All that is fair, but I wish people who be honest when they are betrayed by their own side and defended by the other, and thank the other side. Their call though, most people don't have the guts to admit that the other side isn't 100% evil. At least they didn't spread lies about republicans in any of the links I spread.

    16. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by gb506 · · Score: 1
      To make a legal distinction based on "potential" audience appears noble on the face, yet would be a travesty in practice. How, then, shall we regulate the political pontification of Pat Boone, Barbara Streisand, or eminem in front of 50,000 people? How do we know eminem isn't on Rick Santorum's campaign staff or payroll? How do we regulate Tim Robbins, Tom Seleck, or MeatHead when they blow hot air about politics?

      No, this bill's demise was about rampant FUD about the perception that the right has its act together online. And after hearing the resounding thud made by MoveOn and other Peter Lewis/George Soros backed entities in 04, they may have a valid arguement. But instead of meeting the challenge with creativity and vigor, they block the pajama wearing dude from voicing his opinion, thereby throwing the yoke back into the MSM's "trusted" hands. Sorry, brother, I'm with free speech here.

    17. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you so much for saying that and giving me faith that there actually is intelligent life in the /. zone.

    18. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by TheWickedKingJeremy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Money is in fact extremely important to our elections, which is unfortunate. The fact that some very rich men (Perot and Forbes) lost to other very rich men (or, rich/entrenched political parties if you prefer) does not defeat this notion. These clowns spend a fortune on some of these political races...

      Media favor is probably the most important factor in elections... money is important because it can influence media favor to some degree.

      --

      my religion lies somewhere between buddhism and super monkey ball - pamphlet?
    19. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Taladar · · Score: 1

      If they think this is so important why don't they make a law that outlaws campaigns completely, no paid and no free ads, no pre-election tours through the country, just one website for each party to tell in formal (read: no exagerations, no attacking of the other parties) words what they plan to do when they get elected, perhaps 5 minutes each week on TV and each radio stations for each party to read those statements to those that are information-technologically impaired. No taking money from companies to finance campaigns and no using your own money for that same purpose. No disruption of normal political business either as politicians are not tied up campaigning when they should govern instead.

    20. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "This isn't about trashing McCain Feingold, it's about preserving an idividual's freedom of speech within the political process. There is no difference between a blogger and some dude in a bar rattling on about politics."

            Then why are there laws in place for the campaign financing? What purpose do they serve? Why not let the media wars end in one big monopoly of "truth"?

      Oh course there is a difference.

      If this laws was about "free speech" then why not include words in the legislation that distinguish between large scale institutions and the average joe to soothe worries over soft money?

            If you don't do that--then it's an open invitation for powerful interests to trump laws that have been proven to keep free speech functioning. If xyz gazillionaire decides to go on a political smear campaign (regardless the party) I'd like to know that all the individual sources are actually just one guy funding it.

      Fox news comes to mind.

    21. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Why is it that the so-called "progressives" in American politics seem to be the ones in the biggest hurry to take my rights away


      I think it's because the "Progressives" have integratity, where as the "Regressives" don't. Bills like the McCain/Feingold are needed because people can't be trusted to play nicely without them. It is readily apparent from the previous election that some people will do anything and say anything (while hiding their true identities) to get their way.

      The requirements don't effect some guy in his PJ's spouting his opinion.. They effect the large cash payments he is getting from special interests that he isn't bothering to report.
    22. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by andy_shepard · · Score: 1

      So, you're pretty much saying that it's only okay for people to have free speech as long as they can't really say anything that matters. What does it matter whether a blogger might be being paid?? What he says should stand or fall on its own merit, not on who he is or might be.

    23. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by fingusernames · · Score: 1

      They only want to take away the bad rights, most notably the right to a limited government of specifically enumerated powers. Of course, "they" includes Democrats and Republicans on that count.

      Larry

    24. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by CoreWalker · · Score: 1

      And you have found part of the problem with the liberal in me :-).

      I despise the fact that we have a representative form of government that fails time and time again because people refuse to act in their own best interest. Advertising has become far more effective than the framers of the Constitution ever predicted, and people vote for the candidate with name brand shoes rather than a candidate with a track record of acting to benefit society. Rather than admit this form of government no longer works (no, I don't have any better ideas), my knee jerk reaction is to enact laws to protect those who are too simple to act in their own self interest, otherwise they just become a tool for whichever group can instill the most fear in them. I'm not totally convinced it's not what needs to be done. I'm also not sure it would do anyone any good.

      You raise some good points. I still don't think I completely agree with you, but that doesn't mean I'm right.

    25. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by mellon · · Score: 1

      Actually, that's not true. Moveon is very careful not to violate the $2000 spending limit. Dunno about Swift Voat Bets, though.

    26. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by dangitman · · Score: 1
      There is no difference between a blogger and some dude in a bar rattling on about politics.

      I doubt that many "dudes in bars" are receiving hundreds of thousands of dollars from political groups to express their opinion. It is extremely naive to think this is at all about "bloggers in pajamas" - it's about the corrupt blogs driven by political bribes. Blogs are big business now.

      --
      ... and then they built the supercollider.
    27. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Morinaga · · Score: 1

      527 groups like Moveon.org have no limitations on how much soft money they can collect from contributors mellon. Moveon may say it's carefull but it doesn't change the fact that Bing and Soros can donate millions to their cause, not just $2000. Those afformentioned gentlemen have not hidden the fact that their contributions are significantly more than that.

    28. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by gb506 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, some blogs are very successful, which has most to do with the freshness, veracity, and relevance of their content rather than who's bankrolling them. In the rush to regulate popular bloggers the one-man pajama brigade gets squashed, too. Do we limit everyone's right to political free speech in an attempt to safeguard against a "possible" abuse? Where does it stop? I'll ask again, why should Powerline or the DailyKos be targeted by the FEC when Babs Streisand or the Dixie Chicks can get up in front of 50,000 people and embark on an extended anti-Bush screed? And be paid very, very handsomely for it!!!!

    29. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Rimbo · · Score: 1

      The fact is that in the last election cycle the Dems got their asses handed to them due to their inability to uphold the status quo, which is (was) being able to rely on the main stream media to play the role of gatekeepers w/ regard to the message being put forth by a candidate or organization.

      DingDingDingDingDingDingDingDing!!! We have a winner.

      The bloggers ended up usurping the message for Kerry. The Democrats were no longer in control of their own message. And since the "guys in pajamas" (as you so eloquently put it) were largely loudmouths who couldn't sell a life preserver to a drowning man, the message was loud, rude, obnoxious, and basically turned off the small portion of the electorate that didn't already have its mind made up.

      The Democrats were killed by their own supporters.

    30. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by HanzoSpam · · Score: 1

      Individuals can say whatever they want. The problem comes when they're spending gobs of money from a few, wealthy vested interests to promote their ideals.

      In other words, free speech is fine - as long as no one can hear what you're saying.

      --

      Progressivism: Parasites helping parasites to help themselves - to other people's stuff.
    31. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget MoveOn.org

    32. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by mellon · · Score: 1

      Soros probably contributed for infrastructure or salaries or something. I don't know what to tell you. Whenever *I* contribute to Moveon, they ask me to certify that I haven't given more than my limit for the year. You can speculate all you want about Soros, but I'm talking about my own personal experience here, and Soros isn't, so if you want to go from hard data rather than speculation, I think you're stuck with accepting that Moveon is obeying the law.

    33. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Arandir · · Score: 1

      Go read Freakonomics. While you do need to spend some amount of money to win an election, and while that money is probably somewhere above the one dollar range, outspending your opponent will not cause you to win the election.

      It sounds real good as an excuse for the loser, but it's simply not true.

      Do not confuse correlation with causation. The amount of money spent on a campaign is correlated somewhat to the odds of winning a campaign, but it is not the cause. Popular candidates win. Popular candidates manage to raise more money. People are hesitant to donate to a losing candidate, even one they otherwise support.

      --
      A Government Is a Body of People, Usually Notably Ungoverned
    34. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Bill+Dog · · Score: 1

      ..."Progressives" have integratity...

      Progressives have Acuras with nipples?

      It is readily apparent from the previous election that some people will do anything and say anything (while hiding their true identities) to get their way.

      Yup, that's why I could not in good conscience have voted for John Kerry. At least Howard Dean was (and remains) real about who and what he is.

      Looks like Hillary will be following the Kerry strategy. Maybe she'll have the charisma to pull it off.

      --
      Attention zealots and haters: 00100 00100
    35. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Money+for+Nothin' · · Score: 1

      No, only Republicans have big-money sponsors! Duh...

      Who's that George Soros guy again?

    36. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Golias · · Score: 1

      They only want to take away the bad rights, most notably the right to a limited government of specifically enumerated powers. Of course, "they" includes Democrats and Republicans on that count.

      Unlike the knee-jerk partisan response to my post just before yours, you've hit the nail pretty much on the head. A lot of so-called progressives in the Republican Party (and even some of the so-called conservatives) are gleefully eroding our rights right along side some (not all) of the Democrats.

      --

      Information wants to be anthropomorphized.

    37. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by cagle_.25 · · Score: 1
      How do we know eminem isn't on Rick Santorum's campaign staff or payroll?

      Um... flip a coin? You call it in the air. Heads, he's not. Tails, he isn't.

      --
      Human being (n.): A genetically human, genetically distinct, functioning organism.
    38. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Why is it that the so-called "progressives" in American politics seem to be the ones in the biggest hurry to take my rights away?

      Because "your rights" are standing in their way of making your life better for you.

      (sorry, way too many pronouns in that sentence)

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    39. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      The fact that some very rich men (Perot and Forbes) lost to other very rich men (or, rich/entrenched political parties if you prefer) does not defeat this notion.

      I'll take the rich man any day. At least he's not 'owned' by all of his contributors.

      As goes the contributions, so goes the pork. In English, that's our money taken by threat of force and given to campaign donors for a substantial return on investment.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    40. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by TheWickedKingJeremy · · Score: 1

      I'll take the rich man any day. At least he's not 'owned' by all of his contributors.

      Wake up and smell the coffee. A guy who gets rich via his contributors is certainly going to be subject to them... look at the current state of Washington. Lobbyists play a huge role in current politics. Corporations can, with enough dollars, go a long way to influence legislation. You're living in a fantasy world.

      --

      my religion lies somewhere between buddhism and super monkey ball - pamphlet?
    41. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by TheWickedKingJeremy · · Score: 1

      I don't think I confused causation and correlation. I never stated that outspending an opponent will cause a candidate to always win. I simply said that money is an important part of elections, and it is.

      As for the "popular candidates"... they are largely selected beforehand by the media and the two major parties. They are marketed as the only choices available, and people follow along and support those choice candidates. And yes, you are correct that these choice candidates would then be able to raise a lot of money.

      But don't think for a second that money would not help out candidates who were not selected by the media. They don't get nearly the amount of press that the selected candidates do... they can pay for advertising, but that isn't cheap. And one needs to have money in order to spend all that time campaigning... hard to campaign when you're working double shifts.

      --

      my religion lies somewhere between buddhism and super monkey ball - pamphlet?
    42. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      I can't tell if you're intentionally or unintentionally misunderstanding my point.

      A guy who gets rich via his contributors is certainly going to be subject to them...

      A rich man doesn't have contributors. The average politician does.

      You're living in a fantasy world.

      (Score -1, ad hominem)

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    43. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by phlinn · · Score: 1

      "...people refuse to act in their own best interest."

      And what, exactly, gives you the right or ability to decide what their best interests are? People do act in what they percieve to be their own best interests, and just because you disagree does not make them wrong. Your criteria for benefitting society is no more or less arbitrary than theirs.

      --
      "Pulling together is the aim of despotism and tyranny! Free men pull in all sorts of directions" -- Havelock Vetinari
    44. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by TheWickedKingJeremy · · Score: 1

      A rich man doesn't have contributors.

      Yep... definitely living in a fantasy world.

      Look, I see what you're getting at... in theory, a man who is already rich need not "sell out" to special interests, because he already has money. Unfortunately, it does not play out like this in the real world.

      Schwarzenegger in fact ran on that very premise. And, of course, he takes in shitloads of contributions. One link from a quick google search...

      Again, you are living in a fantasy world. That is not meant to attack you as a person... I just think you need to give the idea that being rich lends itself to some sort of independant morality a second thought. By national standards, a lot of these politicians are "rich"... and it how they get that way that scares me, and hurts us all.

      --

      my religion lies somewhere between buddhism and super monkey ball - pamphlet?
    45. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Schwarzenegger in fact ran on that very premise. And, of course, he takes in shitloads of contributions. One link [arnoldwatch.org] from a quick google search...

      Boy, I really have to spell it out in small words, don't I?

      A rich man who doesn't take contributions would make a better ruler than a politician who does.

      That you cite an example of someone who doesn't match this axiom is irrelevant.

      Ross Perot went near this with a $200 cap on contributions so he'd be beholdent to nobody in particular. That Ross Perot imploded is a separate issue - his model was good.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    46. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by Morinaga · · Score: 1

      I did not say Moveon wasn't obeying the law. I'm saying all 527s are a work around for McCain-Feingold.

    47. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by TheWickedKingJeremy · · Score: 1

      Ooh, bold print. This is getting intense. My heart is racing... ;)

      I agree that Perot's model has some merits -- but not all "rich men" follow that model in the real world. Your blanket statement that rich men do not take contributions was flatly wrong. Sorry, it was. And of course my example was entirely relevant. It proves that the "rich men are immune from special interests" theory is incorrect.

      A rich man who doesn't take contributions would make a better ruler than a politician who does.

      Obviously. I never made an argument to the contrary, nor ever would. And why stop there? A working class man who doesn't take contributions would make a better ruler than a politician who does. Or, a politician who doesn't take contributions would make a better ruler than a politician who does.

      --

      my religion lies somewhere between buddhism and super monkey ball - pamphlet?
    48. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      I agree that Perot's model has some merits -- but not all "rich men" follow that model in the real world. Your blanket statement that rich men do not take contributions was flatly wrong.

      It wasn't a blanket statement - my response was to text specifically referencing the Perot/Forbes candidacies. You can beat down your strawman all you want but the context was clearly established.

      A working class man who doesn't take contributions would make a better ruler than a politician who does. Or, a politician who doesn't take contributions would make a better ruler than a politician who does.

      And you're giving me a hard time about living in a fantasy world...

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    49. Re:Uh, that was the WHOLE POINT by laughingcoyote · · Score: 1

      Hey, shut up! You're not supposed to -actually- reform the system so that it's -genuinely- fair. Still, that does raise free-speech issues-if I read the websites and decide I support a given candidate, am I still free to express that support? There's still questions even there. I agree it'd be a step in the right direction though-NO ads, to start with. Period. Debates only, to which anyone on the ballot must be allowed to come. Unfortunately, we'll never see it.

      --
      To fight the war on terror, stop being afraid.
  12. Re:Legislation is one thing, enforcement is anothe by dfn_deux · · Score: 1

    The above should say FEC not FCC.. whoopsy!

    --
    -*The above statement is printed entirely on recycled electrons*-
  13. More detailed information by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 4, Informative

    Daily Kos has an article on this with a bit more information. This one actually goes into reasons why the Dems voted againt it. Daily Kos disagrees with the Dem's reasons, and was in favor of extending the free nature of blogs.

    http://www.dailykos.com/storyonly/2005/11/3/112540 /088

    Note that the act can still be brought up for a vote under normal rules and passed. The defeat was under special rules intended to speed the process.

    --
    Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    1. Re:More detailed information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ignore the daily KOS it is nothing but a bunch of close minded anti-christianity and judiasm bigotry group. So much for being open minded. They are openminded to only what they beleive. Bigotry and hypocriscy in the highest form.

      Anytime anyone calls someone else closed minded since the other person believes something different they themselves are the closed minded ones. Ohh.. these people are a bunch of fags too.

    2. Re:More detailed information by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      I think that the parent comment reflects much more poorly on the person who wrote it than on the Daily Kos website.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    3. Re:More detailed information by MilenCent · · Score: 1

      Note that the act can still be brought up for a vote under normal rules and passed. The defeat was under special rules intended to speed the process.

      After the hideous first passage of the Patriot Act sailed through without hardly having been read, I can't really blame the Dems for this.

    4. Re:More detailed information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Daily Kos disagrees with the Dem's reasons, and was in favor of extending the free nature of blogs.

      Did Daily Kos happen to mention the huge whack of cash he received from the Democrats for "consulting work" during the last election?

    5. Re:More detailed information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Adam B is not kos.

      Honestly, where did all the smart trolls go? I'm a Republican myself but the young Republicans who troll are really stupid these days.

    6. Re:More detailed information by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      Did George Bush mention his daughter's abortions? And did he bring up the fact that Dick Cheney made a small fortune investing in a friend's pornography business?

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
    7. Re:More detailed information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [Some guy who goes by "Profane MuthaFucka" lectures someone on how something can reflect poorly on oneself]

      Gotta love it.

    8. Re:More detailed information by Profane+MuthaFucka · · Score: 1

      Nice, from an anonymous coward. If I ever meet you, I'll put my fist through your teeth. Not that I'm angry, it's just what I do to conservatives every day.

      --
      Fascism trolls keeping me up every night. When I starts a preachin', he HITS ME WITH HIS REICH!
  14. Re:Legislation is one thing, enforcement is anothe by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1, Insightful

    In the end there just isn't the budget or the manpower to enforce the same FCC political advertising guidelines online as are enforced in major boradcast media.

    All it takes is one example. They don't have to go after every blog. Just a couple of them. A couple of high profile prosecutions will make political blogging a different sort of beast. FACE didn't require that every abortion protestor be prosecuted. A few prosecutions and everyone with half a brain and something to lose will conform.

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  15. Why? by 31415926535897 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why does there have to be an Online Freedom of Speech Act? Why does there have to be anything other than the First Amendment? I am tired of how much our "free speech" has become regulated since the founding of this country.

    The other thing that bothers me is the two party political system. Why wouldn't democrats want to protect our speech online? It seems all they're interested in is opposing the republicans these days (I used to be a republican, but I don't think they stand for conservatism anymore, so I'm libertarian/independent/non-incumbant now).

    We need politicians that will bring us back to the freedoms our country enjoyed two hundred years ago, but everyone is interested in towing the party line--it seems even the voters. If you are of voting age, and in the US, please consider third-party candidates in the '06 congressional elections. I want to be part of a larger group than 0.5% of the population.

    1. Re:Why? by Sandbox+Conspiracy · · Score: 1

      We need politicians that will bring us back to the freedoms our country enjoyed two hundred years ago, but everyone is interested in towing the party line--it seems even the voters.

      Two hundred years ago, blacks were 3/5 of a person and women were legally sanctioned second class citizens. That freedom?

      Though, I do agree that we are being sold short by our politicians on both sides these days. However, in a democratic republic aren't we supposed to be the bosses? Much of the blame for this modern day political lampooning rests squarely upon our own shoulders for allowing our representatives to meander about unchecked beyond the scope of their political enemies who also happen to be their political peers.

      --
      Why am I on Slashdot? I'm bored. Why am I bored? I'm on Slashdot.
    2. Re:Why? by dkoulomzin · · Score: 1

      Free Speech, much like a capitalist economy, works best if there is true competition... certainly I've never heard of an enlightening debate when only one side has been doing all the talking. A monopolistic free-speaker (i.e. one that has the ability to essentially spam everyone with its ideas) stifles the competition. Chances are, as a slashdotter you're against monopolistic control of the software (and other) industry by micro$oft-like organizations. So why shouldn't you be against monopolistic control of speech by super-rich and super-loud organizations?

      By the way, if you haven't noticed, the world is rather different from how it was 200 years ago. Exactly what makes you think that what worked then would work now?

      By the way, I do agree with you about one thing: voters need to demonstrate their disgust with politics as usual by voting for non-mainstream candidates. I vote for third party candidates as much as I can.

      --
      Thou shalt not begin a subject line or post with the word "Umm".
    3. Re:Why? by NineNine · · Score: 1

      We need politicians that will bring us back to the freedoms our country enjoyed two hundred years ago,

      Welcome to the Libertarian Party.

    4. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Two hundred years ago, blacks were 3/5 of a person

      I'm sorry, I'm not picking on you personally, but this old canard drives me up a wall. It is so misunderstood. The "3/5 of a person" thing was not created to demean black people, or show they were somehow less than human beings. In fact, the opposite is true. The 3/5 rule was enacted by Northern states to prevent Southern slaveowning states from counting slaves in the census, and thus increasing their (slaveowners) representation in Congress. By enacting the rule, they were able to keep the economically powerful South in check, and hasten the demise of slavery.

      Granted, it sucks it had to come to that, but the reasons were good. Before anyone flames me, I'm not interested in getting into a race relations debate about this, and I'm open to alternative explanations for the 3/5 rule.

    5. Re:Why? by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      Except on the Internet, it doesn't cost you a million bucks to open a small shop to make some money to open a second so that 20 years later you have a $35 million profit margin and can begin developing a Microsoft competitor. You can start blogging today!

    6. Re:Why? by Donkey+Trader · · Score: 1

      Absolutely!

      I'm sick and tired of politicians, and the special interest groups that control them, playing politics with our constitutional rights.

      Free speech should mean free speech for all without discrimination. Gender, race, ethnicity and economic disposition should not play a factor. The argument that "the big guy" can drown out the voice of "the little guy" is faulty. There are a lot more "little guys" out there which provides power in numbers. In a democracy, its the majority that wins.

      The only time free speech should be limited is when it is outright lies. Since we already have laws regarding slander and libel, campaign finance law that limits free speech is superfluous. It is simply bad for democracy.

      --
      If reality were relative, truth would be false.
    7. Re:Why? by lgw · · Score: 1

      Exactly. Bloggers are the closest thing to 18th century pamphleteers we've seen in a while (except the bloggers aren't as vicious). Anyone should be able to blog as much as they want on politics. Why should it matter if they're getting paid? I'll read a blogger if I want to, and not if I don't - it's not like an advertisement, where I'll be bombarded despite trying my best to avoid the communicaiton. And if you give *any* blogger more credibility than you would someone paid directly by the party that opposes your beliefs, more fool you.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  16. That's a lot of trouble to go to by ScentCone · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I mean, why go to all that trouble to screw with my freedom to talk? Wasn't McCain-Feingold bad enough as is? Surely the Dems could just inspire better bloggers, and then not feel so insecure about the impact of non-liberal bloggers on elections? Because the measure in question was, I think, absolutely central to free expression (my right to post things on my own damn web site, or even to pay someone to help me write that content, or even to pay people to help me get traffic to that web site)... and whatever those opposing the measure were thinking, they sure weren't thinking "First Amendment."

    I can't stand (and thus, don't read) the wingnut blogs from the far end of either party... but if I want to catch up on how a pending election is going to realistically impact something I actually care about, I want to be able to read what some people would certainly consider political blogs, and right up until I cast a vote. And considering my ecclectic interests, I know that the people posting meaningful content covering what I can't see through the normal media sure as hell can't afford to do what they do and even begin to think about whether they are or aren't compliant with election bookkeeping rules. Blocking this measure was stupid, counter-constitutional, and just objectively the wrong thing to do.

    --
    Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    1. Re:That's a lot of trouble to go to by Tsiangkun · · Score: 1

      Hidden in the measure was a dirty secret about funneling money through "online free speach" sites to political parties and candidates.

      It's not knocked down because of the freedom of expression, it was voted down because it's a circumvention of campaign finance restrictions, essentially allowing unlimited donations. Unlimited money spent on politics is almost always the opposite of freedom.

    2. Re:That's a lot of trouble to go to by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      That's no "dirty secret." Any money collected through those channels still must be reported, and must still comply with campaign finance laws.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    3. Re:That's a lot of trouble to go to by PhreakOfTime · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Somehow the parent was modded 'insightful'?

      Ignorance has covered the land, eh whos suprised?

      This bill in NO WAY will effect your ability to post whatever you want on your website, UNLESS you recieve money from somebody in a political party to post said content. You can post or publish ANYTHING you like, as long as you do it with your money. In no way would that restrain your ability to read other people who run, and edit THEIR OWN blogs. And then, EVEN IF these websites recieved such money, the only thing you would notice is the disclosure of WHO paid money.

      For some reason, this is being posted with a title that disparages democrats, when in actuality they struck down a bill that would have made the funding source similar to CLOSED-SOURCE software, ie you cant look at it. Or by striking down this bill, the funding stream FOR EVERYONE has to BY LAW be disclosed just like everywhere else, ie OPEN-SOURCE. I mean isnt that the republican line on all this Patriot Act smoke and mirrors? The basic line of thinking, if you arent hiding anything in your funding sources, why wouldnt you want to disclose them? If you stopped listening to the rhetoric, you wouldnt get caught up in such inconsistancies of logic.

      Stop being such an uninformed alarminst!

      On a side note, I stopped having stories posted by 'Zonk' display on my slashdot homepage, because they were just garbage and it made me start to stay away from this site. The only way I noticed this article was by logging in on a computer that wasnt mine. It was amazing how much removing just that single editor made a difference in the percieved, and actual, quality of slashdot.

    4. Re:That's a lot of trouble to go to by lgw · · Score: 1

      So what you're saying is, I can shut down all pro-Democrat blogs by allying myself with a Dem candidate, then buying a ton of Google ads to cover all political blogs? Wow, that wouldn't hurt frree speech at all, if only bloggers who can afford to host with no ads at all can blog.

      It shouldn't matter one bit if a blogger is a paid mouthpiece. It's not like an advertisement: I dont read a blog except upon my own initiative. No politician should have *any* ability to limit opposing speech in this way.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    5. Re:That's a lot of trouble to go to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This bill in NO WAY will effect your ability to post whatever you want on your website, UNLESS you recieve money from somebody in a political party to post said content.

      In other words, individual rights cease to exist when a dollar is involved; in that case, you don't make a move without the government's permission.

      When you find the Constitutional basis for that principle, be sure to let us know.

    6. Re:That's a lot of trouble to go to by PhreakOfTime · · Score: 1

      um no, thats not what I said at all.

      Like I said, stop listening to the rhetoric and pay attention to facts.

      You cannot 'shutdown' a site by allying yourself with a democrat. But if you do form such an alliance, you will have to DISCLOSE for all to see what your alliances are, if they exist. And then the POLITICIAN is limited in how much money he can spend on such 'advertising', in no way does it impact you. Unless of course you are playing a shell game and posting multiple blogs from the same source information and monies.

      Its not a hard concept, read the actual bill. For once, its less complicated than you think it is. And actually, fairly comprehensible even for a non-political person.

    7. Re:That's a lot of trouble to go to by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Forget what this bill would do to campaign finance laws for a minute and think what it would do to the internet. Every four years the internet would just about stop from the overload of political bullshit. And the providers won't increase their capacities for 1 out of four year useage increase. Nevermind the rest of the world being polluted by our ads and bickering. To go with that, for at least a year everything on the net would be subject to question, it would be practically useless as an information resource. The populace might as well turn off their internet connections and get a life cause the internet will be as useful during and election year as watching tv. (ok, less useful)

  17. mirror world? by conJunk · · Score: 1
    fta:
    "I'm horribly disappointed that this important measure failed to pass," said Rep. Mark Kennedy, R-Minn. "This bill was designed to protect the free-speech rights of Americans whose only alleged crime is wanting to use the Internet to express their opinions."

    is my understanding of u.s. politics so backwards? i would have expected the party breakdown to be 180degrees opoistite this...

    can someone explain?

    1. Re:mirror world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Well first the "main-stream" media are already pointing the fingers at the Dems and sort of not making it clear why they are doing it. And slashdot is being ignorant and playing along. Now the Republicans are taking advantage trying to make the Democrats look bad by crushing what they consider to be a "free speech" issue. Where the problem is actually more related to campaign finance and would basically set the stage for the internet to have more advertising in 2008 then I see on TV, hear on Radio or see in the paper combined with no apparent limit.

    2. Re:mirror world? by Mayhem178 · · Score: 1

      I believe that the Democratic party fears a strong Republican win (due to plethora candidate choices as compared to the Democrats, who will undoubtedly run the Hildebeast) during the 2008 election, and are therefore attempting to choke down the lines of communication between registered voters.

      Doesn't really effect me that much, I guess. Living in Indiana is an all but guaranteed red win in the electoral college. If I recall correctly, we were the first state to report in in 2004, mere seconds after our polls had closed.

      --

      "You will pay for your lack of vision..." - Emperor Palpatine to Ray Charles

    3. Re:mirror world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      can someone explain?

      Yes. In a nutshell, your view of Republicans vs. Democrats is flawed. The Republicans claim to be about 1) individual and states rights 2) limited government spending 3) small government 4) strong military 5) conservative approach to social issues. The Democrats claim to be about (well if you understand what they REALLY mean) 1) more laws 2) more government spending 3) larger government 4) weak military 5) liberal approach to social issues. So, in fact it makes sense that Republicans would support free speech. However, what is really going on here is that blogging really hurt the Democrats last election, so the Dems are out to hurt bloggers. Really ugly, and really partisan.

      Now, back to the parties themselves. Note above I used the term "claims" as to what each party represents. The fact is that both parties are now only a hairbreadth apart, since both rely (wrongly) on public opinion polls to develop their platforms. We desperately need a real third party in the US...I'd favor a party using essentially the entire Libertarian party platform, except for a reasonable military / foreign policy. Neo-libertarianism, if you will.

    4. Re:mirror world? by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 5, Insightful
      i would have expected the party breakdown to be 180degrees opoistite this...

      can someone explain?

      Sure. In a nutshell, you've been lied to. I would never assert that the Republican party has always vote pro-Freedom (yeah, we wrote the Patriot Act. Sorry about that.), but censorship has often been a Democratic pastime. Remember, the DMCA was signed by a Democrat president, and the PMRC was a pet project of Tipper Gore.

      And yet, to hear liberal groups tell it, it's always the Evil Republicans (tm) who want to silence everyone. The truth is far more complex, but how often do you hear of both parties' sins?

      P.S. I don't know which party Jack Thompson affiliates with. I won't blame either party for that nut.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    5. Re:mirror world? by Create+an+Account · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Disclaimer: I am mostly Republican.

      The issue is that the bill would have allowed almost unlimited political spending on the Internet. The Republicans almost always have WAY more money than the Democrats, but how they can spend it is sharply constrained by campaign finance laws. The Democrats do not want to allow the Republicans to 'buy' the election by spending vast amounts of money on unregulated messages over the Internet.

      Rep: "Pass this bill" so we can pay people to blog for us with no oversight.
      Dem: "Stop this bill" or we will lose our asses in the next election.

      It's not about free speech, really. It's about campaign finance and tactics.

    6. Re:mirror world? by ScentCone · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      is my understanding of u.s. politics so backwards? i would have expected the party breakdown to be 180degrees opoistite this...

      Interesting, isn't it? Despite the common association between left/liberal politics and liberty (to do/be anything), it's the left that usually acts to restrict or condemn speech. It's common on college campuses and is apparent in this congressional vote.

      There's another dimension to this, as well. Because much of the mainstream news media, as people, lean to the political left, there's a built-in advantage for leftier politicians in the way they are covered. When exposure for a politician comes in the form of "reporting" (or op-eds in a newspaper), it's not subject to the campaign laws. If personal/group expression is limited by law, then the democratic candidates benefit by getting more "free" journalistic exposure. People will whine about Fox being a more right-leaning news outlet, but that scarcely puts a dent in the coverage from CNN, ABC, NBC, CBS, NPR and the majority of big city newspapers and local broadcasters. So, the Democrats, in limiting free speech in this way, are morally bankrupt, but are working to improve their odds of winning elections.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    7. Re:mirror world? by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 1
      You got it. Mr. Kennedy is flat-out lying. There is no need to protect the free-speech rights of Americans. Note the dangerous innuendo ('alleged crime'). There is no crime. What the darkside wants to do is regulate your rights to speak on the Internet, then over time, via money pressure, drive out the blogs.

      The democrats saw exactly what this bill was designed to do, which is to stiffle the public from being able to talk about the corrupt darkside.

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
    8. Re:mirror world? by Erwos · · Score: 1

      "is my understanding of u.s. politics so backwards? i would have expected the party breakdown to be 180degrees opoistite this..."

      It is. Most Europeans (and to a certain extent, the rest of the world) seem to think of Republicans as evil, and Democrats as good (and Greens as the best, but I digress). This is a stunningly naive way of approaching the topic, and really rather misinformed.

      American politics revolve on a few different axes (m-w confirms this is the plural of axis!). I think the most usual examples are:
      1. States rights vs federal rights
      2. Individual responsibility vs social responsibility
      3. Loose constructionism vs strict constructionism

      So, assuming the Democrats actually voted down the bill because they didn't want bloggers doing their thing, the reasoning would be: It's not "socially responsible" to allow people to blog outside of campaign finance rules. Campaign finance rules don't work Constitutionally unless you take a very loose-constructionist view of free speech. I mean, when you think about it, giving money is a form of speech, especially if you do it publicly, right?

      Both parties believe in free speech, and all those lovely freedoms guaranteed in the Constitution. It is honestly disturbing how often you see people get gamed by the political parties into thinking the "other" is trying to steal away all of their precious freedoms.

      So, yes, if you were under the misimpression that "Republicans are free speech hating monsters", and "Democrats are angelic defenders of all that is good and true", you were mistaken. There is nothing inherently wrong with the concepts of individual responsibility, states rights, and strict constructionism, at least no more than there's anything wrong with social responsibility, federalism, and loose constructionism. The situation is complex, and there are good, even great, people on both sides of the aisle, so to speak.

      -Erwos

      --
      Plausible conjecture should not be misrepresented as proof positive.
    9. Re:mirror world? by iocat · · Score: 1

      Democrats were afraid to comepete on a level playing field. Uh! Republicans have lots of money, they could register more websites than us! More proof that politicians on both sides of the aisle can be morons.

      --

      Dude, I think I can see my house from here.

    10. Re:mirror world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The democrats saw exactly what this bill was designed to do, which is to stiffle the public from being able to talk about the corrupt darkside.

      We've found a strange SpaceLifeForm, but it doesn't seem to be intelligent...

    11. Re:mirror world? by Enry · · Score: 4, Informative
      and the PMRC was a pet project of Tipper Gore

      from TFWA:

      They included Tipper Gore (wife of Senator and later Vice President Al Gore); Susan Baker, wife of Treasury Secretary James Baker; and Nancy Thurmond, wife of Senator Strom Thurmond.


      So 1 democrat + 2 republicans = democratic project?

    12. Re:mirror world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If I were a cynic (and I am), I'd say that Republican support of this measure, and Democratic opposition, were both based on the conventional wisdom that the Republicans have talk radio and blogs, while the Democrats have print and TV. Exceptions to every rule, of course (Daily Kos, Fox News, etc). One could argue that the original McCain-Feingold bill, which was targeted at traditional media, had the opposite pattern of support (well, the same pattern of support, but the bill was a negation of this one), for the same reason

    13. Re:mirror world? by Pig+Hogger · · Score: 1
      I am mostly Republican.
      Mostly republican != mostly harmless
    14. Re:mirror world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      PigHogger != mostly smart

    15. Re:mirror world? by stlhawkeye · · Score: 1
      Sure. In a nutshell, you've been lied to. I would never assert that the Republican party has always vote pro-Freedom (yeah, we wrote the Patriot Act. Sorry about that.), but censorship has often been a Democratic pastime. Remember, the DMCA was signed by a Democrat president, and the PMRC [wikipedia.org] was a pet project of Tipper Gore.

      I find the censorship falls down on both sides of the aisle. Republicans tend to vote to censor stuff "for our own good." They're always wanting to save our poor souls from the evils of naked people and swear words and violence. The Democrats, recently, have hopped onto this issue too, because it's a winner with families, and your soccer moms and suburbanites are a huge voting bloc. There's no clear party line on this stuff. Antonin Scalia, probably the most conservative judges on the Supreme Court, strongly upheld the right to burn the flag under first ammendment protections, to the chagrin of Republican hardliners. You just can't fracture this issue easily along party lines like you can with so many others.

      And yet, to hear liberal groups tell it, it's always the Evil Republicans (tm) who want to silence everyone. The truth is far more complex, but how often do you hear of both parties' sins?

      Politicians want to silence anybody who damages or threatens their stranglehold on power. People are often afraid of the truth, but I think people are even more afriad of lies being repeated and believed. Well, not afraid. People are afraid of truth. They get angry when lies are believed. Anger tends to be a greater motivator to take positive action. Fear causes people to turtle up and protect themselves.

      P.S. I don't know which party Jack Thompson affiliates with. I won't blame either party for that nut.

      He associates with the Republicans, but lately they don't associate much with him. He is to the right-wing what Cindy Sheehan is the left-wing. He's so far off the edge that even RIGHT WING right-wingers alienate him.

      --
      "I have never won a debate with an ignorant person." -Ali ibn Abi Talib
    16. Re:mirror world? by Foosinho · · Score: 1
      Sure. In a nutshell, you've been lied to. I would never assert that the Republican party has always vote pro-Freedom (yeah, we wrote the Patriot Act. Sorry about that.), but censorship has often been a Democratic pastime. Remember, the DMCA was signed by a Democrat president, and the PMRC was a pet project of Tipper Gore.

      The DMCA was introduced by a Republican, and passed 99-0 in the Senate. A veto would have been pointless (not that Clinton wanted to veto it).

      The PMRC was not only a "pet project" of Tipper Gore, but also of James Baker's wife and Strom Thurmond's wife.

      The truth is far more complex, but how often do you hear of both parties' sins?

      Indeed, and not near often enough.
    17. Re:mirror world? by buhatkj · · Score: 1

      the wierd thing about this is that the democrats have a bigger, better online presence than the republicans do. george soros gave 25mil to moveon.org for example. i dont get why they would oppose this...what happens when the republicans start making a stink about all the liberal soft money flowing around these liberal activist web groups. up till now its been the dems having fun with the campaign finance laws, but what goes around always comes around...

      bottom line; they should have supported this bill, based on what ive read about it...there will always be more liberals on the internet (especially /.), because of the demographic.

      if me and all the other conservative "hicks" figure out that we can have political activism on the web too the dems are in big trouble in '08...

      --
      sometimes, i wonder if i'm the only conservative on teh intarweb. ah well, back to mah hogs and warmongerin'....
    18. Re:mirror world? by LordKazan · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Wow.. you are spewing seven types of BS

      It's been proven my repeated indepenant studies that Fox News is so biased and mixes opinion and news so freely [intentionally] that they have engendered inaccurate knowledge in 80% of their viewers.

      People who watch fox news have been shown to be less accurately inclined about the real world than people who watch/listen to BBC American, PBS, NPR

      Infact ABC/CBS/NBC aren't too much better than Fox - and you know all the factually inaccuracies they push off favor the administration's positions.

      For example in one quite pointed study about misconceptions and support of the Iraq war three questions were asked - and the more of them they got wrong the more likely they were to be the following
      A) Supporters of the war
      B) Fox news viewers

      [Ref: PIPA]

      --
      If you cannot keep politics out of your moderation remove yourself from the Mod Lottery.. NOW!
    19. Re:mirror world? by rk · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Remember, the DMCA was signed by a Democrat president

      And passed by a Republican majority congress. The sins of both parties are legion, and whenever someone comes around to challenge the status quo, left or right, they band together and squash the threat.

      It is so funny to me to listen to the Democratic Party's newly found fondness of federalism, where for 40 years prior they treated support of states' rights and federalism as mere code words for supporting racism and segregation, and out of touch with core American values. Now that they're outnumbered at the federal level, they have all kinds of respect for checks and balances and fiscal responsibility.

    20. Re:mirror world? by Morinaga · · Score: 1

      All blogs regardless of political leanings were opposed to this (all the major blogs of both sides that I've read. Kos on the left, The Corner on the right and Instipundent on the Libertarian side). It's not so much that either Republicans nor Democrats can spend money on Internet campaign adds anymore. Now, KOS's books can be audited and regulated by the FCC based on the context of what he writes either pro or con for a given canidate. So his freedom of speech is now constricted to the dollar amounts he gets from political parties. The work around is Moveon.org and other organizations like this. Now Soros can give 600 Billion dollars to Moveon and never be subject to McCain-Feingold because he's not giving it to a canidate. Moveon then can fund unlimited spending in any way they see fit. It's the work around to campaign finance reform. The legallity of McCain-Feingold is mind boggling in it's implications. It tries to limit political influence from special interest groups and does not succeed. In the end all it does is limit the political speech of the individual to directly voice their opinions. So instead you create grops like MoveOn.org and Swift Boat Veterans. Now blogs get to be moderated by the FCC if they collect any advertising. Seems a very bad move to me.

    21. Re:mirror world? by stlhawkeye · · Score: 1
      The Republicans almost always have WAY more money than the Democrats, but how they can spend it is sharply constrained by campaign finance laws.

      You're a Republican? I don't buy it, because you've got your facts wrong. And Republicans never get their facts wrong.

      Err... shit.

      No, seriously, let's take a look. Republicans do have MUCH more money but the sources may surprise you. For all of the Democrats constant bitching about how the Republicans are the party of rich business men and oil tycoons, the largest donors are almost always to Democrats. Republicans tend to collect a lot of small and medium sized donations from a ton of people. Which is probably why they win elections. It's the Democrats who have the financial support of the elite rich and nobody else. Poor people don't give money to campaigns. The Republicans have the middle class nailed down tight. All that family values bullshit.

      2000 Election, Top 10 527 Commitee Donors 1. Pro Choice Vote $12,364,150
      2. Planned Parenthood Votes $7,217,204
      3. Bush-Cheney 2000, Inc-Recount Fund $7,211,773
      4. New York Senate 2000 $6,337,785
      5. Gore Lieberman Recount Committee $3,685,287
      6. DLCC $3,542,722
      7. Republican Leadership Council (RLC) $3,059,730
      8. WORKING FAMILIES 2000 $2,954,655
      9. EMILY's List Non-Federal $2,810,939
      10. Democratic Governors' Association$ 2,016,475

      2002 Election, Top 10 Donors to 527's 1 . Fonda, Jane $11,955,000

      2 . AFL-CIO $1,442,755 3 . DCCC Democratic Congressional Campaign Cmte $1,422,285
      4 . American Fedn of St Cty & Municipal Empls $1,180,071
      5 . DNC Democratic National Cmte/DNC Services Co $1,110,000
      6 . Messinger, Alida Rockefeller $970,000
      7 . KIRSCH, STEVEN T & MICHELE $750,000
      8 . Service Employees Int'l Union $675,250
      9 . HARRIS, JOHN A IV AND MRS $652,500
      10 . Soros, George $500,000

      If you can't figure out that half of these are unions that their money goes almost exclusively to Democrats...

      Top Donors PACS, 2006 1. NATIONAL BEER WHOLESALERS ASSOCIATION POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $984,100
      2. INTERNATIONAL BROTHERHOOD OF ELECTRICAL WORKERS COMMITTEE ON POLITICAL EDUCATION $979,000
      3. ASSOCIATION OF TRIAL LAWYERS OF AMERICA POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $966,000
      4. CREDIT UNION LEGISLATIVE ACTION COUNCIL OF CUNA $942,869
      5. AMERICAN BANKERS ASSOCIATION PAC (BANKPAC) $847,514
      6. AMERICAN FEDERATION OF STATE COUNTY & MUNICIPAL EMPLOYEES - P E O P L E, QUALIFIED $841,673
      7. DEALERS ELECTION ACTION COMMITTEE OF THE NATIONAL AUTOMOTIVE DEALERS ASSOCIATION $803,350
      8. UNITED PARCEL SERVICE INC. POLITICAL ACTION COMMITTEE $778,298
      9. INTERNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF FIREFIGHTERS INTERESTED IN REGISTRATION AND EDUCATION PAC $684,705
      10. CARPENTERS LEGISLATIVE IMPROVEMENT COMMITTEE UNITED BROTHERHOOD OF CARPENTERS AND JOINERS

      And so on and so forth. BIG MONEY donors tend to go Democratic more than Republican.

      It's not about free speech, really. It's about campaign finance and tactics.

      I concur!

      --
      "I have never won a debate with an ignorant person." -Ali ibn Abi Talib
    22. Re:mirror world? by ak3ldama · · Score: 1
      If you haven't noticed, the dems are already in trouble in '08. That's why they're so paranoid about the potential of this bill hurting them. They must be perfect so they are not put so far out of the races they cannot get back. They have the potential to become completely second-rate.

      I am a republican/libertarian, but I would hate to see what happens if the republicans gain complete dominance over the democrats. It is in no one's best interest to have the republicans every whim pleased, God only knows what would happen to our national debt.

      --
      "but money is the God of Algiers & Mahomet their prophet." - Rich. O'Bryen June 8th 1786
    23. Re:mirror world? by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 2, Insightful
      So 1 democrat + 2 republicans = democratic project?

      It does when the one Democrat was on every TV and radio show to explain how censoring kids' music would make them happier, healthier, and safer. I'm pretty sure she invented the phrase "think of the children!".

      Both sides of the aisle were in on this one, but Tipper was definitely the starring attraction.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    24. Re:mirror world? by buhatkj · · Score: 1

      "God only knows what would happen to our national debt."

      the funny thing about that is you are right. what ever happened to that fiscal restraint they used to have.

      i would have voted libertarian in 04' but i didnt think their policies on the war made sense. even kerry knew we couldnt just about face and leave immediately...
      if it weren't for that, i'd have been on board.

      --
      sometimes, i wonder if i'm the only conservative on teh intarweb. ah well, back to mah hogs and warmongerin'....
    25. Re:mirror world? by Liam+Slider · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And the Republicans AND Democrats have way more money than every other political party...where's the laws bringing that into balance? Oh wait, we third party people don't even argue about that... We just want elections that are fair where when we get on the ballot we don't get dragged into local courts by the big parties with them arguing we should be taken off because we have no chance to win...because we aren't them... where our Presidential candidates, if they are on enough ballots to (in theory) get enough electoral votes to win, can participate in Presidential debates...where the ballot boxes aren't stuffed and voting machines aren't rigged (both big parties guilty of this)... In other words, we want Free and Democratic elections in the United States (well....everyone sems to want them for Iraq, or this or that third world piss poor country, only fair we should want them here.) That would be election reform. Who gives a shit about "campaign finance" at a stage where everything else is broken?

    26. Re:mirror world? by ak3ldama · · Score: 1

      I completely agree on all points.

      --
      "but money is the God of Algiers & Mahomet their prophet." - Rich. O'Bryen June 8th 1786
    27. Re:mirror world? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      It's been proven my repeated indepenant studies that Fox News is so biased and mixes opinion and news so freely [intentionally] that they have engendered inaccurate knowledge in 80% of their viewers.

      And, even allowing for that statistic, I'm saying that 80% of their viewers is still a tiny minority of the other networks' collective viewers. CBS still gets more people watching it, and if they had their way, a presidential election would have been altered by their anchors obviously insane clutching to a bogus story based on poorly forged MS Word documents pretending to be memos from decades ago.

      Infact ABC/CBS/NBC aren't too much better than Fox - and you know all the factually inaccuracies they push off favor the administration's positions.

      No, they're also very poor at journalism... but their biases absolutely do not favor the administration. Most importantly, their airtime biases tilt the most extremely during the critical few weeks before an election, which is what we're talking about (since that's when the law would most crack down on non-"journalist" rights to free speech).

      For example in one quite pointed study about misconceptions and support of the Iraq war three questions were asked - and the more of them they got wrong the more likely they were to be the following A) Supporters of the war B) Fox news viewers

      And? "More likely to be..." doesn't add up to "and thus we shouldn't let people write what they want on their web sites because that's the same as paid media support."

      "More likely they were to be..." doesn't, by the way, indicate that one news channe's counter-balancing editorial position even comes close to countering the overt bias of organizations like NPR (which even uses your tax dollars), or the major new networks. CNN alone is so demonstrably oriented against the administration that it and Fox essentially cancel each other out. What's left are all the other broadcasters and networks, the majority of which overwhelmingly left-leaning in their personal politics and their editorial decisions.

      Why not read a serious poli-sci paper on the subject. You'll see specific references to hard stats on the people involved. For every reporter that contributed to the Bush campaign, 93 contributed to Kerry... and many other such instructive tidbits. You can bitch about Fox all you want, but they're only a tiny slice of the media pie.

      But you know what? I don't care if they're biased, as long as my person right to free speech isn't limited. And that's exactly what the legislation in question was designed to prevent, and which the Dems just went to a lot of trouble to shoot down. Nice.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    28. Re:mirror world? by LordKazan · · Score: 1

      To call NPR biased and to ignore my statements about various news stations because they don't agree with your bias is ludacris - go look up the specific study i was referencing for my statistics

        oh wait - lemme get you a link to the PDF because i know you're too lazy to factcheck yourself

      http://www.pipa.org/OnlineReports/Pres_Election_04 /Report10_21_04.pdf

      --
      If you cannot keep politics out of your moderation remove yourself from the Mod Lottery.. NOW!
    29. Re:mirror world? by SlashHack · · Score: 1

      Republicans tend to collect a lot of small and medium sized donations from a ton of people. Which is probably why they win elections.

      No, republicans win elections because they actually have ideas. democrats loose because people reject socialelitism.

      --
      --- Bad news for America, good news for Democrats
      Good news for America, bad news for Democrats
    30. Re:mirror world? by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 1

      Remember, the DMCA was signed by a Democrat president,

      uh huh, and who wrote that bill again?

    31. Re:mirror world? by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      To call NPR biased and to ignore my statements about various news stations because they don't agree with your bias is ludacris - go look up the specific study i was referencing for my statistics

      I'm not ignoring your stats, I'm pointing out that they don't mean anything in the larger context. How about this: let's, for sake of argument, say that every single viewer of Fox is a useless Republican drone, and that every single NPR listener takes everything that's presented there with a grain of salt and researches it entirely on their own against multiple sources before forming any sort of opinion. Better? That still leaves all of the other major broadcast networks, staffed by people that overwhelmingly lean towards one political camp, and viewed rather uncritically by a large national audience. Citing how many Fox watchers think what is like pulling three similar people out of a mix of 100 people and then finding that 100% of those three select people think the same thing. Shocking! Also meaningless.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    32. Re:mirror world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, Clinton disagreed with it but signed it anyway because it was popular? Gee, what a ringing endorsement of the man.

    33. Re:mirror world? by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      "Now that they're outnumbered at the federal level, they have all kinds of respect for checks and balances and fiscal responsibility."

      Umm, fiscal responsibility has nothing to do with federalism vs. states' rights. If you mean restraint on federal spending, then you may have a point -- but fiscal responsibility is really about balancing a budget, not spending less.

      Neither major party in the US walks the walk -- but they all talk the talk. Tax & spend (the traditional conservative appellation for the liberal method) sure beats borrow & spend (the current liberal appellation for the 'conservative' method in use).

      Either way, the Federal government continues to bloat.

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    34. Re:mirror world? by stlhawkeye · · Score: 1
      No, republicans win elections because they actually have ideas. democrats loose because people reject socialelitism.

      Everybody has idea. The question is whose ideas the majority of voters will support. Or rather, whose marketing they'll buy. I agree that America in particular has a continuing history of its population and leaders strongly rejecting socialism, even before socialism resulted in Nazism and Sovietism. What I meant by my comment that you quoted was that when your party is receiving a lot of money from small to medium donations, it means you have a significant population base of what could easily be classified as "mainstream" America: middle class families and small business owners with a modicum of disposable income.

      If those people were contributing to Democrats, I'd interpret it as the Democratic platform appealing more to that class of people, and I think they'd start winning elections. Part of the Democrat's problem is that they're still playing by the rules and assumptions of the 1970's and 1980's, which are really far out of date. When you tell people for three decades that the Republicans are going to dismantle all of the social safety nets, then the Republicans get power and you still get your entitlement check, people stop trusting you when you keep running on that same platform.

      I think you can also point to the waning power of labor unions. My friends are about the most leftist, liberal people I know. There's not a Democrat in congress who is liberal enough to satisfy them. They almost didn't vote for Kerry because he's not liberal enough. And even they think the unions are more of a burden than a help to the "working man."

      I have no cure for what ails the Democrats. It seems to me that they have no real platform other than a non-stop caterwauling over the myriad shortcomings of George Bush, which is a road to nowhere, since Bush is very unlikely to run for President in 2008. I voted libertarian in 2004, but had I not, I'd have voted for Bush before Kerry. Not because of any real love for the man, his party, or his platform, but because Kerry could provide me with no compelling reason for vote for him. And I'm searching desperately for a rising star in the Democratic party with a shred of intellectual integrity, and I'm not finding any. Nor any in the Republican party, frankly, and barring that, I'll vote Libertarian again. I basically vote for whomever at least gives good lip service towards the principles of our way of life that I embrace and believe in. And I'll vote AGAINST any party that attacks those things, or hides an ideology that runs counter to those things in a veil of patriotism.

      --
      "I have never won a debate with an ignorant person." -Ali ibn Abi Talib
    35. Re:mirror world? by Procyon101 · · Score: 1

      If the Democratic party collapses, we won't be a 1 party system. The Libertarian party will fill in the gap. Political party systems always find equilibrium with 2 parties, more than that and the parties combine during shared battles, less than that and the unheard minority bands together under a new umbrella.

      Personally, I left the Republican party for the Libertarians primarily over the national debt issue...

    36. Re:mirror world? by Procyon101 · · Score: 1

      Maybe he forgot to read it like all the Democrats did when they voted yes on the Patriot act. Common problem I hear.

    37. Re:mirror world? by ifwm · · Score: 0

      "Umm, fiscal responsibility has nothing to do with federalism vs. states' rights."

      Umm, yes it does. Does the federal governement COLLECT money from the states? YES.

      Does the federal government GIVE money to the states? YES.

      See now why you're completely wrong?

    38. Re:mirror world? by deanoaz · · Score: 1

      >>> i would have expected the party breakdown to be 180degrees opoistite this...

      >>> can someone explain?

      Here's my wild-ass guess.

      Thirty years ago you got your news and opinion from A-NB-CBS and you liked it, cause you didn't have much choice. With that kind of media bottleneck in effect the Democrats held Congress in an iron grip for forty years.

      Now there are scads of places to get your news and opinion and the Democrats find themselves on the outs.. out of the White House, out of control in the Senate, and out of control in the House. They have drawn the conclusion that too much free speech is very bad for their prospects as a party.

      --
      If 'the people' in Amendment 2 are 'the state' then Amendments 1, 2, 4, 9, and 10 benefit the state, not you.
    39. Re:mirror world? by mrgreen4242 · · Score: 1
      Remember, the DMCA was signed by a Democrat president

      And passed by a Republican controlled Congress, no?

    40. Re:mirror world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      there will always be more liberals on the internet (especially /.), because of the demographic.

      Until, as the old saw goes, 20 years go by and all those liberals "become conservatives without changing a single idea".

      I was attracted to the counterculture when I was young, because I love freedom, and I loved the idea of getting rid of all the fuddy-duddy restrictions the "older generation" seemed to want. I still feel the same way today. So, why do I consider myself a "conservative" these days? Because I want extremely small government that stays out of my business and lets me be free with minimal stupid restriction and tax burden. The Libertarian platform is the only thing approaching a sane platform from any semi-major political party. And by the way, the Libertarian platform is ultra-conservative, not liberal, the way those words are used in political discourse today. (I think the terms "conservative" and "liberal" should just be retired, frankly.)

      Anytime a politician tells you that it's "for your rights", but wants to grow government, you know it's lying.

    41. Re:mirror world? by Red+Flayer · · Score: 1

      "See now why you're completely wrong?"

      No. And you don't need to be an asshat if you disagree with me... though I'm getting used to your flaming.

      Apparently, you are still confusing spending restraint with fiscal responsibility. They are not the same.

      "Does the federal governement COLLECT money from the states? YES"

      Since when does the federal government collect money from states? If you mean taxpayers within states, then fine... but show me a budget item showing any state paying the federal government for operational or capital expenses.

      Furthermore, from an economic standpoint (not a political one), it doesn't really matter whether the funds are received and spent at the national, state, or local level. Here's a good paper that discusses deficit spending and how it is accounted for: http://law.bepress.com/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article =1008&context=rutgersnewarklwps

      Fiscal responsibility is a separate issue from states' rights. They are not independent when applied in practice, if you mean "fiscal responsibility only at the federal level." But fiscal responsibility really includes federal, state, and local spending and revenues.

      You see now why you're completely wrong?

      BTW, I read your recent posts... I see you still as misinformed as ever. The filibuster cannot be used in the House of Reps. You linked that Wikipedia article... maybe you should have bothered reading it.

      Well, what should one expect from a troll, but trollish comments?

      --
      "Trolls they were, but filled with the evil will of their master: a fell race..." -- J.R.R. Tolkien on Olog-hai
    42. Re:mirror world? by Impotent_Emperor · · Score: 1

      Small political parties should concentrate on small elections. So if you are a Green or Libertarian, set your sights a little lower and aim for a county seat.

    43. Re:mirror world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      oh wait - lemme get you a link to the PDF because i know you're too lazy to factcheck yourself

      The study you're linking is quite deceptive in its own right.

      For instance, it essentially makes claims like "X% of Fox Viewers thought Saddam was directly responsible for 9/11, as opposed to the smaller group of Y% that watched CNN and thought the same thing". Well, that's great, except they're implying causation (watching Fox News caused people to be misinformed) rather than association (people who think Saddam was directly responsible for 9/11 tend to watch Fox News). Typical way to "lie with statistics", and a well known logical fallacy.

      Fox isn't perfect, but it's no worse (and possibly better) than many of its competitors.

    44. Re:mirror world? by TheWickedKingJeremy · · Score: 1

      "The smart way to keep people passive and obedient is to strictly limit the spectrum of acceptable opinion, but allow very lively debate within that spectrum - even encourage the more critical and dissident views. That gives people the sense that there's free thinking going on, while all the time the presuppositions of the system are being reinforced by the limits put on the range of the debate."

      -Noam Chomsky


      The points you bring up are a great example of controlling the range of debate... The two parties talk of "election reform"... they dangle carrots, make some adjustments, argue a bit, etc. But they are not interested in the slightest in really taking money out of politics, or in introducing new ideas... and why would they? They, after all, are the beneficieries of the current system, and hence are its defenders.

      --

      my religion lies somewhere between buddhism and super monkey ball - pamphlet?
    45. Re:mirror world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Democrats claim to be about (well if you understand what they REALLY mean) 1) more laws 2) more government spending 3) larger government 4) weak military 5) liberal approach to social issues

      Thank you, partisan hack. For supporting the Republican kleptocracy. Your check is in the mail!

    46. Re:mirror world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Anytime a politician tells you that it's "for your rights", but wants to grow government, you know it's lying.

      That's right! Because having power consolidated in the government, where there is public accountability, is far inferior to having power in the corporate world, with NO accountability.

      Nature abhors a vacuum. Who would you rather have with the power, your corporate overloads or elected officials who have to at least pretend to serve the will of the electorate?

    47. Re:mirror world? by Liam+Slider · · Score: 1

      The kinds of tactics I am talking about...dragging candidates into courts, rigged elections, and so forth, happen much more often at the local level. There have even been moments where intimidation tactics have been used to scare away candidates, dirty tricks with regards to debates (such as refusing third party debates....but showing up at the last minute at third party specific debates to steal away the press attention onto themselves), and all sorts of other nastiness. Saying "well confine yourselves to local elections then" doesn't solve the problem. Also...how is anyone expected to even try to effect change at the national level with that attitude!

      And let's not forget....Libetarians have been elected to Federal positions many times before. And there has even been a third-party President once upon a time... It's not utterly hopeless there. Just exceedingly difficult due to the unfair system.

    48. Re:mirror world? by Enry · · Score: 1

      the wierd thing about this is that the democrats have a bigger, better online presence than the republicans do. george soros gave 25mil to moveon.org for example. i dont get why they would oppose this...what happens when the republicans start making a stink about all the liberal soft money flowing around these liberal activist web groups. up till now its been the dems having fun with the campaign finance laws, but what goes around always comes around...

      You'd be right, except for a few things.

      For one, every time you mention Soros, I'll bring up Richard Mellon Scaife. The amount of money he's given to conservative causes far exceeds what Soros has done (Wikipedia says Scaife has given $340 mil to conservative causes as of 2002).

      Okay, so there's a bunch of liberal causes out there, with moveon.org being the big one? What about swift boat veterans? They were a 527. And then there's USA Next.

    49. Re:mirror world? by davidbofinger · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It is so funny to me to listen to the Democratic Party's newly found fondness of federalism, where for 40 years prior they treated support of states' rights and federalism as mere code words for supporting racism and segregation, and out of touch with core American values. Now that they're outnumbered at the federal level, they have all kinds of respect for checks and balances and fiscal responsibility.

      Pretty much the same thing is happening in Australia. Traditionally the "liberal" (i.e. conservative) party has been federalist, and the labor (sort of post-socialist; US spelling sic) has been centralist.

      But today the liberals control both the federal houses of parliament (and hence also the executive), while the labor party has a clean sweep at the state level. Quite extraordinary political situation, and the effect on politicians' psychology, on both sides of politics, has been equally remarkable.

    50. Re:mirror world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It is so funny to me to listen to the Democratic Party's newly found fondness of federalism, where for 40 years prior they treated support of states' rights and federalism as mere code words for supporting racism and segregation, and out of touch with core American values. Now that they're outnumbered at the federal level, they have all kinds of respect for checks and balances and fiscal responsibility.
      It is so funny for me to listen to the Republican Party's bullshit about family values when most of them are
      crooks and hypocrites. They do their best to try to convert the middle class into a poor class.
      Republicans speak of patriotism while the vice president, his aide, the president's aide and maybe even the
      president have comitted treason.
      40 years ago the republicans courted the dixiecrats and converted them to republicans. The democrats became
      more acceptable because they lost most of their racists to the republicans who welcomed them with open arms.
      The differences between the republicans and democrats 40 years ago was rather blurry, but not anymore.
      Today the republicans are a coalition of religious fundamentalists, neocons and/or chickenhawks.
      Democrats are not outnumbered, the political landscape is 50-50%. What gives a small edge to the
      republicans has more to do with electoral fraude that it does to public support.
    51. Re:mirror world? by bm_luethke · · Score: 1

      "And passed by a Republican majority congress."

      At least in the senate - it passed without a single dissenting vote. I didn't look up the exact house vote, but by a HUGE margin also. Can't pick blame for either side, though I think the parent to you was making that point to a group of people who mostly blame the DMCA on republicans.

      You know, it's interesting to look where both parties "agreed" - at least as far as voting goes. It's almost universally bad when they vote for it, though there have been a few decent things.

      You will note that depsite the complaints of democrats about the patriot act it passed about just like the DMCA - 1 nay in the senate and 66 nays in the house. While it was a republican sponsered bill, the democrats voted en mass for the thing also. Again, no real winner if you actually payed attention to the actual vote (what really matters) instead of rhetoric.

      It is sorta amusing to see what people think that thier political party stands for after watching the actual votes.

      --
      ------- Sorry about the spelling, I suffer from two problems. Dyslexia makes it difficult to spell well, lazy makes it
    52. Re:mirror world? by rk · · Score: 1

      You may be surprised, but I don't think I disagree with a single word you said. There is a special vitriolic place in my heart for the Republican Party. Campaign like libertarians, govern like mercantilists, corporatists, or worse.

    53. Re:mirror world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Thank you, partisan hack. For supporting the Republican kleptocracy. Your check is in the mail!

      LOL! Way to attack the messenger instead of the message!

      Anything substantive to say?

    54. Re:mirror world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      That's right! Because having power consolidated in the government, where there is public accountability, is far inferior to having power in the corporate world, with NO accountability.

      Congratulations! You have just invented a fine strawman argument!

      If those were the two alternatives, clearly you'd have a point. However, a WHOLE lot of our government's power has to do with controlling and taxing it's citizenry, not controlling the "corporate world". Then we have things like subsidies, and military spending. NONE of that has anything to do with "power", per se, most of it is (IMO) wasted money.

      If the country were run efficiently, with streamlined subsidies and less pork (like that $200 million+ bridge in Washington state to connect a community of 8,000 to a community of 50) I guarantee we could have a very satisfactory level of government services with about 50% lower tax rates. Total revenues would grow, and total taxes would probably be not much lower in the long run due to a stronger economy. That's what's happened every time there have been tax cuts, including now after the Bush cuts. Bush just needs to find his veto pen, and the Congress needs to get a fiscal clue.

      Nature abhors a vacuum. Who would you rather have with the power, your corporate overloads or elected officials who have to at least pretend to serve the will of the electorate?

      That is not the choice. Do we want smart leaders and an efficient, freedom-oriented country, or do we want what we have now?

    55. Re:mirror world? by genrader · · Score: 1

      LOLOL That is the funniest thing I've ever read, methinks. "Oh, I'm sorry, we Democrats are ALWAYS right and the Republicans are dirty mongrels!!!" Perhaps you should actually educate yourself a bit more.

    56. Re:mirror world? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      deanoaz hit the nail square on the head. The Bloggers fact check the media, most of which leans to the left. If the Bloggers can't talk about politics the Dems feel they will have an advantage. I think it's stupid cause it's not going to change anything.

  18. Money and speech by jfengel · · Score: 1

    Actually, it controls their money flow: they can't be paid by certain sources to blog politically.

    Then again, the court has decided that spending money is a form of speech, which is the basis of restrictions on campaign finance laws, so perhaps we're really saying the same thing.

  19. Not dead ... Better this way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    There was majority support, but under the rules of the House, it can't jump to the head of the line without "supermajority" support. Neither the House, nor the Senate, is a supermajority body. But they have rules that permit Democrats and Republicans to play games and defeat the will of the majority ... for a time.

    In a way, this is better. The Federal Election Commission in the next few weeks will release its "final rules" relating to court-mandated regulation of political speech on the Internet. These rules may meet the primary concerns of bloggers, and this legislation might not be necessary.

    Few seem to understand why bloggers have been so concerned with the proposed rules. It is not the application of campaign finance laws to political advertising. It is, primarily, the absurd characterization of the use of computers and internet access with any ownership linkages to corporations or labor unions as illegal campaign contributions, if a blogger happens to be "coordinating" (poorly defined) with a political campaign.

    The absurd safe harbor is, IIRC, 4 hours a month, of using a computer that might be provided, or subsidized, by your employer!

    By the way, as bloggers formally organize as incorporated vehicles for liability protection, they are subject to all the rules applicable that bar "corporate money" from "corrupting" the system.

    The original proposal was a mess. Well known bloggers testified before the FEC and flushed out most of this. Let's give the FEC a chance to rule. This piece of legislation has majority support. Most of the "coordination" provisions bloggers are most worried about don't kick in until 60 days before next November's federal election. Let's take a breath, see what the FEC offers, and then put whatever pressure on legislators may be necessary and appropriate.

  20. Of course, what the article doesn't tell you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is that this bill actually needed a 2/3 majority to pass for some reason. I'm not sure why; it says they were trying to pass it outside the normal rules. Well, huh. If they'd just gone through the normal rules it would have passed, looks like, right?

    Still, a bit of an odd way of looking at it. The democrats have a minority of congress and not all of them voted against this motion. They certainly voted against it more than the republicans did; still this article seems a bit sensationalist, the bill doesn't manage to get 2/3 of congress to vote for it and it's the DEMOCRATS! THE DEMOCRATS DID THIS!

  21. Not sure the dems were ever friends of free speech by inverselimit · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Remember who signed the DMCA--Clinton. I think free speech in the slashdot, eff sense is really quite orthogonal to party lines.

  22. What constitutes a 'political' blog? by gstoddart · · Score: 1

    What is the threshold to be covered by this?

    Could you, as an individual blogger, endorse a candidate or discuss political issues on your blog? Or are you enjoined from making any political statements on your blog because that is now included as part of someone's election campaign?

    How much of one's blog would have to apply to other things in order to not run afoul of this?

    I'm a little mystefied as the article is unclear. On the one hand, I can see that they don't want massive campaigns by parties which circumvents the electoral rules. On the other hand, you can't supress every single private individual from having a political opinion.

    --
    Lost at C:>. Found at C.
    1. Re:What constitutes a 'political' blog? by jordandeamattson · · Score: 1

      A political blog is defined by some (see some of the skirmishes in the last election) as anyone writing on matters political.

      There was one case where a blogger/website runner was pushed to file the various FEC disclosure forms, because he endorsed a candidate.

      It was this situation, which inspired this proposed legislation.

      Yours,

      Jordan

  23. not surpising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Democrats do blame bloggers and other internet outlets, in part, for their recent losses at the ballet box. It seems that any non-traditional media is ironically bad for liberals. Between Matt Drudge destroying Clintons potential of having a stainless (pun intended) legacy and bloggers destroying the "national guard" memos and other parts of the Kerry campaign democrats want to stifle online speech. If you can't compete than just shut them down is the thinking I guess.

  24. get ready for your own chinese firewall by know1 · · Score: 0

    only it won't be physical, sure go ahead and look... "pick up the gun" * shoots * "you all saw, he had a gun" look at and say what you want, just be prepared for the beatdown when you do. thank god i'm in England

  25. READ THE DAMN ARTICLE by RingDev · · Score: 4, Informative

    This is not an encrouchment on your right to free speech. This just applies existing election campaign laws to internet communication.

    You can still post your political party bashing blog. Now you just can't get paid insane amounts of money to do so with out the backing party acknowledging it.

    Nothing to do with your rights. Everything to do with campaign finances.

    -Rick

    --
    "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
    1. Re:READ THE DAMN ARTICLE by rtb144 · · Score: 1

      You are totally incorrect. This has much more meaning than that. Black out dates and limitations apply also. You cannot mention candidates that are running during certain periods, plus a value system could apply reguardless of how much actual money you make. I'm sorry, but you clearly have no understanding of what is at stake here.

      --
      Sie ist tunbar!
    2. Re:READ THE DAMN ARTICLE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ah, but what if you have ads on your site? What if I manage to get an interview with a politican for my blog? Will I have to allow his opponent equal time/space to present his views?

      Campaign finance is a lot more than just disclosure. I'm sorry, but the minute I have start worrying about whether what I post on my blog will get me into legal trouble it is about my rights.

    3. Re:READ THE DAMN ARTICLE by RingDev · · Score: 1

      Black out dates, limitations and value systems do not apply to individual citizens discussing election campaigns. Heck, with soft money and constituants it barely even applies to mass media. This will have no effect on 99.999% of all bloggers.

      What this means is that political parties can't funnel unfettered advertising dollars into blogs and internet based advertising for campaigns. If this amendment had gone through, it would mean that the next election could result in millions of tax payer and private dollars being spent in spam bots flooding the blogosphere with advertisements, payments for backing from prominent political blogs, and paid posters to add emphasis or FUD to different blogs depending on political affiliation.

      So if you receive finances from a political party or their constituants, you should be careful and review the FEC rules. But for the vast majority of bloggers, just keep on posting.

      -Rick

      --
      "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
    4. Re:READ THE DAMN ARTICLE by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      Nothing to do with your rights. Everything to do with campaign finances.

      WTF? So all of the rights issues in the debate over campaign financing have been agreed upon and settled?

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    5. Re:READ THE DAMN ARTICLE by RingDev · · Score: 1

      "but what if you have ads on your site?"

      I'm getting paid right now, but I'm posting about a political issue. If this issue was an election should I wory? No. Because the money I am earning is in no way related to the political parties involved. Now, if your google adds were for a specific campaigner, then you may have to check on it.

      "I'm sorry, but the minute I have start worrying about whether what I post on my blog will get me into legal trouble it is about my rights."

      You already do. You can't post liable or slander on your blog. You can't break NDA's on your blog. You can't export encryption algorythms on your blog. There are thousands of things you already can not do on your blog. And in this case its not making political posts illegal. It is holding political posts under the same scruteny as mass media.

      For example. Lets say /. did their usual "Top 10 questions" thread to ask each of the next presidential elects. They pick the top 10 questions and send them off to each elect and post the responses. No problem.

      Now lets say that the Republican Party paid Cmdr Taco $25,000 to post a "Top 10 questions" thread. Now the thread would be subject to FEC regulation. Atleast to the extent of Cmdr Taco and /. And yes, that regulation goes way beyond disclosure, there are lawyers that would gladly take that $25,000 from Taco to make sure /. was safe from lawsuit.

      What would be nice would be if some Blog friendly campaign lawyer would post a clear cut (err atleast roughly serraded) article on where the danger area begins.

      -Rick

      --
      "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
    6. Re:READ THE DAMN ARTICLE by amliebsch · · Score: 1

      I don't agree with your analysis, because hosting a web site does in fact require expenditures. Remember, there are not just restrictions on receipts but also expenditures. The more popular the website, the more it costs to host it. If the website is promoting a certain party or candidate with those expenditures of cash, those expenditures could easily be characterized as "in-kind" contributions, just like independent groups that pay money to broadcast political advertisements. Therefore, I do think it will affect a large number of blogs.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    7. Re:READ THE DAMN ARTICLE by RingDev · · Score: 1

      You have a point there. But I disagree with the impact. Most political blogs that actually have that heavy of a load likely either have a plan in place for covering the next set of elections, or will by that point in time now that the responsibility of web based journalism is being clarified. And even then, so long as the blog owner is paying for the site, at worst it would be considered soft money (like the Swift Boat Vet adds and that Fox pro-Bush TV show) which is not regulated nearly as tightly as party money.

      I still think that this ruling will provide for more truthful blogging and less politically funded punditry cluttering up the issues.

      In all likelihood, the 2006 elections will be the test bed. The parties will experiment with the bloggosphere for the representative elections, someone will get sued, and the courts will help define the line between a blogging citizen and a political contribution.

      -Rick

      --
      "Most people in the U.S. wouldn't know they live in a tyrannical state if it walked up and grabbed their junk." - MyFirs
  26. Question for the poster... by pdo400 · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...were you paid to submit this here?

    --
    --
    1. Re:Question for the poster... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It looks like the post's title was taken straight from the article. Is CNET on the Republican payroll? Or are you just angry that it isn't a anti-Reblican article?

  27. Aaaargh! by Slartibartfast · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Once upon a time, I was a Democrat -- and damn proud of it. Democrats have a wonderful and storied history of going to bat for the little guy. Be it gender, race, disability, religion... you name it, the Democrats were willing to support those unfairly accused or biased against.

    And then came the 90's.

    Bill Clinton still did many good things -- but one of the worst things he did (IMNSHO) was to cause the Democratic party to lose its identity. He frequently took Republican initiatives, rubbed off the serial numbers, and called it "Good." Then came Gore & Kerry -- both of whose campaign platforms could be summed up as "I'm not George W. Bush."

    Then we have stuff like the DMCA and the Sonny Bono act, both of which should have been squashed by traditional Democrats... and instead are supported by them.

    I'm disgusted. Bring back a JFK. Bring back a Roosevelt! Hell -- even Carter! He made some really dumb mistakes, but nobody doubts his sincere willingness to try to do what he felt was best -- as his continued works with Habitat for Humanity show.

    Instead, we get Ted (The One That Wouldn't Go Away) Kennedy, we get Tom (I'm a waste of space and air) Daschle, we get antagonists, footdraggers and backpeddalers.

    God, I hope McCain runs next time. I'll vote for him before most any Democratic contender I can think of. Perhaps that's why I'm now a registered independent. *sigh*

    1. Re:Aaaargh! by lbrandy · · Score: 1

      Hell -- even Carter! He made some really dumb mistakes, but nobody doubts his sincere willingness to try to do what he felt was best.

      You misspelled George W Bush.

    2. Re:Aaaargh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once upon a time, I was a Democrat -- and damn proud of it. Democrats have a wonderful and storied history of going to bat for the little guy. Be it gender, race, disability, religion... you name it, the Democrats were willing to support those unfairly accused or biased against.

      Think again. Most of the KKK and those fighting against integration in the South were democrats. You've got Rep. Charles Rangel (D-NY) saying, "President Bush Is Our Bull Connor." and getting applause instead of being laughed at. Bull Connor - who in 1963 turned fire hoses and attack dogs on blacks, including Martin Luther King Jr., demonstrating in favor of equal rights - was, you guessed it, a democrat.

      There are far too many moonbats in the democratic party.

    3. Re:Aaaargh! by finkployd · · Score: 1

      Wow, you are like the mirror "ex-Democrat" version of me (ex-Republican).

      In fact think about it, our last two presidents were both the most popular total failures ever. Clinton is remembered fondly by half the country despite the DMCA, Clipper Chip mess, etc. which show him to be a massive sellout to the Democrats ideals. Now look at the curiously popular Bush, who despite enjoying support from economic conservatives has shown himself to be the most incompetent reckless spender....well...ever. And don't get me started on the who personal liberty and freedom crowd who seem to miss that he has taken a dump on nearly every amendment except the second.

      Will there ever again be a real Republican or Democrat? Does this country even want that anymore?

      I'll join you in a vote for McCain.

      Finkployd

    4. Re:Aaaargh! by killjoe · · Score: 1

      When Bush was running against McCain he ran ads saying that McCain was against breast cancer research and Karl Rove launched a "McCain has an illiegitemate black baby" whispering campaign in the south.

      Despite these immoral and sleazy campaign tactics used against him George Bush McCain has backed him 100% on every issue and has never critized Bush.

      This tells me that McCain does not have the integrity and honor people say he does. His loyalty is to his party before everything else including his honor.

      There is nothing special about McCain he is just another politician willing to compromise all and any of his beliefs in order to get what he wants.

      --
      evil is as evil does
    5. Re:Aaaargh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A vote against a bill isn't only a vote against the good it can do. It it also a vote against the bad it can do. Since bills are labeled only for the good, people only see the good. Bills are always named and worded to mask negative impacts. "This bill ensures my free speech!" Vagueries in the bill open up a fund-funneling loophole through which you could drive a convoy of trucks. The bill can't just be changed when it's rushed to a vote. You can only do one of two things: 1. Vote yes and allow the corrupt (but legal!) to suppress and misinform without oversight. 2. Vote no and get pounded by people screaming "You voted against free speech!" That sort of vote always plagues senators and representatives during election campaigns. The legislative process in this country is as flawed as any of the men working within it, if not moreso.

    6. Re:Aaaargh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm an Independent but Democrats tend to be better than Republicans. The problem isn't with Democrats but the centrists that founded Democratic Leadership Counsil (DLC). In the 1960's, some Democrats didn't want to support blacks. They formed DLC to manipulate the party so it'd get away from the left, chase poll results, and weaken any message so they don't have to show any support for blacks, gays, women, and anyone hated by Southerns (everyone). The blame is on them....and the corporate sell-outs.

    7. Re:Aaaargh! by jordandeamattson · · Score: 1

      I am one of the biggest fans of Carter out there, but I believe that both FDR and JFK (though I love Teddy Roosevelt) laid much of the ground work for the world we see and face now.

      FDR's blatant overreaching of the Commerce Clause to get the Federal Government into just about anything along with his disregard for the concept of unenumerated rights, has done much to create the politcal world in which we find ourselves.

      JFK's administration (all 3 years of it) laid a foundation which Johnson and Nixon built upon to create "The Imperial Presidency". Of course, it took GW Bush to take this to its extreme.

      Yours,

      Jordan

      Who was also, once upon a time, a Democrat.

    8. Re:Aaaargh! by Procyon101 · · Score: 1

      Ex-republican here :)

      I've adopted the Libertarian party now, and my great dream is that the Dems continue on their path to wackiville and self destruct, leaving the new tax-and-spend Republicans having to reform in response to sane debate from the Libertarians finally.

      McCain is a partyless one trick pony who can at most win a single election. We should all get together and vote with the 3rd largest party, and the only one that has a chance in hell to replace one of the existing.

    9. Re:Aaaargh! by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      I did that last time. I've normally voted Republican, but I just couldn't vote for Bush in 2004. And Kerry made me violently ill! Unfortunately, most people still insist on R vs D. :(

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    10. Re:Aaaargh! by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1
      FDR's blatant overreaching of the Commerce Clause to get the Federal Government into just about anything along with his disregard for the concept of unenumerated rights, has done much to create the politcal world in which we find ourselves.

      JFK's administration (all 3 years of it) laid a foundation which Johnson and Nixon built upon to create "The Imperial Presidency". Of course, it took GW Bush to take this to its extreme.


      That's one of my pet peeves. I'm always hearing people bad-mouth Bush, as if he's solely responsible for where this country is heading. But Bush is standing on the shoulders of his predecessors. Unless people get over the R vs D fallacy, we'll get another anti-freedom President in 2008, and I don't care what party s/he belongs to!
      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    11. Re:Aaaargh! by Procyon101 · · Score: 1

      The multi party system always breaks down to 2 parties. The 2 parties aren't invulnerable though (and have been replaced multiple times in the past.) When a party does collapse though, it happens quickly and is replaced quickly, and brings to the table a new sanity in the remaining old party.

    12. Re:Aaaargh! by Control+Group · · Score: 1

      EXACTLY

      Until the "man on the street" who's a lifelong member of one of the two parties realizes that he has been fundamentally and completely betrayed by not just the opposition, not just his own party, but also by the very nature of the two-party system, nothing's going to change.

      But as long as we have our bread and circuses - excuse me, I mean our 'mocha latte whipped soy skinny with a shot of espresso's and our reality TV - that's not going to happen.

      I have seen the enemy, and he is us. Not that anyone wants to hear that when they complain about politics and I tell them it's our own damn fault.

      --

      Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
    13. Re:Aaaargh! by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1
      Now look at the curiously popular Bush, who despite enjoying support from economic conservatives

      Erm, have you looked at his poll numbers lately?

      We economic conservatives aren't exactly his biggest supporters right now.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    14. Re:Aaaargh! by finkployd · · Score: 1

      Ok, he has some new low numbers, but those are not due to any change in his fundamental policies which have gotten him quite favorable numbers in the past. His newfound problems are pretty much just response to natural disasters (I guess if it is not terrorism, he cannot deal with it), some poor choices for Supreme Court nominations, and the fact that it has come to light that his White House is just a crooked and scheming as the previous ones.

      Economic conservatives may not support him on economics, but I know more than a few who consider his position on gay marriage and abortion (two of the absolute LEAST important issues in America today) to trump any other issue. This is how he got elected, quite frankly.

      Finkployd

    15. Re:Aaaargh! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, different mistakes.

    16. Re:Aaaargh! by finkployd · · Score: 1

      The problem now is that we have two completely identical parties which differ pretty much on only two issues: abortion and gay marriage. The entire last election boiled down to those two issues, and everyone voted accordingly.

      I cannot think of two issues that interest me less, or are less important, yet people fight, argue, and vote over these as though they trumped economics, liberty, safety, and all other aspects of government policy.

      I mean, I have opinions on these two issues, everyone does. I also have opinions on coke vs pepsi, boxers vs briefs, and the designated hitter rule, but I am not about to make those asinine issues my political litmus test like the rest of this insane country. :(

      Finkployd

    17. Re:Aaaargh! by Procyon101 · · Score: 1

      Amen brother :)

      Things must be pretty good if the only thing left to fight about is whether the state will officially recognize a class of private personal relationship :)

    18. Re:Aaaargh! by Slartibartfast · · Score: 1

      WTF, people? I go and post a political comment, and people *AGREE*? C'mon! Where's the irrational debate? Where's the namecalling?

      Hmmm. Maybe we should form a new party: the Slashdot party! Because, of course, all Slashdot discourse is rational and level-headed.

      Okay, maybe not. And, yes, Roosevelt was not without fault -- from the Japanese interment to attempting to stack the Supreme Court, he definitely was someone willing to sacrifice means for an end -- in a way, he reminds me of Rudy. I guess a part of me thinks that a benificent dictator can be a good thing, but then I remember that was pretty much what Hitler portrayed himself as, and then it doesn't feel as warm and fuzzy.

      I just want the Democratic idealism of the 50's (Adlai Stevenson, etc.) and 60's -- but with some fiscal conservatism thrown in, to keep things rational. That, and I'd like to emphasize the word "rational," something that's missing from both parties. [And, sadly, I've considered Libertarianism, but I don't think I can fully rationalize it... not that I don't agree with many Libertarian precepts.]

      Ahh, hell. Let's go for anarchy. At least it'll be interesting.

  28. I am obligated to respond... by lbrandy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I've come to expect dupes, glaring ommissions, and outright falsehoods from Slashdot, but up until now it had resisted posting blatantly partisan rhetoric.

    You must be new here.

  29. Somewhere, somone said..... by mitcharoni · · Score: 1

    "Congress shall make no law .... abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press..."

    Can't quite place it.

    Effectively by NOT passing this law, Congress continues to end run the constitution and maintains their control over defining what speech is free. Control which they explicitly do not have in the first place.

    This helps the Democrats more since the Moveon.org's of the world will continue to be powerhouses on the net, while TRUE grassroots organizations get f'd.

    1. Re:Somewhere, somone said..... by idsofmarch · · Score: 2, Interesting
      You had me until you wrote this: This helps the Democrats more since the Moveon.org's [sic] of the world will continue to be powerhouses on the net, while TRUE grassroots organizations get f'd.

      If Moveon.org isn't a sucessful grassroots organization then what is? Swift Boat Veterans for Truth? Actually, the law was problematic since it delinated the Internet from all other media, effectively allowing anything goes on the largest and widest media ever known. This was a bad bill and should have been killed. We want transparency, we want bloggers and other Internet media outlets to show where their funding comes from in order to separate honest viewpoints from propaganda.

      --
      Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
    2. Re:Somewhere, somone said..... by mitcharoni · · Score: 1

      A grassroots organization is NOT one that is funded with tens or hundreds of millions of dollars from a single individual, be it liberal or conservative. Grassroots to me means me and a few friends and a LOT of strangers from around the state or country pitch a few dollars a piece and start a website or buy some campaign buttons to further a common vision or agenda. Why we should be subjected to FEC rules is beyond me.

    3. Re:Somewhere, somone said..... by idsofmarch · · Score: 1

      Good point, and I tend to agree as long as bloggers and other grassroot organizations are honest and specific about where their funding comes from. The inherent problem with the later-day MoveOn (it was originally a grassroots organization before Soros) and with SBWT or the Department of Education scandal is the confusion of political motivated funds with small-organizations. In other words, if you and your friends want to create a political blog on your own dime have fun, but if the RNC gives you, and hundreds like you, money to do the same thing then we have a problem. I'm not sure what the solution is, but giving political organizations that are subject to the FEC an end-run around these laws by using the Internet strikes me as dangerous.

      --
      Anyone who whines about being modded down should be.
    4. Re:Somewhere, somone said..... by bluGill · · Score: 1

      Moveon.org is a successful attempt by one rich man (George Seros) to get around campaign finance laws by donating to a cause that has the same results as donating to campaigns, without donating to the campaigns.

      Swift Vote Veterans for Truth is not grassroots either. A number of common people with a cause getting together to get their message out is a start of grassroots, but they were not working the system locally, they were working nationally.

      Normally grassroots is when you start working your friends and neighbors to build support for something, before going to your local political party meetings (those "smoke filled back rooms" are open to the public and they even tell you when they are meeting), and working the issue.

  30. IT'S NOT ABOUT PROTECTING FREE SPEECH by DrJimbo · · Score: 4, Insightful
    This bill had nothing whatsoever to do with protecting free speech. Independent bloggers already have free speech and this amendment would not have enhanced their free speech.

    The amendment would have created a loophole in campaign finance reform and allowed unlimited political spending on the web. The amendment would actually suppress free speech to the extent that independent views could be drowned out with politically financed astro-turfing.

    In the fine tradition of many other laws and bills that have surfaced over the past five years, the intent of this amendment was the exact opposite of that implied by its title. If Orwell were alive, he'd be rolling in his grave.

    Slashdot: faux infotainment for nerds.

    --
    We don't see the world as it is, we see it as we are.
    -- Anais Nin
    1. Re:IT'S NOT ABOUT PROTECTING FREE SPEECH by druschc01 · · Score: 1

      If you wanted to do something as simple as naming the local candidates in your district in your personal blog, you would HAVE to have a lawyer in order to take the multiple steps legally necessary to comply with federal campaign reform laws... Even if that means just having the lawyer explain all the laws related to campaign finance reform and which ones DON't apply to you.

      In the current climate of Martha-Stewart type prosecutions where the object of the investigation is by definition not a crime and the outcome is indictments based on inconsistencies between dozens of people, of things they testified to months after occuring, with no notes or lawyers... Would you really like to piss off the beesnest that is the "other side" of politics without legal representation? This may not affect DailyKos or other large bloggers with legal resources, but considering that the DNC is currently able to get credit information about political opponents, god help the idiot who points out something about their candidate, however true, without having his own team of 3-4 lawyers and experts in this field of study.

      I do know this much, if I did consult a lawyer with this rule not passed, his explaination would be a simple "pay me or don't blog or go to jail"

    2. Re:IT'S NOT ABOUT PROTECTING FREE SPEECH by pi_rules · · Score: 4, Funny
      If Orwell were alive, he'd be rolling in his grave.
      If Orwell were alive, he wouldn't be in a grave.
    3. Re:IT'S NOT ABOUT PROTECTING FREE SPEECH by goldspider · · Score: 1

      "The amendment would actually suppress free speech to the extent that independent views could be drowned out with politically financed astro-turfing."

      How, exactly?

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    4. Re:IT'S NOT ABOUT PROTECTING FREE SPEECH by ifwm · · Score: 1

      Thank you, I was going to ask the same question.

      Explain for me exactly how you envision this process happening.

    5. Re:IT'S NOT ABOUT PROTECTING FREE SPEECH by DrJimbo · · Score: 1
      The bill is simple. It says:
      Paragraph (22) of section 301 of the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 (2 U.S.C. 431(22)) is amended by adding at the end the following new sentence: `Such term shall not include communications over the Internet.'.

      Its essence is to prevent campaign finance laws from applying to the Internet.

      If it passed then a campaign that has an excess of soft money would no longer need to launder it (what Delay was indicted for), instead they could spend it on paid shills to astro-turf blog sites. These shills could pretend to be average Joes expressing their personal opinions and would not need to divulge their political funding or affiliation.

      The soft money funding would not be limited to astro-turfing blogs. Any Internet communication would be fair game for almost unlimited funding with no need for disclaimers such as "this ad was paid for by ...".

      --
      We don't see the world as it is, we see it as we are.
      -- Anais Nin
    6. Re:IT'S NOT ABOUT PROTECTING FREE SPEECH by RexRhino · · Score: 1

      If you have to hire a lawyer and an accountant to PROVE to the FEC that you do not recieve too much political funding... and the FEC can then decide to fine you, or restrict what you say, because you might have not filed the right form, or they are not "sure" on some funding issue, and to fight it you must carry out a lengthly legal proceedings... You do not have freedom of speech, at least if you are an average person.

      Only the rich will have the lawyers, and only the politically well connected will be able to get FEC approval ...

      Look at how ruthlessly and openly the Democrats used FEC and local election officials to try to destroy the election chances of the Green party. Democrats were openly bragging they were going to use the law to "destroy" the Greens. And you are going to tell me that I can trust those same people to "regulate" my speech? HELL NO!

      You blindly support the Democrats and are just trying to make some sort of excuse why all political speech needs to be regulated by a handful of people from only two parties.

    7. Re:IT'S NOT ABOUT PROTECTING FREE SPEECH by goldspider · · Score: 1

      If you believe that a blog poster is a paid astro-turfer, you have the right and means to call them out on it, or for that matter respond however you please. That the shills might outnumber you doesn't impede you in any way from expressing your views. If they are so overwhelming that they compromise the conversation, you have the right and means to take your views elsewhere.

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    8. Re:IT'S NOT ABOUT PROTECTING FREE SPEECH by mosb1000 · · Score: 1

      "independent views could be drowned out with politically financed astro-turfing."

      Well that sounds good, I don't thin that's an accurate portrayal of how people view information on the internet. We don't view every page on the internet, or type random URLs until we find something like. We are linked from one site to another. We use search engines to find the pages we are interested in, and we don't read the pages that don't strike us as being relevant. Apart from googlebombing, I don't think it's really possible to crowd out other peoples speech on the internet. On television, or in print it is possible to buy up all of the advertising space and crowd out other viewpoints, but it seems much harder to do on the internet.

    9. Re:IT'S NOT ABOUT PROTECTING FREE SPEECH by efuzzyone · · Score: 1

      The question is not about whether "that a blog poster is a paid astro-turfer" it is about as one poster wrote: "The amendment would have created a loophole in campaign finance reform and allowed unlimited political spending on the web."

      I hope you understand it.

      --
      Creativity uninhibited www.kreeti.com
    10. Re:IT'S NOT ABOUT PROTECTING FREE SPEECH by DrJimbo · · Score: 1
      RexRhino said:
      If you have to hire a lawyer and an accountant to PROVE to the FEC that you do not recieve too much political funding...
      I say whatever I want to on the Internet and I have not ever felt the need to hire a lawyer because of FEC concerns. Have you? The Democrats voted to keep things as they are now. No changes. I can't tell for sure, but the tone of your post indicates that you might be confused about this.

      RexRhino said:

      [then] ... You do not have freedom of speech, at least if you are an average person.

      IMO freedom of speech on the Internet for the average person is just fine right now. If the bill were to pass, which would certainly flood the Internet with totally unregulated soft money, then the freedom of speech of the average person would be less certain. Certainly the voice of the rich and the powerful would increase. It might even drown out the voices of the average persons. It might even come disguised as the voices of average persons. But the idea that unleashing a flood of soft money onto the Internet would increase the voice of the average person is absurd in the extreme.

      RexRhino said:

      You blindly support the Democrats and are just trying to make some sort of excuse why all political speech needs to be regulated by a handful of people from only two parties.
      No. I was not blindly supporting the Democrats. I actually RTFA and RTFB. Did you? The /. page was filling up with rants about the Democrats taking away our right to blog. Those posters had clearly not read TFA nor TFB. They were misled because the summary, the title and the article, were quite frankly -- misleading.

      The bill was about putting in a loophole in the current campaign finance regulations so that the Internet could be flooded with political funding.

      If you are against the current campaign finance regulations, fine. Let's discuss them on their merits, not on some hysterical arguments that the Democrats are trying to outlaw blogs.

      --
      We don't see the world as it is, we see it as we are.
      -- Anais Nin
    11. Re:IT'S NOT ABOUT PROTECTING FREE SPEECH by DrJimbo · · Score: 1
      I can believe that you didn't get my joke. I can even believe you would post a response demonstrating that fact, but I can't believe you got modded funny for not understanding that my sentence was a joke.

      Oops ... wait a sec ... this is Slashdot ... never mind.

      On the other hand if Orwell was alive and and still in his grave, he would be rollin' around somethin' fierce trying to get out.

      --
      We don't see the world as it is, we see it as we are.
      -- Anais Nin
  31. Follow the money... by C10H14N2 · · Score: 1

    This article--being an obviously biased love letter to the Republican party--could also be considered a political contribution.

    At a time when effectively everyone has their own press and, IMHO, should be treated no differently than "professional journalists"--the term, of late, really should be in quotes, not least because so many "real" journalists are shills of the shrillest variety--unless we're going to say that the entire budget of Fox should be considered a political contribution to the Republican Party or the NYT to the Dems, it almost seems absurd to be counting ANY of these beans any differently. So, 'screw it, let's just return to the time of Hearst and allow total yellow-journalism and vote-buying. At least it would be open, obvious and readily understood by all for what it is.

  32. Democrats and Campaign Reform... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Ultimately, the Democratic position would probably limit free speech among bloggers to a certain extent. The problem has to deal with the "Schenck v. United States", where a person has a limited amount of time to make a decision based on statements that he/she has no ability to verify (because of that time).

    New campaign laws seek to limit the type/amout/method of information being disseminated in the weeks directly before election. Let me give an example...

    Lets say a large group of bloggers decides they want to impact an election. 2 days before an election one anonymously blogs that Candidate X was accused of date rape in college and that the accuser is afraid to come forward. The day before the election, all of the other bloggers pick up the story and start talking about it in huge numbers. Then, the day of the election, every voter has to make a decision of risking to vote for a date rapist. I know this sounds silly, but it was a very effective strategy against a college student body president campaign at my alma mater only a few years back. A similar strategy was employed against a Republican candidate for house in 1996 in NC (although it wasnt bloggers, it was a mass mailing).

    While there is no precedent against bloggers, it seems silly - I think - to give them a complete immunity when it is very possible (if not inevitable) that such an immunity would create a haven of this kind of attack.

    The most important speech that must be protected is the vote.

    1. Re:Democrats and Campaign Reform... by randomc0de · · Score: 1
      I remember reading Chris Matthew's
      • Hardball
      a while ago. A valid tactic was to call up voters with a "survey". One of the questions was "What would you think if [opponent] had an illigitimate child with his maid?". This is about the same as paying bloggers to accuse or plant misinformation on your political opponent.

      Just remember, if you aren't getting paid, you can say whatever you wish [excepting libel and slander].
      --
      Three rights make a left. Freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of assembly.
    2. Re:Democrats and Campaign Reform... by Control+Group · · Score: 1

      This sounds good, but it's misleading. It's the kind of thinking that always leads to removal of rights to no net benefit. Turn the scenario around, and see what it does. What if the first blogger is right? In your example, the spread of false information affects the outcome of the election. In the opposite example, the spread of true information affects the outcome of the election.

      You, instead, want to prevent this from happening. Now, in your example, there is no spread of false information, and an innocent person is justly elected. Flip it around, and there is no spread of true information, and a date rapist has been elected.

      Either way, there's the potential for abuse. But that's the problem with all rights - having a right includes being able to abuse it. Preventing abuse can only be accomplished by denying the right in the first place. Me, I'm in favor of free speech, so I choose to risk your scenario rather than mine. You, of course, may well disagree. But if free speech isn't about the right to talk about candidates for public office, it isn't about anything whatsoever.

      Look at your post on a different topic, and see if you still like what it says:

      Ultimately, the PATRIOT act would probably limit privacy among citizens to a certain extent. The problem has to deal with the speed of terrorists, where an agency has a limited amount of time to make an arrest or a search of private property based on evidence that they have no ability to verify.
      [...snip...]
      While almost no citizens are suicide bombers, it seems silly - I think - to give them a complete immunity from warrantless search & seizure when it is very possible (if not inevitable) that such an immunity would create a haven of this kind of attack.


      Of course, this bill isn't actually about free speech, it's about who can pay whom to spread political opinion, and whether they have to disclose that someone was paid...but the point remains.

      The most important speech that must be protected is the vote.

      Every major politician in East Germany was voted for by the people.

      --

      Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
  33. Dems save /. by Puhase · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Can you even imagine having the RNC pay 5-10 people a day to create a bunch of accounts on here to post on political articles of relevance? You may be thinking that no one would care enough to do it, but with the kind of money involved, they could hire 50-1000's to do it on as many American news sites/blogs as they wanted. All of that aside, its nigh impossible to enforce broad internet legislation that is not copyright oriented (so the RIAA pays for its enforcement).

    --
    I am and always will be a stereotype, because who in their right mind prefers mono?
  34. Re:Not sure the dems were ever friends of free spe by Zak3056 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Remember who signed the DMCA--Clinton. I think free speech in the slashdot, eff sense is really quite orthogonal to party lines.

    And a Republican congress passed the law to begin with. Both major parties have similar agendas in this regard--most people, sadly, choose to ignore that fact and simply spout "my party is all that is good and light. Your party is teh suck" tripe.

    --
    What part of "shall not be infringed" is so hard to understand?
  35. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  36. "Most liberal of parties" by PCM2 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    I see that the most liberal of parties opposes what is effectively Free Speech and the party which brought us the Patriot Act is advocating the it.
    Umm... most liberal? You are talking about the Democratic Party in the United States, right? Next you'll be telling me that the Republicans are practicing conservative fiscal policy... you know, small government, less spending, etc...
    --
    Breakfast served all day!
    1. Re:"Most liberal of parties" by ErikTheRed · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Umm... most liberal? You are talking about the Democratic Party in the United States, right? Next you'll be telling me that the Republicans are practicing conservative fiscal policy... you know, small government, less spending, etc...
      Thank you. It always floors me when I look at how emotional people get over one party or the other. If people would pay more attention to their actions than their rhetoric (especially over a period of time greater than a decade), they'd find they're disturbingly similar.

      Myself, I vote for politicians (while holding my nose), not for parties.
      --

      Help save the critically endangered Blue Iguana
    2. Re:"Most liberal of parties" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The democrats are the most liberal party, idiot.
      Afterall there are only 2 parties, and the democrats are more liberal than the republicans. That makes them the most liberal party. It's not rocket science.

      Of course, its rather like saying "that pile of feces is the most pleasant smelling of all the piles of feces!" It may be true, but only in the context of the limited selection.

    3. Re:"Most liberal of parties" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, I'm sorry - the Republican Party is more liberal than the Democrat? Or are you referring to one of those other parties that can't get anyone in office, and is thus completely irrelevant?

    4. Re:"Most liberal of parties" by PCM2 · · Score: 1
      Afterall there are only 2 parties, and the democrats are more liberal than the republicans.
      There are more than two political parties in the United States, as you will find out when you reach legal voting age. Just because two parties have achieved special "blessed" status doesn't mean everyone should blindly vote for them even when they don't represent the interests of the voter.
      That makes them the most liberal party. It's not rocket science.
      Yes, but it doesn't make them the most liberal of parties, which is what the grandparent said. Reading ain't rocket science either.
      --
      Breakfast served all day!
  37. If this bill passed... by greg_barton · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Consider this scenerio:

    Some PAC raises one million dollars from unlimited, unreported donations.
    They use the money to pay 1000 bloggers to promote their issue.
    They don't need to report that these bloggers work for them, or how much they get paid.

    Rinse. Repeat.

    Is this free speech?

    1. Re:If this bill passed... by CptNerd · · Score: 1

      If it's a Republican PAC, no. If it's a Democrat PAC, of course. :-)

      The problem is, if the Internet is not excepted, all bloggers will have to prove that they are not being paid by some PAC to post, or else they will be subject to fines for violating campaign finance "reform" laws.

      --
      By the taping of my glasses, something geeky this way passes
    2. Re:If this bill passed... by rtb144 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yes this is free speech. What the $@#! do you think free speech is? A PAC represents people and corporations that are organized by people. Their speech counts too. So who cares how much money is spent. Right now, people with money can hire attorneys and law specialists that can find loopholes in these obscure and confusing laws. These laws only affect people with limited resources. You are fooling yourself if you think otherwise. These laws are to allow incumbents to be reelected time after time. You are a fool who buys into what you are spoon fed. Think about how much you value your own rights before you try to abrogate those of others.

      --
      Sie ist tunbar!
    3. Re:If this bill passed... by gsfprez · · Score: 1

      no, its moveon.org

      --
      guns kill people like spoons make Rosie O'Donnell fat.
    4. Re:If this bill passed... by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      Yes this is free speech.

      Ah. So folks with more money should have a louder voice? They have a greater right to have their opinions heard?

    5. Re:If this bill passed... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The problem is, if the Internet is not excepted, all bloggers will have to prove that they are not being paid by some PAC to post, or else they will be subject to fines for violating campaign finance "reform" laws.

      Which means that someone has to bring to court every individual blogger that posts something. In theory, one could name them all in the same lawsuit as being paid by the same PAC. However, if you have 100 bloggers named, those 100 people could turn around and pool their money to hire a single legal team rather than spending their money on individual lawyers. If you decide to go after each of the 100 bloggers individually, your court costs are going to go through the roof, and the bloggers will likely end up asking for legal assistance from a single free speech organization link EFF, who will help assemble a single legal team to help them that is made up of experts in the field. And don't forget about countersuits for malicious prosecution...

      In other words, going after paid bloggers creates hundreds of small targets that are hard to hit. However, if you go after the entity who paid them, you have a single, big target. Therefore, it always makes more sense to go after the group paying the bloggers than the bloggers themselves. Because of this, it hurts large political organizations (in other words, the Republican Party, which has far more money to pay for such things and a history of astroturfing) far more than it can hurt individual Internet posters (like me).

    6. Re:If this bill passed... by psykocrime · · Score: 1

      Ah. So folks with more money should have a louder voice?

      They do have a louder voice, in the sense that they can afford to purchase more television and radio ads, etc. That may be unfortunate, but it's the way it is. Nothing gives the government any authority to restrict an individual from spending their money on political speech, so if some rich billionaire wants to dump his fortune on promoting a candidate, it must be allowed.

      They have a greater right to have their opinions heard?

      Nobody has any "right" to have their opinion heard. Everybody has an equal right to speak, but to suggest a right (or, more properly, an entitlement) to be heard suggests than one can somehow force others to listen to your speech.

      Anyway, the problem that everybody is missing is this: We *care* about this whole election / campaign finance / political blogging thing only because the government has assumed more power than it properly should have. If our government were as small and restricted as it should be, and the sovereignty of the individual was widely acknowledged, then nobody would be spending millions of dollars to campaign for office, because there wouldn't be any incentive. We look at the President of the United States and say "there is the most powerful man in the world" when we should look at him and say "There is our servant, who is no more important than any other man."

      --
      // TODO: Insert Cool Sig
    7. Re:If this bill passed... by amliebsch · · Score: 1
      Ah. So folks with more money should have a louder voice? They have a greater right to have their opinions heard?

      No. They simply have a greater ability to have their opinions heard. Why is this so hard for you to understand? If you don't see the folly of trying to equalize ability through government legislation, I suggest you ask Mr. Harrison Bergeron about it.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    8. Re:If this bill passed... by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      Nobody has any "right" to have their opinion heard.

      If I put a bullhorn up to your ear and shout in it, I have no right to have my opinion heard. You have a right to not listen, too.

      The first amendment says that the government will not abridge my right to free speech. Are you saying that those who want to become the government (i.e. political candidates) DO have the right to shout me down? Candidates can be as dirty as they want while seeking office, but once they get into office they have to clean up their ways?

    9. Re:If this bill passed... by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      I suggest you ask Mr. Harrison Bergeron about it.

      I suggest Mr Bergeron (and Mr Vonnegut) ask Mr Straw Man about it.

    10. Re:If this bill passed... by ifwm · · Score: 0

      Yes.

      Because anyone else with a million dollars can do it too.

    11. Re:If this bill passed... by ifwm · · Score: 0

      As opposed to?

    12. Re:If this bill passed... by Wateshay · · Score: 1

      So it's ok to enact a bad law, as long as it's unenforceable?

      The problem isn't that there will suddenly be this huge mass of prosecutions against every single blogger who mentions a candidate. The problem is that there will be targeted prosecutions against only those bloggers who stick their head up and end up on the losing side (which ever side ends up losing). You may believe (incorrectly) that the Democrats are honorable enough not to abuse this law, but do you really believe that the Republicans aren't?

      --

      "If English was good enough for Jesus, it's good enough for everyone else."

    13. Re:If this bill passed... by RexRhino · · Score: 1

      Except that campaign finance reform eliminates free speech for the little guy and gives it only to the guys big enough to hire an army of lawyers and accountants and lobbyists to get FEC approval and to comply with the law.

      It is the little parties and organizations that are against capaign finance reform, and the big PAC and the Democrats and Republics that are for it!

    14. Re:If this bill passed... by amliebsch · · Score: 1

      What is the straw man? I maintain that campaign finance reform in general is nothing more than an attempt to equalize the ability to speak (or to be heard, depending on your point of view), a goal that (for reasons well illustrated in the alluded-to short story) is pure folly. This is a cogent and direct response to your implied argument that CFR is necessary to prevent a scenario where people with more money have louder voices.

      --
      If you don't know where you are going, you will wind up somewhere else.
    15. Re:If this bill passed... by Coniptor · · Score: 1

      I value my rights strongly.
      I'll say your a holier than thou ASS.
      This is NOT free speech.
      Free speech is EVEARYONE being able to voice they're opinion and be HEARD BY ALL THAT WANT TO HERE THEM equally. Those that want can walk away, stop reading, turn the channel. When ANYONE can exploit loop holes like this and people can be paid to blog all day and astroturf for someone else whether they believe what they're posting or are doing it just for the money disadvantages others, especially those who don't have the time because they actually have to "work for living" (NO, NO, being paid to astroturf for some asswipes interests is NOT "working for a living.") This gives those paying the astroturfers "more free speech" than your average citizen as they now have many mouth pieces instead of their own. As others have posted before me they can now drown out everyone elses free speech. If you think that is right and just I'll tell you that in my view it is then right and just for me to shove a shotgun in your face and blow you away. I mean after all, it's ok for the rich to override my freedom of speech? If I don't have money too then the only way to regain balance of freedom of speech to each individual is to take yours away as well as others like you. Corporations **DO NOT** represent the freedom of speech of their employers. NO employee is going to put their job on the line when they need to take care of them selves and their family to tell the truth to their employee that NO they don't support the views of their boss or higher ups.
      You are simply justifying might makes right. For that I curse you and all like you. Die a painfull death you sack of shit.

    16. Re:If this bill passed... by Coniptor · · Score: 1

      Also. Knowing that some one is whoring their political views for money WOULD affect mine and others view of said people with regards to respecting them or assigning any merit to their views. Denying us the understanding that a person is NOT posting SOLEY of their own free will but is as I said before whoring them selves out politically for money is a practice of deception and fraud.
      Again curse you and God Damn you. YOU are a part of what is wrong with the USA. Your ilk is responsible for the problems of the world. Don't argue with me. Argue with the BIG guy up there when the time comes. We'll see how far you get.

  38. I'm sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    every damn article the AP puts out is slanted to the left..
    people bash bush all day long and dont even know the facts..
    they bash just to bash.
    he's the one who's protecting your grandkids..
    flame away... see if i care..

  39. Rewind a bit by ackthpt · · Score: 1
    Which still makes it odd for Democrats to oppose it as far as I can tell. In my state the best funded 527 groups are liberal groups.

    Go back to 1999. A little known and not largely respected son of a former president is considering a run for the Whitehouse. He really hasn't done anything of note in his tenure as a governor and the nation's attention is on other things. I was astounded to hear that George W. Bush already had $70 million in his war chest, months before he actually appeared on the GOP Predidential Candidate RADAR. He was a made man, as the Mafia might put it. Some people weren't happy with McCain, who had broad popular support and was a distinguished veteran, but he didn't have deep support in his own party. Where do you suppose that $70 million came from? It certainly didn't come from public donations, nobody knew he was even going to run at that point, outside the kingmakers that is.

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:Rewind a bit by twiddlingbits · · Score: 1

      Idiot. The $70M came mostly from funds he had leftover from running for Governor twice in Texas. The old laws said what you don't spend you get to keep and can use in just about any way you want. GWB was tagged as a possible Presidental candidate about halfway into his second term as Governor. Far as I know you don't actually have to be a "official" candidate to raise money, you can just say you are forming an "exploratory committee" and start raising money for things like people, offices, name identification surveys, etc. It's done all the time by BOTH parties

    2. Re:Rewind a bit by magarity · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Amusing conspiracy rant but it doesn't have anything to do with 527 groups. To make my point, here is a URL for the list of the top 527 groups nationwide:
      http://www.opensecrets.org/527s/527cm tes.asp?level=C&cycle=2006
      Note that of the top 10, only numbers 4,5 and 7 are Republican and only one, 9, is reasonably non-partisan.

    3. Re:Rewind a bit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The $70M came mostly from funds he had leftover from running for Governor twice in Texas.

      Not that it matters to you, but almost all of the money he got to win Texas come from out of state. That's something I think should be illegal. They wanted to give him a landslide victory to set him up for president. I've never seen such unbalanced spending. TV ads for Bush ran almost constantly.

    4. Re:Rewind a bit by DeadPrez · · Score: 0, Troll

      Parent post seems to have to same issues of ommission the Slashdot article suffered from.

      We can use 2006, an off-year election, as the be all end all dataset if that feels more comfortable.

      As you said only three of the top ten are declaritively Republican. Numbers 1, 3, and 10 are unions. If you are one of the people who believe Republicans never attempt to represent the view of the working man, then I guess unions would be Democrat in a two party system.

      Number 8 is League of Conservation Voters. Environmentalists. If you are one of the people who believe Republicans never attempt to represent the view of environmental advocates, then I guess the League of Conservation Voters would be Democrat in a two party system.

      Number 2, America Coming Together, and number 6, Emily's List, seems to be the only declaratively Democratic 527s.

      I think this establishes that 527s are neither a Republican or Democratic stronghold, and we haven't even begun to account for those 527s that appear suddenly with massive amounts of cash near the end of the election cycle (in 2004 a good example would be Swift Boat Veterans for Truth). We also aren't accounting for which socio-economic group benefits the most from current campaign finance laws, 527s or otherwise. I'd make you the bet that it isn't the guy who has four bucks taken out of each pay check that ends up in in a 527.

    5. Re:Rewind a bit by magarity · · Score: 2, Informative

      That's clever to accuse me of ommission and claim "I guess unions would be Democrat" with a snide bit at Republicans when clicking the profiles of said union 527s shows they pay for ads promoting Democrat candidates and they give money almost exclusively to Democrat candidates. Hmm, 99% of the State/County/Muni Workers Union's spending went towards Democrat candidates. There is no "I guess" about it. Unions are Socialist in nature so of course they fall in well with the Democrats who have as many Socialists as the Republicans do free marketers. Same goes for the League of Environmental Voters. They spent all their money running negative ads against Republican cadidates and for Democrat candidates. Also no need for "I guess" and a snide comment.
       
        527s that appear suddenly with massive amounts of cash
       
      Checking the 2004 expenditures, the Swift Boat Vets with their $17M is "massive" compared to America Coming Together's $79M. Sorry, $17M isn't much in the scheme of big politics.

    6. Re:Rewind a bit by ifwm · · Score: 1

      "As you said only three of the top ten are declaritively Republican. Numbers 1, 3, and 10 are unions. If you are one of the people who believe Republicans never attempt to represent the view of the working man, then I guess unions would be Democrat in a two party system.

      Number 8 is League of Conservation Voters. Environmentalists. If you are one of the people who believe Republicans never attempt to represent the view of environmental advocates, then I guess the League of Conservation Voters would be Democrat in a two party system.

      Number 2, America Coming Together, and number 6, Emily's List, seems to be the only declaratively Democratic 527s."

      Well, i suppose you could look at it that way.

      Or, you could simply look at who those groups gave their money and endorsement to.

      But, that would prove GP correct, and you wrong, so I can see why you'd avoid such an obvious and simple solution.

    7. Re:Rewind a bit by Procyon101 · · Score: 2, Informative

      You are yourself making the assumption that unions are always for the in support of the working man and that environmentalist groups are always for protecting the environment. Often I find that that they are more pro-democrat (or pro-racket in the case of unions) than pro-the cause they claim to support.

      Republicans can be against a Union, yet still support the views of the working class, or be against a conservationist group yet still want environmental protection.

    8. Re:Rewind a bit by DeadPrez · · Score: 1

      You are confusing cause and effect.

      Historically, unions have endorsed numerous Republican candidates. The reason is simple. When Republicans are hostile to unions, unions don't give money to Republicans in significant quanities.

      Republican hostility towards unions is the cause of unions going Democrat. Not the effect. Talk to many union officials and you'd find they'd love for Republicans to again court their vote.

      Same goes for environmentalist groups. I have yet to meet a serious Republican who was against the environment both in general principle and in specifics. Yet, the Republican political elite continue to be hostile towards regulations due to their sworn belief in so-called free market capitalism (doublespeak code phrase for corporate welfare).

      Checking the 2004 expenditures, the Swift Boat Vets with their $17M is "massive" compared to America Coming Together's $79M. Sorry, $17M isn't much in the scheme of big politics.
      And truthfully, neither is $79 million. $300+ million has been spent in my state of California on a special election in which no candidates are running. But that's neither here nor there. No one accuses America Coming Together as unfairly influencing the election, but Swift Boat Veterans are accused of this all the time because of their controversial approach to the facts.

      Are we talking about (1)vote buying, (2)election fairness or the (3)expenditure of money when we talk of campaign finance reform? The first two are the important ones. The amount of money spent is irrelevent if you address the first two problems.

      And yet, the elephant in the room is still that the rich have vast advantages over any other socio-economic group regardless of the existences of 527s.

    9. Re:Rewind a bit by DeadPrez · · Score: 1

      If you'd prefer, we can stop focusing narrowly on 527s which are just one part of the campaign finance and expand the the scope to other fundraising efforts. When you do this, you will see Republicans have a $200 million advantage in hardmoney and the two parties are equal in softmoney.

      http://www.opensecrets.org/bigpicture/ptytots.asp? cycle=2002

      BTW, the problem with 527s is not who rounds out the top 10, but how the money is spent and who is accountable when lies and distortions and broadcast with this money. Sorry to impede on your worldview.

  40. Two simple reasons! by riversky · · Score: 0, Troll

    The traditional media, writers, publishers, are mostly Democrats. Especially in the major media markets of LA and NYC where the ad dollars would be transfered to the internet sites and the traditional guys would loose big (ie Dems loose contributions). Second quite frankly the Democrats blame in large part the blogging world for their losses in the last election. It has nothing to do with free speech in their minds but the fact that the Republicans have so much more money than the Democrats that they can overwhelm them with Republican speech and not get their side out.

    1. Re:Two simple reasons! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Republicans have so much more money than the Democrats..."

      But you have the Ketchup Queen on your side!

  41. Mod parent up by ylikone · · Score: 1

    Stop spreading republican lies, the liberals aren't anti freedom of speech!

    --
    Meh.
    1. Re:Mod parent up by ArtStone · · Score: 1

      Is there a mod for Unintentionally Ironic?

      Perhaps this was intended as funny, but I don't think so.

      --
      Final 2006 "Proof of Global Warming" US Hurricane Count -> 0
  42. Dems da feet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The Democrats have neither sufficient numbers in the House, nor rules favorable to allow them to defeat anything. In the House the Republicans rule. Everything that happens in the House happens at the discretion of the Republicans. The title of the article should have been "Large numbers of Republicans break ranks to defeat bill...", but that's not something a right-leaning reporter would ever say because it implies that Republicans are not 100% in agreement on something.

  43. Amen to that. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well put. I'm ashamed to have ever considered myself a Democrat.

  44. a good site for background by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    1. Re:a good site for background by DerProfi · · Score: 1

      I'll have to disagree with you on the "good site" description. After browsing through some of the absolutely insane rantings on that site I can see why you felt the need to post as AC, though.

      --

      3000+ comments meta-modded. 0 mod points awarded.
      Lesson for other meta-suckers: Don't believe the hype!
  45. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  46. Democrat History by thelizman · · Score: 1

    The Democrats have a wonderful and storied history of lynchingn blacks, catholics, and jews. It was the Republicans actually doing the work of the Civil Rights movement up until the 1960's when liberal (lower case "l") Democrats from the West Coast joined the bandwagon.

    Or did you forget that your Senator Robert C Byrd was once a Grand Dragon in the Klu Klux Klan, and still has a bad habit of making racist remarks today?

    Politicians of all stripes are asses. Democrats certainly aren't an exception.

    1. Re:Democrat History by Slartibartfast · · Score: 1

      No, the Democrats do *not* have that "wonderful and storied" history to which you refer. Instead, it was those Southerners who, in a fit of hatred at reconstruction, chose the alternative party to Lincoln. The so-called "Dixiecrats." It was *NEVER* a national Democratic policy -- written or otherwise -- to endorse any of those policies, no moreso than the Republicans felt that David Duke was "their man." So, while I will concede that politicians of all stripes can, indeed, be asses, I think one has to be wary of making sweeping generalizations and assignations like yours.

      $.02.

    2. Re:Democrat History by thelizman · · Score: 1

      You're a dumbass who clearly hasn't a clue about history. They were Democrats. (Hint: Conservatism and Liberalism are philosophies.) And the Democrats, along with Whigs, were the dominate political force in that era. The Republican party was founded in part by abolitionists.

      Go read a fucking book you knee jerk idiot.

  47. I'm sorry, but... by drgroove · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    ... if we can't rely on the Democrats to protect our freedoms, then who are we to rely on?

    Time to start looking into up-and-coming libertarian/green party candidates...

    1. Re:I'm sorry, but... by crazyjimmy · · Score: 1

      Please don't mix the green party with the libertarians. That's an insult to us libertarians out there ;D

    2. Re:I'm sorry, but... by Cro+Magnon · · Score: 1

      Agreed, but at least he's thinking outside the Republicrat box. That's the first step to enlightenment.

      --
      Slow down, cowboy! It has been 4 hours since you last posted. You must wait another few hours.
    3. Re:I'm sorry, but... by psykocrime · · Score: 1

      ... if we can't rely on the Democrats to protect our freedoms

      When have you ever been able to rely on Democrats to protect your freedoms?!? This is the party that doesn't acknowledge your right to retain the fruits of your own labor, which implies that they don't respect your right to property at all. Well, if you don't own property then you don't own yourself, so who do you belong to? "The government?" "Society?" Do you really want to know?

      Democrats don't have one bit more concern for your freedoms than Republicans... I'm amazed that there are still people in this country who haven't figured that out yet.

      , then who are we to rely on?

      I would suggest that, if freedom is an important concern to you, you look to the Libertarians.

      --
      // TODO: Insert Cool Sig
    4. Re:I'm sorry, but... by RexRhino · · Score: 1

      Actually the Libertarian Party and the Green party are cordial enough. Both organized the "alternative presidential debates" and have organized joint protests of the Iraq war.

      Basicly, the mainstream left (and the right too, but that doesn't apply to the Green Party) in the U.S. are hardcore dedicating to supressing all political parties except the Democrats and the Republicans... if we can get them interested in another party like the Green Party, maybe the left wouldn't be so rabidly hostile to a true multi-party democracy like they are now, and would help eliminate all these legal restrictions that give Democrats and Republicans total politcal power.

  48. You have it backwards. by bigtallmofo · · Score: 1

    The heading Democrats Defeat Online FOS Act and omission of the Why certainly colours this article.

    I don't think the article poster or the editor did anything wrong at all. The article they were linking to was headlined Democrats defeat election-law aid for bloggers which is essentially the same thing as the Slashdot article.

    like something has been attached which allows oil drilling in Yosemite National Park.

    The whole point of submitting it the way it was submitted (suspension calendar) was to prevent exactly what you're talking about. The Republican leadership wanted the bill introduced a certain way and wanted to preclude anyone from adding other things. Don't believe me? Look at Nancy Pelosi's diary where she states:

    This is an issue that must be fully discussed in open debate on the House floor through a process that permits amendments to be offered and voted on. The Republican Leadership brought this bill to the floor through the suspension calendar which does not permit such an opportunity.

    Clearly, she didn't want this fast-tracked and wanted the ability to add whatever amendments she and her colleagues desired.

    --
    I'm a big tall mofo.
    1. Re:You have it backwards. by JhohannaVH · · Score: 1

      Yeah, like Nancy Pelosi is the shining example of Democracy!!! *ARGH*!!!!!1 Wake up and smell the meth, man. She's the biggest hypocrite in the House! Everyone in California with 1/2 a brain in their head hates that she speaks for this state, because she's so clueless. Wanna see how clueless/ "Staunch union supporter Rep. Nancy Pelosi (Calif.) has received the Cesar Chavez Award from the United Farmworkers Union. But the $25 million Northern California vineyard she and her husband own is a non-union shop. The hypocrisy doesn't end there. Pelosi has received more money from the Hotel Employees and Restaurant Employees union than any other member of Congress in recent election cycles. But the Pelosis own a large stake in an exclusive hotel in Rutherford, Calif. It has more than 250 employees. But none of them are in a union, according to Schweizer, author of "The Bushes: Portrait of a Dynasty" and a regular contributor to the New York Times, Wall Street Journal and other periodicals. The Pelosis are also partners in a restaurant chain called Piatti, which has 900 employees. The chain is - that's right, a non-union shop." Bought and paid for by the people she's buttraping. :*(

      --
      Sorry man... the Internet pooped on me.
  49. Get all the facts by stinerman · · Score: 1

    The summary leaves out quite a bit of information:

    First, this bill was brought up on the suspensions calendar, which is reserved for bills that are supposed to get about 2/3 of the vote. These bills are not amendable and are only debatable for less than 30 minutes. This bill will now go to the Rules Committee, which will consider amendments and longer debat

    Second, the Democrats don't necessarily disagree with the legislation, but want to be sure, via amendments, that the Internet is not wholly exempt from all FEC campaign finance laws. The text of the bill is simply

    Paragraph (22) of section 301 of the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 (2 U.S.C. 431(22)) is amended by adding at the end the following new sentence: `Such term shall not include communications over the Internet.'.

    I'd want some amendments that make sure that any interests, be them liberal, conservative, etc., cannot give unlimited amounts of money, so long as done over the Internet. That could be reasonably interpreted from the law ... so long as its over the Internet, its exempt. Now, some of you "money is speech" libertarians might like that, but I, for one, am not.

    1. Re:Get all the facts by RexRhino · · Score: 1

      Now, some of you "money is speech" libertarians might like that, but I, for one, am not.
      Speech with money:
      TV Commercials, Radio Commercials, Print Ads, Pamphlets, Web Sites

      Speech without money:
      stand on the street corner and yell real loud.

      Libertarians are rightfully outraged by this campaign finance reform, because like nearly all the parties besides the Democrats and Republican party, the Libertarians could in many places lose 90% of their donations (well, in places were the Libertarian party is allowed to exist as a functioning party... in many places the Democrats and Republicans have "protected the public" with campaign laws that don't allow Libertarians to run as Libertarians and bullshit like that)... effectivly silencing the party (or silencing it more that it already is with all the legal and quasi-legal restrictions on third parties).

      I love it how the "campaign finance laws" that are supposed to "protect the public" from parties "stealing the elections" by spending hundreds of millions on advertising, are in effect crippling all the political parties except for the two that have hundreds of millions to spend on advertising.

  50. Neither party respects our liberties by jordandeamattson · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Hi All -

    The reality is that neither party respects our liberties (i.e., fully embracing both the enumerated and unenumerated, and retained rights as outlined in the 10th Amendment of the Constitution). They tell us to look at the US Constitution and ask "where are you given that right?", rather than asking the question Madison would have, which is, "where did you give up that right?"

    Both political parties have a shared monopoly on power (I think we called this a duopoly in Econ 101), and will resist any attempt to take away this power. Yes, they will jostle for advantage over one another, but when this duopoly is threatened they will unite against it (see, opposition to any redistricting reform by the mainstreams of both the Republican and Democratic parties in California).

    Looking back at the 2004 election, the mainstream of the Democratic party was hit right between the eyes by the power of the Internet and Blogs, as demonstrated by the insurgent campaign of Howard Dean. The look at this and wonder what it might have been

    Couple this with that there are still a few Republicans who value liberty (as understood through the lens of enumerated and unenumerated rights), over staying in power, and you see why this got fair broader support among them.

    This isn't the first time something like this happened. Rewind back to the election of 1968, and TV was the breakout media. Eugene McCarthy used it effectively in New Hampshire to force Johnson from the primary process. Nixon and Wallace (running one of the most effective 3rd party campaigns since Teddy Roosevelt (even if I despise what he represented), used it to great benefit.

    So, in the Congress following this election what happened? An incredible level of restrictions on TV in political campaigns were put into place, which effectively put access to TV in the hands of those in power.

    Like McCain-Feingold (and I say this with the greatest respect for both of these gentleman), giving the FEC oversight of Bloggers will only diminish the level of free speech and dialog in the public square. The internet and blogs dramatically reduced the barriers to entry to commentators, because as A.J. Liebling noted, "Freedom of the press is limited to those who own one." All of a sudden, a whole lot of people now could own the equivalent of a printing press. And the result is as you would expect (applying Sturgeon's Law that 90% of everything is crap), with a lot of nonsenses and garbage spewing forth, but a few gems mixed up in the overall stream.

    If I had my magic legislative wand, and could make one change to improve the political process in this country, I would wave it and do away with our FEC as it exists and our various restrictions on political spending and embracing Justice Brandise maxim, "sunlight is the best disinfectant; electric light the best policeman", I would require the following:

    1. That within 24 hours of any political donation being made, that this fact be posted for all to see and search on the Internet. Any legislation in which this party has an interest will also be identified. If this donation was made by a PAC, then the membership of that PAC must be clearly visible (i.e. I can follow the money).

    2. For scheduled meetings, 24 hours in advance, and for unscheduled meetings within 24 hours, any meeting with a lobbyist (defined as someone educating on an issue or requesting legislative action) will be disclosed for all to search on the Internet. The topic of this conversation will be disclosed along with any legislation discussed or related to the topic of conversation. The source of funding for this lobbyist, organization, or individual, must be made transparent, all the way back up the chain. If Lobbyist A was hired by Organization X who received funding from PACS 1, 2, and 3, who in turned received funding from PACS 4, 5, and 6, I should be able to follow it all the way back to the companies and individuals making the donations.

    3. The calendar of all members of the Legislative and Executive branches, along with their staff members, will be made available and search-able on the Internet. Common, unique identifiers will be used to enable cross referencing.

    Yours,

    Jordan

    1. Re:Neither party respects our liberties by dustmachine · · Score: 1

      Slight problem with posting names of contributors: retribution. Suppose a liberal works at a small company where 100% of the bosses are conservative? and vice versa. Is he or she going to want the company owners to know his or her political standing? Didn't think so. Of course nobody would ever let a political viewpoint affect how they perceive an employee's performance. Paranoia? It sure is.

    2. Re:Neither party respects our liberties by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      Great ideas, except for one key point: how would you enforce this?

      It's probably impossible without totolitarian type tracking. Voluntary disclosure of meetings? Not likely. Mandatory RFID based tracking of people's movements and recording of conversations? Way not likely.

      Releasing all information is meaningless if the information cannot be gathered. Garbage in, garbage out.

    3. Re:Neither party respects our liberties by jordandeamattson · · Score: 1

      Hi Greg -

      Actually, getting this would be real easy.

      1. All lobbyists are currently required to be registered. Real easy to cross reference this against calendars.

      2. All members of Congress and the Executive Branch keep very detailed calendars. Simply put these calendars online. Of course, the content of some meetings could and would be blacked out. For the President, it might say, "In Situation Room"

      Finally, you back up the requirements with stiff penalities for non-disclosure. Penalities that will be leveled on both the member of Congress or the Executive Branch, and those meeting with them.

      Fees, even jail sentences for willful non-compliance would be possibilities, but I would also recommend rules changes in the House and Senate which would require that you recuse yourself on an issue (all Committee and Floor votes), if you didn't disclose meetings on it.

      Yes, things won't be perfect, but it would be better than what we have right now. Remember that the enemy of the good is the perfect!

      Yours,

      Jordan

    4. Re:Neither party respects our liberties by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      Considering how difficult it's been to get any disclosure about any lobbyist influence (Cheney's energy bill meetings come to mind, with the courts to back him up) I seriously doubt this would happen in our lifetimes. It's a nice thought, though.

    5. Re:Neither party respects our liberties by jordandeamattson · · Score: 1

      Hi Greg -

      In part, this is because we have no requirements around disclosure. Where we do (for example Lobbyist registration), they have proven very effective. In numerous cases, the failure of a Lobbyist to register has hit them hard.

      Yours,

      Jordan

    6. Re:Neither party respects our liberties by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying they wouldn't be effective. They'd be great. It's just not going to happen any time soon.

  51. Terms of Debate by Aexia · · Score: 1

    In addition to the "no ammendments" stipulation, debate is limited to 20 minutes for each side.

    Slashdotters are constantly complaining that bills with major implications are given little to no debate and yet, here they are, complaining that a bill with *huge* implications wasn't passed with little to no debate.

    The suspension resolutions are meant for bills renaming post offices and "We like puppies" declarations that no one really opposes, not legislation that has has huge ramifications for free speech.

    Ask yourself... why are people so eager to rush this through the House *without debate* and without considering ammendments?

  52. Wait, I Thought the Democrats Were the Good Guys by Cruxus · · Score: 1

    But the abstract to the article makes them out to be evil, evil vermin bent on destroying free speech.

    --
    On vit, on code et puis on meurt.
  53. Thank goodness the government is protecting us by canter · · Score: 1

    I'm really glad the government is limiting our free speech in order to protect the "fairness" of the election process.

    Because apparently we're too stupid to form our own opinions based on facts and rational thinking. Instead we just say "oooo shiny" and vote for whoever spends the most money.

    We're sheep for shearing in the springtime and cannon fodder during wartime.

    That is all. Go back and watch another football game. Nothing important here.

    1. Re:Thank goodness the government is protecting us by rtb144 · · Score: 1

      I hope that you are speaking sarcastically. The government is only interested in protecting itself from those pesky outsiders ie the electorate.

      --
      Sie ist tunbar!
  54. Re:Not sure the dems were ever friends of free spe by nullChris · · Score: 1

    Agreed. Even though I agree with the liberals far more than I agree with the conservatives (and have voted that way for the last few elections), why does everyone assume the Democrats to be champions of free speech? Hillary, Lieberman, Tipper Gore... all names that should ring bells in conjunction with the desire to censor.

  55. This reminds me of the "motor-voter" debates by StressGuy · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Bear with me, this connects

    Not to long ago, an idea was presented to link voter registration with getting your driver's license. The underlying idea, reportedly, was that, by making it easier for the average adult to register to vote, there would be a greater population of registered American voters thus making elections more reflective of "the will of the people".

    Seems like a good idea really, but the debates on C-SPAN went a little differently

    The Republicans were not happy and saying that this was just a ruse to get a disproportionate number of Democrats registered to vote. The implication is kind of interesting. Apparantly, Republicans (and likely Democrats) were of the opinion that persons of the GOP were more likely than Democrats to register without the assistance of the "motor-voter" legislation - at least that was my interpretation.

    With the present situation, the implication seems to be that Republicans have more cash reserves than Democrats and, by making blogs not susceptible to campaign fund contribution limits, they can more easily use that advantage.

    So, both sides seek to exploit a "hidden" advantage in a particular legislation. It's like the old saying, for every endeavor there is a "good reason" and the "real reason".

    and the games go on

    --
    A goal is a dream with a deadline
    1. Re:This reminds me of the "motor-voter" debates by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The Republicans were not happy and saying that this was just a ruse to get a disproportionate number of Democrats registered to vote. The implication is kind of interesting. Apparantly, Republicans (and likely Democrats) were of the opinion that persons of the GOP were more likely than Democrats to register without the assistance of the "motor-voter" legislation - at least that was my interpretation.


      While the Democrats hoped it would get more Democrats registered, the primary reason the Republicans were against it was it introduced more voter fraud into the system. Look how easy it was for the 9/11 hijackers to get drivers licenses even though they weren't citizens.

      I'm pretty sure I read that some of them were also registered to vote...

    2. Re:This reminds me of the "motor-voter" debates by StressGuy · · Score: 1

      Yes, that was the Republican mantra on this issue

      easier to register => greater liklihood of fraud

      therefore, don't make it easier to register.

      As a registered independant, I suppose it's easier for me to see how specious that argument is.

      --
      A goal is a dream with a deadline
  56. Re:Not sure the dems were ever friends of free spe by glesga_kiss · · Score: 1
    Remember who signed the DMCA--Clinton. I think free speech in the slashdot, eff sense is really quite orthogonal to party lines.

    Until you get rid of those party lines, you'll always be making a mockery of democracy. Every US political debate breaks down into red vs blue, instead of one point of view verses another. It's a great way of avoiding constructive debate and actually getting anything done. This benefits them, but not you, not your country and certainally not freedom or democracy, supposedly the pillars of America.

    Of course, as long as the general population believes that this system is "democratic", the wool will continue to be pulled over their eyes. You'll continue to choose between a douche and a turd and never once question the system that presents those choices. And before moderating me off-topic, realise that this is directly on-topic, as this bill refered to the whole campaign finance issue. I tend not to deal in euphansims, and as such I call "campaign contributions" for what they are. Political Bribery. Corruption of the highest order. You scratch my back, I'll scratch yours. It's not only legal, it's a key, essential part of the electoral process in most western democracies. Certainally in the US, there is an undebatable correlation between campaign spending and campaign success. The people who make these "donations" use phrases like "return on investment", not "charitable donations".

    I don't know how many times I've been called a "liberal Bush hater". No, I just hate corrupt murdering fuckwits. The fact he has a elephant on his party logo is not relevant to anything. But so long as you can divert the discussion from issues to bipartisan mudslinging, you don't get your real bad laundry aired in public.

    In my ideal world of the future, all politics is done on a board similar to slashdot, with everyone posting as an annoymous coward. Once the debate is over, the owners of the comments are revealed. Being caught colluding (mod me up, nudge nudge) results in the members being temporarilly banned, with public exposure. Of course, this will never happen, as it's humanities nature to form tribes then divide and concquor. The two-party system is a direct result of this.

  57. Conservative AC's by greg_barton · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    I've noticed that there are a whole lot of conservative leaning Anonymous Coward posts on this thread.

    Coincidence?

    1. Re:Conservative AC's by arfonrg · · Score: 1

      Nah, you're just paranoid.

      Now, I'm back to my daily powertrip- meta moderating :)

      --
      Your thin skin doesn't make me a troll
    2. Re:Conservative AC's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course it is only a coincidence.

      There is nothing to see here... Move along...

    3. Re:Conservative AC's by GypC · · Score: 1

      Maybe because conservative opinions regularly get modded "Flamebait" or "Troll"?

    4. Re:Conservative AC's by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      Ah, yes. Conservatives are so oppressed these days, aren't they?

    5. Re:Conservative AC's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I've noticed that there are a whole lot of conservative leaning Anonymous Coward posts on this thread.

      Coincidence?


      About as coincidental as a minority keeping a low profile when the KKK is in town.

    6. Re:Conservative AC's by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      About as coincidental as a minority keeping a low profile when the KKK is in town.

      Goodwin called. He wants his ability for meta Hitlerian hyperbole back.

    7. Re:Conservative AC's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because when we make a Conservative post as ourselves, we get flamed and our karma gets trashed, yet the libs never get touched for their rants.

      It's expected actually. Piss off a Convervative, he'll take action and resolve the issue. Piss of a Lib and they will just attack, attack, attack until they beat you down into submission.

      Prove me wrong.

    8. Re:Conservative AC's by GypC · · Score: 1
      Take a look at some of the moderations and tell me I'm wrong.

      I'm just talking truth here, not some perception of oppression.

    9. Re:Conservative AC's by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      Because when we make a Conservative post as ourselves, we get flamed and our karma gets trashed...

      Jesus, are all conservatives these days such quivering pussies? For christ's sake, man, stand up for yourself and don't be such a coward. Don't blame someone else because you're too chickenshit to speak your mind in public.

    10. Re:Conservative AC's by Dominic+Burns · · Score: 1

      "I've noticed that there are a whole lot of conservative leaning Anonymous Coward posts on this thread."

      And not one of them funny, dammit.

      "Coincidence?"

      Is anything a coincidence?

      Yes [ ]
      No [ ]

      If 'Yes', please detail [in less than four words] below:







    11. Re:Conservative AC's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Jesus Christ! How many countries do I got to invade before people stop calling me a pussy??

    12. Re:Conservative AC's by hans_e · · Score: 1

      Okay, I took a look at some of the moderations and I'm telling you you're wrong.

      Any other vague advice you'd like to share?

    13. Re:Conservative AC's by Obsi · · Score: 0

      Rebuild the Roman Empire. Then no one will have the balls to call you a pussy.

    14. Re:Conservative AC's by randyest · · Score: 1

      You didn't really look. He's right you know.

      --
      everything in moderation
  58. Both parties are about control. by khasim · · Score: 1

    It all comes down to who they want to control (A)
      in order to "protect"
    what/whom (B).

    Tipper wanted to control the music industry
      in order to "protect"
    "the children".

    Now, some control is necessary. For example, controlling chemical companies so they don't dump toxic waste into the water supply is a "good thing".

    As long as you get to define what is "toxic" and "waste" and "water supply".

    Which gets down to the level of "threat" posed by A and how much we fear damage to B.

    Poisoning every child is usually seen as a "bad thing".

    The same with every 10th child. And 100th child, 1,000th, 10,000th .....

    But when you're talking about 9,999,999 children being okay for every 1 that gets sick ... then you have "political issues". And political issues are all about fear and anger right now.

  59. Polarized Pluralism by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

    The other thing that bothers me is the two party political system. Why wouldn't democrats want to protect our speech online? It seems all they're interested in is opposing the republicans these days (I used to be a republican, but I don't think they stand for conservatism anymore, so I'm libertarian/independent/non-incumbant now).

    We need politicians that will bring us back to the freedoms our country enjoyed two hundred years ago, but everyone is interested in towing the party line--it seems even the voters. If you are of voting age, and in the US, please consider third-party candidates in the '06 congressional elections. I want to be part of a larger group than 0.5% of the population.

    I stitched together a quick article on Polarized Pluralism from information in my political science book. Our country is headed this way; the liberals are further along than the conservatives, but I don't know how far it will go before the conservatives fly out of the scope of reality too.

    Basically, a normal two-plus party (we have two-plus) or multi-party system has parties along the political spectrum, from hard-left communist to moderates to hard-right facist. In a healthy system, most of the political power and support is near the center; there are moderate leftists and rightists. This encourages compromises; both sides are willing to sit and listen to eachother, and meet somewhere half-way. In a healthy system, conservatives are -conservative-, and make changes slowly if at all; while liberals are -liberal- and want to immediately dismantle shit and rearrange it, typically breaking things worse. Compromises keep the system healthy by avoiding stagnation or sudden random changes.

    With polarized pluralism, the system is sick. The liberals are out in left field and lost reality somewhere along the way; they don't care if changes are right or wrong, good or bad, as long as they're loud about it, have power, and a following. The conservatives are way in right field; they want to change as little as possible, they target one or a few problems, they speak loudly, and they yell overtop of the liberals so only they can be heard (at this point this isn't a good or bad thing; both sides suck). Neither side wants anything to do with the other; upon solidity of power, they will do all they can to silence the other side. This was the scene with the Communist party (left) and the Nazi party (right) immediately before third-reicht Germany, leading into a far-right balance of power; take bush, and turn the dial a thousand times farther right, and you have the Nazi party.

    As long as the voters percieve something wrong, they'll tow the party line. They'll go along with any silly plan their leaders come up with. If one side has screwed up and lost voter confidence, the other can screw up freely and blame them for it repeatedly while taking credit for all their accomplishments. Effectively, whatever good happens is attributed to party X and everything else goes to party Y, regardless of reality.

    The liberal spread is a nice election hack, btw. Conservatives vote republican; liberals vote Democrat, Green, Libertarian, and Independant. In the end it's easier for a conservative to get to power on a hairline, because everyone running who's not a Democrat is effectively a half-vote for the Republicans. Frankly, I love it; I don't trust minor parties and I damned sure don't trust liberals.

    1. Re:Polarized Pluralism by lgw · · Score: 1

      Oh, the system isn't so messed up as you make it out to be. Sure the left has its (significant) share of moonbats to compliment the religious whackos on the right, and both groups have lost all touch with reality, but it's only a problem today because the Dems are new at this and don't know how to herd their crazies yet. Eventually they'll learn what the GOP has known for a while: crazies don't really associate cause and effect. Promise the crazies whatever they want to hear, look like you're really trying around election time ("Look, a constitutional amendment promoting crazyness! So sorry it didn't pass, but we tried!"), and you don't actually have to *deliver* anything. The Dems will figure this out soon enough.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    2. Re:Polarized Pluralism by GypC · · Score: 1

      "Left" and "Right" are meaningless terms. Fascists are nationalist socialists (as opposed to the internationalist socialist Trotskyites).

    3. Re:Polarized Pluralism by bluefoxlucid · · Score: 1

      America could also do like the French and have the president decide when it's time for election. After 4 years, election; or if the wind is blowing in the right direction 3 years in, ELECTION! That way your goals are simple: have 60% of the electorate masturbating to your picture within your term, and hold an election with the hopes that at least 2/3 of them will vote. Even if you get 50% turn-out, you'll likely get about that on both sides (so 30% vs 20%). Infinite party term, shortened incumbant term.

      Of course our great nation plays roulette instead: come election time, the wind is blowing one way or the other based on your last 6 months of performance (the hell with the other 3.5 years of spotless perfection); you chase your tail a bit to please some of the electorate; and the next guy is judged as a choice between your shadow or somebody who never liked you anyway.

      So here's your choice: Voluntary candidate term shortening to lengthen and expand party candidacy in a calculated way, like France does; or 4 years stuck with whichever candidate is the flavor of the week come election day, like we do now. Do either of these sound nice?

      Remember, when Bush tried to please the evanglican christians with that marriage bill, he never actually expected it to pass. Everyone said, "OMG BUSH R HATE GHEY!" and he lost any potential gay vote to dumb people totally missing the point. On the same line, gay marriage is a strange topic; two $30,000 incomes below poverty line with no taxes, or one $60,000 income with 30% taxes so you get $42,000 in the end? It's all handwaving.

    4. Re:Polarized Pluralism by lgw · · Score: 1

      Oddly enough while about 2/3s of the country objects strongly to anything called "gay marriage", about 2/3 support giving all of the same legal rights to a civil union. 2/3 support for a civil rights movement, and nothing happens? You can be sure that it's all about ideological purity (I.e., pleasing the crazies) and not at all about delivering useful results ON BOTH SIDES when you see that. And this is by no means an isolated example, just an obvious one. I'd be worried about it, except the system seems to have worked pretty well for a century and a half now.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  60. MOD PARENT UP! by CptNerd · · Score: 1

    A sane and logical post that respects more of our rights than anything currently on the table.

    You must be new here. :-)

    (yes, I'm being sarcastic, I see your user number...)

    --
    By the taping of my glasses, something geeky this way passes
    1. Re:MOD PARENT UP! by jordandeamattson · · Score: 1

      Hi CptNerd -

      Thank you for your kind words!

      I try and post only when i have something of value to add to the discussion.

      Yours,

      Jordan

  61. Hilarious post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Restricting free speech on the internet is the only way to assure that free speech isn't drowned out? Nice one, genius.

  62. Epiphany by Marko+DeBeeste · · Score: 2, Funny
    FIRE IN A CROWDED THEATRE!!

    There. I said it. Come get me.

    --
    Faith: n. -- That human impulse that drives them to steal appliances when the power goes out
  63. Why fast-track it? by Jeff+Molby · · Score: 1

    The merits of the bill aside, if the only reason it couldn't pass was the fact that they used a special rule in an attempt to fast-track it, why bother fast-tracking it? Makes it seem like they didn't care about it passing. They probably just wanted to make the dems vote "against free speech"

  64. It's time for a new Slashdot survey by multiplexo · · Score: 1
    Worst Editor evar.

    • Zonk
    • Zonk
    • Zonk
    • Zonk
    • Cmdr Taco
    • You insensitive clod, I am Zonk

    --
    cheap labor conservatives - they want to keep you hungry enough to be thankful for minimum wage.
    1. Re:It's time for a new Slashdot survey by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 1

      You left out Michael, the Editor That Civility Forgot. (Fortunately, so did OSDN.)

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
  65. Patriot Act Myths by the+computer+guy+nex · · Score: 0, Troll

    The slight-left-of-Ted-Kennedy average Slashdotter will have you believe that the PATRIOT (capatilized due to its acronym nature) is a right-wing conspiracy choking our civil liberties.

    Democrats shooting this down is worse than anything in the PATRIOT act. (who, by the way, Democrats helped create and voted for)

    The act simply extends the CURRENT abilities of law enforcement towards drug dealers towards terrorists. You will not find a SINLE provision inside the act that can change the way you are treated as a citizen.

    It simply allows our government to retrieve warrants based on suspicion of terrorism (which was possible before), administor roaming wiretaps based on suspicion of terrorism (which was possible before), and sieze library records under suspicion of terrorism.

    Unfortunately since not RTFA is common around here, almost no one has read through the complete act to realize this... and our liberal media doesn't have the guts to tell you.

    1. Re:Patriot Act Myths by GypC · · Score: 1
      But... what about the part with the cage of rats being locked onto every Liberal and/or Muslim head? You can't tell me that isn't in there, you Rethuglinazi-- uh --can.

      It's all about the OOOOOIIIIIILLLLLLL!!!!!

  66. True, true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Despite what we all call "the rise of conservatism," what we really saw was the decline of the Democratic party.

    Clinton and Gore let the schools rot and capitulated on free trade - which is basically Laissez Faire capitalism wrapped in tissue paper with a pretty bow on it. With the knife still twisting in its back, is it any wonder the populist base of the left wing hasn't been enormously energized or loyal?

  67. Democrats by zimus · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Democrats making a stupid decision? SHOCKING! Shocking I say!

    --
    Is your terror cell living in terror? Is your safe-house not so safe? If so, read the New York Times, the jihad journal.
    1. Re:Democrats by GypC · · Score: 1
      Mild anti-democrat sarcasm modded down as flamebait? Shocking! (no, really, it is shocking as this topic is about political free speech...)

      Now watch me get modded down by the jack-booted commies. :-D

    2. Re:Democrats by NardofDoom · · Score: 1
      You are free to say what you like. I am free to mod it however I like.

      Free speech cuts both ways

      --
      You have two hands and one brain, so always code twice as much as you think!
    3. Re:Democrats by RexRhino · · Score: 1

      Not exactly... Slashdot has a clear moderation policy which you agree to when you join. You are not supposed to moderate a discussion down because you disagree with something someone says. You can mod it down because it really is flamebait (meaning it bring nothing to the discussion, and basicly says "you suck") or causes a disruption, or is providing bad information (a link to a porno website) or something like that. Of course, meta-moderation can be just as biased as moderation, and there is no objective way for Slashdot to detect bias... but if you "mod however I like", you are breaking your word of honour, which is generally considered a bad thing.

      Aside from the violations of the moderation policy which you agreed to, activly supressing opinions that disagree with yours is a pretty good sign that your political beliefs are of the more authoritarian / totalitarian / facist nature. When Democrats vote against exempting political speech to extra constitutional controls, and then Democrats on Slashdot mod in violation of the mod policy to supress speech critical of the Democrats... it makes it hard to believe that Democrats in any way shape or form support free expression.

  68. Very Strange... by Orne · · Score: 1

    Strange, that you think the Democrats would support it.

    Here you have a bill that would create an exception in the laws that would allow common people (i.e. internet users) to post whatever political opinion they want on the internet while receiving payments for creating said content.

    The Republican party has long triumphed free speech with respect to political positions, where "free speech" is synonymous with money spent to advertise their platforms. The current campaign finance laws "restrict free speech" by restricting the amount of money (and where, and when) a political party can spend on their campaigns.

    The Democratic party, which has long proclaimed themselves a "party of the little man" and "enemy of the corporations" have a very hard time raising money from said corporations. So, it is in their best interest to restrict the amounts of spending by their competators, to make it "fair".

    Adding this exception would allow their chief competator (Republicans) to use their (larger) campaign funds in a media that is fast outstripping traditional forms of media (TV / newspapers) among voting audiences, increasingly so among younger voters (who statistically are more Democrat). So, is it really that strange that the Democrats would oppose it?

  69. Politics shmolitics by csartanis · · Score: 1

    This is disgusting! Mods please RTFA before you allow these crap summaries to be posted.

    1. Re:Politics shmolitics by soulhuntre · · Score: 1

      Yeah, this is Slashdot... you're only supposed to slant summaries against MS, Republicans or anyone hwo wants to protect their IP.

      Slamming Democrats is just out of line here. We want out biases rigidly catered to.

      --
      --> Fight tyranny and repression.... read /. at -1!
  70. I almost forgot by roystgnr · · Score: 1

    I do like the idea of "truth in advertising" laws to reveal the origins of political speech financing. That's got its own problems, of course. By prohibiting significant anonymous support, you make it easy for a winning candidate to retaliate against his opponents supporters after an election, and you thus discourage any challenges to candidates who are particularly vindictive or who are in well-entrenched seats. But at least it's a reform measure that comes from the right philosophy: the cure for questionable political discourse is more discourse, not less.

  71. The complexion of the issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm for candidate so-and-so all the way. Let's hear it for social integration!

  72. MOD PARENT UP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He must have struck a nerve, because mods are having to resort to the unaccountable "overrated" instead of something they'd have to justify in metamod.

  73. Jurisdiction by bizitch · · Score: 1

    I'm probably being naive here but -

    The internet is still international right? So what's to stop me from setting up my "illegal" unregulated free speech website in the U.K.? Cambodia? SeaLand? - whereever

    What jurisdiction does the FEC have over foreign hosted political websites? What recourse whould they possibly have?

    --
    ---- "Logoff! That cookie shit makes me nervous!" - A. Soprano
    1. Re:Jurisdiction by RexRhino · · Score: 1

      Look at overseas gambling operations for an example of that.

      Americans went to a small island nation where all gambling is legal. They set up online casinos in full compliance of the laws there. Americans in the U.S. use the online casinos in the small island nation. Now, the Americans are wanted criminals in the U.S., and will be arrested and charged if they go back.

      So, you can set up a web site in a foriegn country... as long as the government can't trace anything back to you, you are OK. But if the government DOES find out it was you, you are treated just like if the website was in the U.S.

  74. Bye! by Frogking · · Score: 1

    Looks like I'll be contributing to the growth of digg.com readership...

  75. Re:Not sure the dems were ever friends of free spe by Snap+E+Tom · · Score: 1

    And don't forget Al Gore, who championed the Clipper Chip.

  76. NO ONE HAS A RIGHT TO BE HEARD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The parent post and the grandparent seem to not understand a simple issue... So what if some PAC created 1000 websites? No-one is obligated to read them. And they have no right to be heard, or listened to.

    1. Re:NO ONE HAS A RIGHT TO BE HEARD by Procyon101 · · Score: 1

      amen

    2. Re:NO ONE HAS A RIGHT TO BE HEARD by greg_barton · · Score: 1

      I usually don't respond to AC's, but...

      You obviously have no understanding of the phrase "signal to noise ratio."

      Either that, or you're intentionally obsfucating.

    3. Re:NO ONE HAS A RIGHT TO BE HEARD by Rev+Snow · · Score: 1

      A ``noisy'' political process is a characteristic of one where freedom of political speech is central, yes.

      The problem here is with those willing to trade away that freedom in exchange for a slight reduction in the noise level.

    4. Re:NO ONE HAS A RIGHT TO BE HEARD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One man's noise is another man's signal, and vice versa. The great thing about free speech is that nobody gets to choose which is which, except for themselves.

    5. Re:NO ONE HAS A RIGHT TO BE HEARD by Procyon101 · · Score: 1

      Your think you can improve the internet's SNR through legislation. Bwahahahahahaaahaa.
      Good Luck!

  77. Actually it is... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know what this law would have really done?

    Does it secretly provide one party or another with unlimited advertising dollars for the purpose of getting elected?
    No.

    Does it allow one party or another to spend unlimited amounts of money online?
    No.

    Does it mean that if YOU write in YOUR blog that you love Hillary and want to see her elected that YOU don't have the FEC knocking on YOUR door for violating campaign finance laws?
    Yes.

    -----

    FWIW, if the Republican Party or the Democratic Party or any other party wants to hire someone to write a blog they have to report the money they spent on this. If they want to buy a domain name, they have to report the money. If they don't, then they're in violation of the campaign finance laws.

    So in the end this is simply about people being able to say what they want, where they want, when they want. It is freedom of speech. No matter how much you want to believe otherwise because it makes you feel better about yourself and your relationship with the world.

    1. Re:Actually it is... by F_Scentura · · Score: 1

      "So in the end this is simply about people being able to say what they want, where they want, when they want. It is freedom of speech. No matter how much you want to believe otherwise because it makes you feel better about yourself and your relationship with the world."

      Exactly. Political speech is still speech.

  78. Online Freedom of Speech Act for whom by msbsod · · Score: 1

    They just want ot keep Ralph Nader and other troublemakers out of elections for present and congress. And you. They thing Dems and Reps do not agree on is how. Someone call the UN to protect our freedom on the Internet.

  79. Clintonians by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Instead of progress, during the Clinton era we embraced political correctness to an absurd degree, signed NAFTA and the almighty DMCA, and watched blissfully while the tech sector bubbled into the stratosphere, only to drop the economic ball just in time to ruin Bush's inaugeration.

    And yet the dems love Clinton, even though he fostered nothing in the way of true progress. He was more concerned with getting his pole smoked than guiding us into the next century.

  80. Editing for fun and profit by jahudabudy · · Score: 1

    Original statement: Free speech should be exactly what the Constitution says it is, and that we need additional regulations to protect it means that the Consitution is being shit on, and that makes me sad.

    Edited statement: Free speech should be [blah] we need additional regulations

    And Jesus spoke, saying "All of my teachings can be summed up in this one thing: Love [blah] thyself." See, kids, editing can be FUN.

    --
    ...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
  81. Everything's moving to the Internet! by Kelson · · Score: 1
    Ah, there's the Why, a loophole for Campaign Finance law.

    And that's a pretty big loophole, and only going to get bigger. Consider:

    • Internet radio and podcasting.
    • Newspapers on the web.
    • Broadband video replacing broadcast TV and/or movie rentals. (It's starting with ITMS)
    • VOIP.
    • Spam.

    This is the equivalent of, in 1900, creating a loophole in some law for anything produced using electricity.

  82. Had to read it twice by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 1

    I saw the article in the Boston Globe referring to this vote and I thought I was reading about a different bill. This Slashdot article heading is so slanted and deceptive that it would make the New York Post blush. Slashdot has really crossed a line here and the people in charge need to explain themselves. The reason why the Democrats joined to vote against it (as noted above) has NOTHING to do with the heading of the article. Someone clearly has an axe to grind and is willing to deceive to do it.

    Slashdot, stick to technology news and stay out of the yellow press business.

    --
    It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
    1. Re:Had to read it twice by ifwm · · Score: 1

      You know, I bet if I track down all those summaries that are slanted to the extreme left (which is virtually all of them) I wouldn't see you bitching about partisanship.

      The only thing that happened here is that the slant went the other way, and you don't like it.

    2. Re:Had to read it twice by Hoi+Polloi · · Score: 1

      Ahhh...this is beyond slant, it is a blatant lie. I don't care for the usual hysteria they promote the rest of the time either. Unlike you I'm not keeping score.

      --
      It is by the juice of the coffee bean that thoughts acquire speed, the teeth acquire stains. The stains become a warning
  83. Campaign Finance Free Speech by geoffrobinson · · Score: 1

    Campaign finance reform is at the heart of this. When you try to take the money out of politics, free speech gets hurt.

    A better solution would be to get the politics out of money.

    --
    Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
  84. Time to move. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    O, Canada....

  85. Defeated? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wait, are we talking about this bill?

    The article I link to seems to think that at least the part of it involving drilling in ANWAR *passed*?

  86. Re:Not sure the dems were ever friends of free spe by Control+Group · · Score: 1

    Yep. Your choices now are for The Party of Big Government or The Big Government Party.

    Of course, this isn't surprising. No political ideology based on removing power from those who hold it is going to gain traction amongst those in power. In some ways, the R's have a tougher row to hoe, because they have to pretend they want to limit government power while simultaneously managing to increase their own power.

    (Which, of course, is what leads to appeals to morality, because they can't win voters based on what their party's core principles should be)

    --

    Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
  87. No, it's slanted in the SAME direction by StevenMaurer · · Score: 1

    The Slashdot editotial policy is pretty obviously slanted Libertarian. Go back and look at the accepted political threads, and you'll see Libertarian coverage in massive disproportion to that party's ability to actually do anything.

    This article, decrying laws prohibiting anonymous funding of political speech is exactly the same as the Libertarian position. It is expressly not a position that a majority of Democrats and Republicans would take; both want limits on anonymous political donations, they just disagree on exactly what.

    1. Re:No, it's slanted in the SAME direction by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 1
      The Slashdot editotial policy is pretty obviously slanted Libertarian. Go back and look at the accepted political threads, and you'll see Libertarian coverage in massive disproportion to that party's ability to actually do anything.

      Partially - the Libertarian contingency on /. is higher than normal by far, but many /.ers also believe in the sort of pork social programs that are the Democrats' bread and butter.

    2. Re:No, it's slanted in the SAME direction by CosmeticLobotamy · · Score: 1

      many /.ers also believe in the sort of pork social programs that are the Democrats' bread and butter.

      So you just have a problem with the social ones. You don't have a problem with the non-social pork that the Republicans love?

      If you could manage to pull your face away from your party's collective crotch for five seconds and realize both sides' shit stinks, the world would be a lot better off.

    3. Re:No, it's slanted in the SAME direction by Specter · · Score: 1

      Ok, I'm not liberal/Democratic by any stretch of the imagination, but come on, to limit the Democrats to the "pork" label is pretty unfair these days. Just look at the last highway bill. Republicans have both trotters in trough too.

  88. equally deep pockets on both sides by dpilot · · Score: 1

    Speaking of BOTH sides, now let's hear from a Libertarian or a Progressive.

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
    1. Re:equally deep pockets on both sides by magarity · · Score: 1

      Speaking of BOTH sides, now let's hear from a Libertarian or a Progressive
       
      Within a four-state radius of Colorado you can listen to a Libertarian rant nightly up to three hours, if you can handle it (I can't), and he gets paid to do it rather than the other way around. There must be a similar somewhere for an opposing hard core leftist outlet but I haven't looked. What is a "Progressive"? I thought that was just an alternative term for "Liberal".

    2. Re:equally deep pockets on both sides by Procyon101 · · Score: 1

      Libertarian here ;)

      I agree with the GP. Campaign fincance restrictions are limiting free speech.
      I think my party is a bit split on the issue though. It is to our advantage to have the restrictions, being a less funded party, but it goes against some of the tenets of the party to be for such restrictions. Personally though I think the restrictions are illegal.

    3. Re:equally deep pockets on both sides by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      How could campaign finance restrictions be illegal? They've become law. You might think they're immoral or something though. Ultimately I think the answer is to outlaw all campaign contributions except those which go to a general fund split between the n tickets (where n is a number I haven't decided on yet) which can raise the most petition signatures.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    4. Re:equally deep pockets on both sides by Procyon101 · · Score: 1

      illegal as in "in breach of constitutional law".

      Not that the current supreme court agrees with me ;)

    5. Re:equally deep pockets on both sides by Unordained · · Score: 1

      Well, if the laws run counter to, say, the Constitution (particularly ammendments), you could see the laws themselves as being illegally created, and illegitimate, and ... illegal?

      I'm in favor of dropping finance laws entirely. The way I see it, if special interests can really throw so much money at campaigns that the people "don't have a choice", then we're screwed anyway. But I think we all do have a choice. No matter how much a message is hammered on TV and radio, we're free to ignore it and vote 'correctly'. If our people aren't interested in doing a little research themselves, in thinking through the issues themselves, then they (all of us) deserve exactly what we get.

      And then there's the effectiveness issue: somewhere recently (sorry that I can't remember where) I came across something saying that if a campaign increases its spending by 50% [in the last week?], it may only expect a 1% change in the final vote. The same went for decreasing spending. If nothing else, they're probably wasting money on the erroneous assumption that it'll have some effect. Most americans vote down party lines, from what I can tell, and no amount of marketing is going to change their minds.

      So I say bah. Drop the laws, let it run free, and don't worry about it. At least we'll save money policing the issue.

    6. Re:equally deep pockets on both sides by mellon · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The big problem with campaign finance is that corporations have freedom of speech. Of course human beings should have freedom of speech, but I see no reason why a corporation should have the same freedom. The simple hack here is to just make it illegal for corporations to contribute to campaign advertising. Unfortunately, because corporations are "persons," there's no way to do this, so we wind up with all kinds of crazy laws that try to place limits on campaign financing by corporations in ways that are arguably unconstitutional.

  89. Re:Aaaargh! - like he said by opencity · · Score: 1

    > Bill Clinton still did many good things -- but one of the worst things he did (IMNSHO) was to cause the Democratic party to lose its identity. He frequently took Republican initiatives, rubbed off the serial numbers, and called it "Good." Then came Gore & Kerry -- both of whose campaign platforms could be summed up as "I'm not George W. Bush."

    At the risk of me-to-ism, above sums up the real problems of the Democratic party. As 43 said (full disclosure: I didn't vote for him and hate all the Reaganauts for their crimes): "A list of complaints is not a program." I doupt I can vote for McCain but Hilary is gonna be tough. We've got to get back to Tip O'Neil's 'all politics is local'.

    To reiterate: Mod parent up.

    --
    Physics is like sex: sure, it may give some practical results, but that's not why we do it.
  90. How is this the Democrats fault? by RayBender · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Last time I checked the Dems were in the minority in the House. Which means that the Republicans are the ones who set the rules - and if they had wanted it to pass badly enough, they could have easly arranged for it to only need a simple majority. They certainly aren't above changing rules to suit their needs in the Senate (e.g. the nuclear option). So this ain't the Dems fault.

    That aside, it's not clear to me that the rules are such a bad thing. They basically say that if a political party spends campaign money on the Web then it has to be reported - just as the case if said party spends money on TV ads. This is perfectly reasonable. Despite what some party-funded astroturfers would have you believe, this does NOT restrict J. Random Blogger from posting whatever he wants. It just says that if he gets money from the RNC, the RNC has to report it.

    --
    Human genome = 3 billion base pairs = 6 GBit. Windows + Office = 20 Gbit. Which is more impressive?
    1. Re:How is this the Democrats fault? by RexRhino · · Score: 2

      The Dems clearly have a party-wide almost universal mandate to regulate political speech on the internet, where as the Republicans tend to not favor government regulation of political speech on the internet, but there are enough Republicans on the other side of the issue that it didn't pass.

      So basicly, on this specific issue - Democrats = Hardcore Facists ... Republics = spineless weenies that enable Facism. That isn't to say that there aren't other issues were the Republicans are the hardcore facists, and the Democrats are the spinless weenie enablers (such as gay marrage, or the war on drugs)...

      But what this issue SHOULD be is a moment for people who vote Democrat to reflect, and come to the realization that "Yes, I am a facist", and either find another party that more reflects liberal ideals, or simply stop the charade and proudly proclaim their support for facism. But don't decieve yourself by thinking the Republicans are the evil ones and the Democrats the good guys. The Democrats are hardcore facists, as much as the Republics, and the supporters of both parties are closet facists.

      And it is VERY clear that these rules are such a bad thing... because any web site with advertisements or makes money in any way will have to register with the government, do loads of paperwork, and be monitored by the government in order to be allowed to make political commentary.

    2. Re:How is this the Democrats fault? by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      saying you're in favor of control doesn't mean you're automatically a "facist."

      That's like saying I'm a hardcore PETA supporting vegan because I want a salad.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  91. Teh Joke is on YOU! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > The reason you didn't hear until 2003 that he wasn't making weapons is because thats when inspectors were let back...

    Wrong. Apparently you were asleep with the rest of the world from 9/11/01 to early 2003, as the White House cranked up it's Marketing War machine. First, the White House threw out salacious tidbits that Iraq had some connection with Al Qaeda, when there was none. No one bought it. Gradually, over the next few insuing months (mid summer 2002), the White House started throwing up trial balloons about WMDs and such in Iraq, and it started gathering steam. Why? Why such a sudden shit of focus from Afghanistan and Al Qaeda to WMDs in Iraq now? Why? No doubt, you and countless others did just what the White House wanted you to do, bite that summer 2002 chunk of bait hook, line, and sinker baby! How's it taste now?

  92. So the 2006 campaign is starting already by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

    Here's my take on this bill:
    1. It was not intended to pass. If Republican leadership had wanted the bill to pass, they wouldn't have invoked the rules requiring a supermajority: They could have just brought it up as a regular bill, voted to close the debate (a majority vote in the House) immediately, and then voted to pass the bill.

    2. Reasoning from (1), the bill was a setup. Republicans wanted Democrats to vote against this bill. Unfortunately for the Democrats, they took the bait, because if Democrats really wanted to stop it they still had the filibuster in the Senate.

    3. From (1) and (2), the whole point of this exercise was to create "proof" that "Democrats hate free speech, bloggers, and the Internet". Expect that to show up in websites (case in point: the headline of this article), debates and campaign ads starting in a few months.

    This is the same sort of technique as creating a bill that states:
          motherhood and apple pie are good, and we will kill kittens.
    When people vote against killing kittens, then their political opponants can say "Look here, this guy's against motherhood and apple pie". And as John Kerry (and many others before him) have learned, it's no use explaining that you were voting against killing kittens, and because of that were forced to vote against motherhood and apple pie.

    --
    I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    1. Re:So the 2006 campaign is starting already by RexRhino · · Score: 1

      I agree that the Republicans created a bad bill in order for it not to pass... (the bill isn't needed if the government would obey the bill of rights, because clearly any type of "capaign finance reform" is a restriction of freedom of speech and violates the constitution).

      But that doesn't mean that the Democrats hating free speech isn't true. The Democrats are as rapid for censorship, government regulation of media, "capaign finance reform" i.e. government regulation of political speech, restricting public protests, etc., as the Republicans. In certain areas even more so.

      The Democrats do want to end the free speech, despite any shading conspiracies of the Republicans. What you are trying to do is justify why you support a party so against freedom of speech.

    2. Re:So the 2006 campaign is starting already by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      To start off, I'm registered as an Independant, and have supported Democrat, Republican, and Libertarian candidates. So the statement "What you are trying to do is justify why you support a party so against freedom of speech" is not applicable, since it is based on the incorrect supposition that I support the Democratic party.

      Here's a more accurate description of what Democrats who voted against this bill believe: They'd rather control campaign spending on the Internet than add a law that says that internet postings are protected speech. Draw whatever conclusions you want from that.

      In terms of how each party views free speech, both the Democrats and Republicans want the loudest megaphone possible to push their positions while completely silencing their opponents. They both will do anything they can get away with to silence anyone who disagrees with them, and will both shout down any other contenders before they have a real chance (for instance limiting televised debates to only Democrats and Republicans).

      My take on the campaign finance reform issue is this: As long as there are ways to pay specific politicians or political organizations based on what decisions they make, corruption is possible. Unfortunately, there's no way to prevent this other than stopping all political speech. So the goal is to find a balance between the need to prevent corruption and the need to have free political discourse.

      Politics always reminds me of the society Douglas Adams refers to where everyone votes for rats to lead their government because they don't want the wrong rat to be in charge. Or the battle between Turd Sandwich and Giant Douche on South Park. The only way to stop the 'lesser of 2 evils' problem is to have more than 2 choices, and the only way we'll see that is if we can somehow build a political party with real power without either major party finding out about it. We've only seen 3 real challenges to the 2 major parties in the last century: Socialists (1900-1915ish), Dixiecrats (1960-75ish), and Reform (1992).

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  93. Re:Not sure the dems were ever friends of free spe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can somebody please tell me what the fuck a law that says, in essence, "No stealing" has to do with the freedom of speech?

    Can somebody else, with way more patience than I've got, explain to "inverselimit" that the freedom of speech is by far the most heavily abridged freedom we have, and for good reason?

  94. Re:Not sure the dems were ever friends of free spe by Dave+Walker · · Score: 1

    Damn, I wish I had my mod points from yesterday back. There's not a dime's worth of difference between the Democrats and the Republicans. On the one hand, you've got the (conservative) Republicans shoving the Patriot Act down our throats, while the other hand, the liberal (Democrat) SCOTUS is busy allowing people's homes to be taken from them and given to private developers to increase the tax base .

    A pox on both their houses...

    Dave Walker
    I would rather be exposed to the inconveniences attending too much liberty than to those attending too small a degree of it. - Thomas Jefferson

  95. Bush has no support from economic conservatives by brlewis · · Score: 1

    Economic conservatives endorsed Kerry mainly because Bush was and is so incredibly bad. The damage from Bush deficits will be with us for years to come.

    Clinton, while less than perfect, at least had some economic sense. Republicans now attribute his success to luck. From Clinton's 2000 DNC speech: "The Republicans said then they would not be held responsible for the results of our economic policies. I hope the American people will take them at their word."

    1. Re:Bush has no support from economic conservatives by Bill+Dog · · Score: 1

      Clinton, while less than perfect, at least had some economic sense. Republicans now attribute his success to luck.

      Clinton had no economic sense, and Republicans have always attributed the successful economy falling under his watch to luck. Clinton's budgets, before the dot-com boom fell into his lap, proposed to add around $200 billion to our national debt each year for the next five years (http://www.gpoaccess.gov/usbudget/fy96/browse.htm l, take the first link in the table, and see the bottom of page 2 of that PDF), adding another trillion to our already 5 trillion national debt.

      --
      Attention zealots and haters: 00100 00100
    2. Re:Bush has no support from economic conservatives by brlewis · · Score: 1

      It's amazing to me how right-wingers on slashdot shoot themselves in the foot by citing actual documents rather than just making things up like Bill O'Reilly. Bill O'Reilly knows what he's doing.

      Thank you for pointing out the $200B deficits under Clinton. They were a huge improvement. Look at the 4th paragraph on page 3 about three straight years of deficit reduction for the first time since Harry Truman was President. Thank you for pointing out that this was in 1996, before the dot-com boom. After the dot-com boom the deficits disappeared and we finally had a surplus, only to be squandered by Republican don't-tax-just-spend budgets under GW Bush.

  96. Re:I agree with SCOTUS by symbolic · · Score: 1


    In some sense, freedom of speech, in the manner in which they have defined it, also relates to freedom of choice by the American citizens to elect the candidate they feel is most qualfied. When citizens are constantly bombarded by one side that has resources that far exceed those of a competitor, they aren't being afforded the opportunity (or the right, some might even say) to make an educated choice.

  97. That's what they said about McCain-Feingold... by geoffrobinson · · Score: 1

    back in the day, they said McCain-Feingold would be found unconstitutional because it clearly limited speech. That's why many politicians voted for it. (besides the fact that campaign finance reform is favorable to incumbants) Supreme Court was fine with by a 5-4 vote or so. I'm not going to rest on the Supreme Court to protect my freedom of speech.

    --
    Except for ending slavery, the Nazis, communism, & securing American independence, war has never solved anything.
  98. Re:Wait, I Thought the Democrats Were the Good Guy by GypC · · Score: 1
    Wait, I Thought the Democrats Were the Good Guys

    ROFL

  99. FOS? Another Definition by npsimons · · Score: 1

    The Online Freedom of Speech Act was defeated in the House of Representatives yesterday.

    Huh. When I saw FOS I thought "Full Of Shit". Then I read the summary, and wondered why Democrats, who are largely in favor of freedom of speech, would be opposed to this bill. Then I read the article, and I realized that not only was my first thought correct (this bill is full of shit), but that indeed it could apply to the article summary as well. I guess balancing things out means we have to post lies from the other side every once in a while. Only problem is, what if you're not on either side and just interested in truth?
  100. If '/' leans right, why does /. lean left? by tepples · · Score: 3, Funny

    /. and it's posters lean so far left

    Then why isn't it called "\." ?

    1. Re:If '/' leans right, why does /. lean left? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Typical. Always thinking in terms of your own point-of-view.

      It's leaning to its left.

  101. Would it matter anyhow? by pdschmid · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Haven't read through quite a bit of the comments, I can understand the issues related with the bill. What I still don't understand is though why it would actually matter? Passing a bill that essentially exempts the Internet from campaing finance laws opens the Internet up to massive campaign spending for US based services. Having the Internet though regulated by campaign finance law would at least curb that, but where does it stop applying? What if the campaign ad is hosted on an international server, but the actual Internet site is US based and only subscribes to an ad service from abroad. How will you ever apply campaign finance laws to this?????? Regulating the Internet has proven to be a pretty tough thing to do for one nation alone. Just remember the CanSpam act and how spam has dramatically increased since that law was passed (the only success I can see is that one indicted spammer who was dumb enough to be US based). As much as I support campaign finance laws, I really have to wonder what they matter to the Internet in any regard. In my opinion, whether to actually apply them or specifically exempt them is a mute point, as circumventing their application is a piece of cake.

  102. ... Along Party Lines by GigG · · Score: 1

    "In an acrimonious debate that broke largely along party lines, more than three-quarters of congressional Democrats voted to oppose the reform bill..."

    This sentence is an oxymoron. The debate "broke largely along party lines" yet 3/4 of the democrats voted aginst the bill.

    --
    Is buying a Harley Davidson as your first motorcycle since you were 16 at age 49 a midlife crisis issue?
  103. not even Fox? by griffjon · · Score: 2, Funny

    They even say that they're fair and balanced.

    Fox wouldn't LIE to me, would it??

    --
    Returned Peace Corps IT Volunteer
    1. Re:not even Fox? by nwbvt · · Score: 1

      Being "fair and balanced" is not the same as being unbiased. Unbiased implies there are no opinions influencing what is said and done. That is either true and false, and is going to be false for virtually every media outlet. Fair and balanced implies opinions from one side are cancelled out by opinions on the other side. That is going to be relative to a particular viewpoint.

      --
      Mathematics is made of 50 percent formulas, 50 percent proofs, and 50 percent imagination.
  104. Read TFB ... by DrJimbo · · Score: 1
    AC said:
    Does it allow one party or another to spend unlimited amounts of money online?
    No.

    Bzzt. Wrong. But you do get this case of Turtle Wax. TFB says:

    Paragraph (22) of section 301 of the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 (2 U.S.C. 431(22)) is amended by adding at the end the following new sentence: `Such term shall not include communications over the Internet.'.

    The bill is precisely about allowing one party or another to spend unlimited amounts of money online.

    Sheesh.

    --
    We don't see the world as it is, we see it as we are.
    -- Anais Nin
  105. Political seppuku by tepples · · Score: 2, Informative

    Oh, and at that time voting against something called the "PATRIOT Act" was political suicide.

    But in some cases, seppuku is the most honorable thing one can do.

  106. What is "speech"? by metamatic · · Score: 1

    Where does this idea come from that spending money is speech? There's no restriction on speech per se here. What's being restricted is the right to be a paid shill.

    If Joe wants to post about how great Bush is, there's nothing in the law to stop him. It's only if he wants to earn money from saying how great Bush is that there's a problem, and it's the money part which is the cause of the restriction.

    It's actually kinda like the iTunes DRM thing. A lot of people on Slashdot trash the iPod for having DRM, and ignore the fact that you are completely free to put unrestricted MP3s on it and never have any DRM restrictions imposed on you. The iPod does not restrict your use of music; it's buying from the iTunes music store that causes the restrictions to come into play.

    --
    GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
    1. Re:What is "speech"? by bluGill · · Score: 1

      It costs money to print a paper. In theory I can print up advertising and send it to every home in the US, in practice I don't have enough money. However there are people who do have that kind of money. By taking away their right to send that advertisement with their own money you are restricting their free speech rights.

      To the major parties - the democrats and the republicans - this is good. They have enough mind share that they can collect all the money they need in tiny amounts from everyone. To a fringe candidate (who could be better than either), it is bad, because the fringe candidate has no ability to counter that. They don't have mind share, and they cannot get it by convincing one rich person to spend money on their advertisements.

      There is good reason campaign finance reform is often called "incumbent protection act" - it makes it much harder to get someone elected out of office.

    2. Re:What is "speech"? by mellon · · Score: 1

      What makes you think that the fringe candidate we really need in office has a billion bucks in her back pocket? The reality is that except for rich poseurs like Forbes and Bloomberg, fringe candidates have to raise money the hard way, just like everyone else.

    3. Re:What is "speech"? by bluGill · · Score: 1

      You got it wrong. The fringe candidate we all need doesn't need money. Today we have to hope the fringe candidate is someone rich, like Forbes, because only rich people can spend enough to get heard nationally. Better home Forbes is a that person we all need because he is the only one with a chance.

      Without campaign finance "reform", the candidate can be anyone. They only need to find one rich person (and there are plenty to choose from), and spend their efforts getting that rich person to donate money. One rich person can write a check for the hundred million needed and not notice the loss. (Not all the time, but for one candidate)

      The two major parties don't need this. They already have the mind share that they can get hundreds of little guys to donate money. They are better of preventing the fringe candidate we all need from getting enough money to be heard.

      Without money you can say anything you want, in this day and age you will not be heard by enough people to make a difference. With money you can get the message out. The major parties (both of them) do not want you to get your message out, so they try to convince you that money isn't a part of free speech.

    4. Re:What is "speech"? by mellon · · Score: 1

      What makes you think the person with the hundred million in pocket is going to write that check? Give me a break!

      The problem with political parties isn't that they have grassroots support. It's that they're institutionalized to the point where they are our only choices. If you want to get elected these days, and your positions aren't in line with either of the two parties, your only choice is to take over one of the parties. That's what happened to the Republicans. :'|

    5. Re:What is "speech"? by bluGill · · Score: 1

      It only takes one person with a hundred million to write the check. Maybe they will, maybe they won't. That doesn't change the point that if they do you suddenly have enough money to mount a national campaign and get your message out. If they don't you are no worse off than before.

    6. Re:What is "speech"? by metamatic · · Score: 1
      By taking away their right to send that advertisement with their own money you are restricting their free speech rights.

      Web hosting isn't free either. Nobody's suggesting that I should be prohibited from posting political rants or printing them out and handing them out on street corners. What's being suggested is that people should be prohibited from paying me to do so.

      Right now, the two big parties have a nice cosy system. They can buy all the coverage they like from the corporate media, and say what they like to an audience of millions. Third parties can't--even if they have the money, their ads are often refused.

      If the law is changed so that the only way to get coverage is to say or do something that warrants proper news coverage, or to actually go out and do grassroots events, it will be very painful for the two big parties. They'll be put on the same basis as the third party candidates.

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
  107. Excuse me, but isn't this pointless??? by istartedi · · Score: 1

    An act in Congress to defend free speech? Hear that? No. It's not your new fan-like subwoofer. It's the Founders spinning in their graves. Either that or our government just sounded another brown note. There is absolutely no need for this. It's covered by the first ammendment. And, if the SCOTUS doesn't back us up on that, then the court of last resort has failed. Then, when the court of last resort fails, it's time for the formation of a new government, just as the Founders formed a new government. I just hope we can keep the bloodshed to a minimum.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  108. I am shocked and amazed! by Locke2005 · · Score: 1

    Politicians have voted against a bill that would make it easier to criticize them with impunity?!? What possible motivation could the politicians have to do such a thing? Surely, like all other human beings, they must openly welcome criticism of themselves!

    --
    I've abandoned my search for truth; now I'm just looking for some useful delusions.
  109. Bloggers... by psykocrime · · Score: 2, Informative

    Bloggers (and everybody else) are already exempt from dealing with those hundreds of pages of crap, because that crap has no authority in the first place. The First Amendment to the Constitution guarantees the right to free speech... and even if it didn't, government has no authority other than what comes from consent of the governed; so anybody who wants my simply choose to not allow the government to regulate their speech.

    Repeat after me: Government has NO intrinsic authority or dominion over anybody; We The People are the ultimate and final source of ALL political power and authority... the government has ONLY what authority we grant it; and what is granted may be taken back at any time. Sovereign individuals not belong to, and are not subjects of, the United States government... they answer to us, not the other way around.

    --
    // TODO: Insert Cool Sig
    1. Re:Bloggers... by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 1

      The government has authority because I respect it. If I choose to defy that authority, I choose to do it willingly in hopes that it'll change.

      The first amendment guarantees that the Goverment won't censor WHAT you say, but it can step in on how, where, and how much you spend on making sure that you say what you want.

      Now, if there was a law banning republicans or democrats or green party or the nazi party from buying air time, then that would be a violation of the 1st.

      --
      Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  110. Speech About Speech by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 1
    --

    --
    make install -not war

  111. Yes, not even Fox? by bluGill · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Many on the far right would claim that fox's slogan is in fact a play on the rest of media claiming it is fair and balanced, while in fact biased to the left. (Witness CBS releasing and standing by fake documents in the last election)

    These are the same people who will call Fox mid left, and everyone else extreme left. That most of Europe would consider the US media mid right is not important to them.

  112. On that note, Bill Text by Ironsides · · Score: 1

    Here is the complete bill text:
    http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c109:H.R.160 6:

    Online Freedom of Speech Act (Introduced in House)

    HR 1606 IH

    109th CONGRESS

    1st Session

    H. R. 1606

    To amend the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 to exclude communications over the Internet from the definition of public communication.

    IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

    April 13, 2005

    Mr. HENSARLING introduced the following bill; which was referred to the Committee on House Administration

    A BILL

    To amend the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 to exclude communications over the Internet from the definition of public communication.

    Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,

    SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.

    This Act may be cited as the `Online Freedom of Speech Act'.

    SEC. 2. MODIFICATION OF DEFINITION OF PUBLIC COMMUNICATION.

    Paragraph (22) of section 301 of the Federal Election Campaign Act of 1971 (2 U.S.C. 431(22)) is amended by adding at the end the following new sentence: `Such term shall not include communications over the Internet.'.

    --
    Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
  113. Not blacks by bluGill · · Score: 1

    The US constitution say nothing about what color or race slaves must be. According to the constitution if I captured a German I could make him my slave (if I was in an area that allowed slavery), even though that person would be white. There were even 1 or 2 cases of this in history, but there was a large supply of slaves coming out of Africa, and no Government to object. In my example the German government would object (though back when slavery was legal in the US, Germany as we know it isn't exist) and it is likely the US government would make me send my slave back.

    Color was never a requirement for slavery. It just happened that black slaves were in supply, so blacks became slaves.

  114. Slashdotters conspiracy search by scjnsn · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Oh.. now the liberal and emotional readers of Slashdot will have to figure out a way to pretend that Democrats really do protect free speech. The way I see it though, Dems have been foaming at the mouth since the advent of talk radio and blogging because the mainstream media can no longer spread liberal tripe unchecked. If they could do it, dems would ban talk radio and blogging altogether.

  115. The *Democrats* defeated it? by feijai · · Score: 1

    ...and about forty Republican congressmen, it would appear. Sounds to me like a bipartisan defeat.

    1. Re:The *Democrats* defeated it? by BobaFett · · Score: 1

      No, the 225 votes were *for* the act, which is an almost party-line majority. It just wasn't a large enough majority.

    2. Re:The *Democrats* defeated it? by feijai · · Score: 1

      It was *not* party-line. Only 3/4 of the democrats voted against the act. Thus approximately 30-40 republicans voted against it.

  116. We know nothing about parties by bluGill · · Score: 1

    Actually your post gives us no information about the political parties involved. It could be 3 democrats, 3 republicans, or any mixture of the above. All we know is that the spouses are composed of 1 democrat and 2 republicans.

    I personally know many married couples, where both are politically active, and one is a democrat and the other a republican. I also know many instances where both belong to the same party (with plenty of instances of each party). It is completely incorrect to draw any conclusion about someones party based solely on their souses' party.

  117. Re:READ THE ARTICLE by superyooser · · Score: 1

    This is not an encroachment on your right to free speech. This just applies existing election campaign laws to Internet communication.

    Existing campaign finance laws encroach on free speech.

  118. Not about free speech by geekoid · · Score: 1

    For all practical reasons, blogger can say what they want. They know this.

    What this does is allow a party to go after another party if the mis-behave.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  119. $$$ != Speech by danaris · · Score: 1

    There's nothing in the freedom of speech clause that says its only free speech up to a certain artificially imposed spending limit.

    And just where in the 1st Amendment does it say that money is equivalent to speech, and thus Constitutionally protected?

    ...

    Yeah, thought not.

    Dan Aris

    --
    Fun. Free. Online. RPG. BattleMaster.
    1. Re:$$$ != Speech by magarity · · Score: 1

      And just where in the 1st Amendment does it say that money is equivalent to speech
       
      It's very simple: I want to get my message (speech) out via mass media. To do that, mass media wants to charge me $X. Campaign finance law says I may not spend more than $X/2. Campaign fiance law has just limited my speech. It's a large scale equivalent of coming up to me on at a town hall meeting and telling me I have to speak more quietly when it's my turn to talk so not everyone in the room can hear me.

    2. Re:$$$ != Speech by danaris · · Score: 1

      I will refer you to this comment on this same discussion, 'cause I think he voices at least as well as I could the reasons why paid political speech is very different than just plain political speech.

      Dan Aris

      --
      Fun. Free. Online. RPG. BattleMaster.
    3. Re:$$$ != Speech by rho · · Score: 1
      If that's the best reasoning you can come up with.. It's summed up by the phrase "we're making speech fair".

      There is no provision for "fair" speech. Only "free" speech. The problem with "fair" speech is, who decides "fair"? And elected politicians deciding on what's fair, and what's not fair, will ALWAYS come down in favor of incumbents.

      --
      Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
    4. Re:$$$ != Speech by danaris · · Score: 1

      Well, it's far from ideal, I admit, but this is the real world, and I'm much happier that the incumbents be somewhat favoured...than that the rich are highly favoured.

      Dan Aris

      --
      Fun. Free. Online. RPG. BattleMaster.
    5. Re:$$$ != Speech by rho · · Score: 1
      Yes, it is the real world--and the rich will ALWAYS be able to circumvent these kinds of laws. You don't think George Soros has undue influence due specifically to his great wealth? Regardless of the laws passed?

      You're daft if you aren't worried about an entrenched political class.

      --
      Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
  120. Campaign Finance Reform is a Joke by TheSync · · Score: 1

    We've now had thirty years of campaign finance reform.

    Would you say things are better now (now that you have to hire a campaign finance lawyer and an accounting firm to run for office)?

    Communication technology expansion makes campaign finance reform a joke. It was a joke to begin with anyway, as it has only been used by incumbents to protect their political power, as evidenced by a higher number of incumbents winning races.

  121. MOD PARENT UP!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Amen to that. It's so amazingly rare to find any /. article that shows Republicans (or conservatives in general) as anything other than Bible-thumping, gun-toting, bedroom-snooping yokels that you sometimes forget the Democrats (or liberals in general) are the tree-hugging, dope-smoking, Commie-loving yokels.

  122. Re:Slashdotters conspiracy search by geekoid · · Score: 1, Insightful

    The media is not liberal. there are liberal aspects, but people like Rush would ahve you believe that all media is liberal and spins liberal. This is simply not true.

    Clinton cheated on his wife, and was beaten to a pulp publicity wise. Even when most polls showed that a large percentage of american didn't care, it still went on.

    Bush lied to get us to war, Haliburton id getting no bid contracts, etc ad nauseum. he hasn't gotten half the negative press Clinton did.

    I find that the media is a lot closer to center, and all arguements I have heard otherwise have just been strawmen.

    AS far as this issue goes, it is very completcated. AS we all know, they can't enforce this accross the board and go after every offended. What they can do, is shut down the occasional site for violating these rules. They do exist for a reason.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  123. Hey, by AndreyF · · Score: 1
  124. That's why it should have passed by ifwm · · Score: 1



    If I have unlimited money, and I want to spend my money endorsing a candidate, how is it not a restriction of my speech to put ANY restrictions on how I spend it?

    Limiting spending is limiting speech.

    1. Re:That's why it should have passed by DrJimbo · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The title, the summary, and the article linked to were misleading. Many /.ers didn't RTFB or carefully RTFA and posted slightly hysterical comments about the Democrats outlawing blogs.

      ifwm said:

      If I have unlimited money, and I want to spend my money endorsing a candidate, how is it not a restriction of my speech to put ANY restrictions on how I spend it?

      Limiting spending is limiting speech.

      I am glad we are now talking about campaign finance and not "the Democrats are stealing our fr33doms!!1".

      You are certainly entitled to your opinion that limiting campaign spending and contributions results in limiting free speech. Unfortunately for you, the majority of the American people, the Congress, and the Supreme Court have consistently disagreed with you.

      Let's look at why this might be. If there was no limit or regulation of campaign finance then there is no question that the voice of the rich and powerful would increase. It is generally assumed that the increased voice of the rich and powerful comes at the cost of decreasing the voice of everyone else. In fact, without regulation, the voice of the rich and powerful can come disguised as the voice of the common person.

      If the bill had passed, there is no question that the Internet would be flooded with soft campaign money. It could easily drown out the voices of individuals. Just as your freedom to move your arm and fist stops at my nose, your freedom of speech stops when it is so loud and pervasive that it drowns out the free speech of others.

      --
      We don't see the world as it is, we see it as we are.
      -- Anais Nin
  125. Ummm, and this is surprising exactly why again? by Impy+the+Impiuos+Imp · · Score: 1

    Hmmmm...next time someone claims the Democrats are all about protecting the Trial Lawyers, maybe people will pay attention.

    Yes, this is flippant. No, it is not a troll or flamebait.

    --
    (-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
  126. IFWM is a waste. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Personally, I have been tracking that idiot for 6 months. He is a total joke here. Occasionally, he says something that is clever with the words, but if you watch carefully, about half of his stuff is propaganda, lies, and fud. The guy claims to be from Florida in one case, but long ago claimed to be in NYC. What is interesting is that his posting times would indicate he is either a student or in a different timezone (me thinks england). I used to avoid him as he is not worth the hassle. But I am convinced that he is a nightmare here, so have followed him recently to simply recant him and catch him when he is being his usual nasty self.

  127. REALITY CHECK: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    OK, "Anonymous Coward" it is, so be it. Obvious "in-your-face" reality doesn't require usernames and accounts anyway. As a proud liberal, a far-left Democrat and a card-carrying member of the ACLU, I have to say that I'm ASTONISHED to see that ZONK's kind of assertion generates any forum discussion HEAT, because it DAMN SURE doesn't generate any LIGHT.

    REALITY CHECK FOR THOSE WHO REALLY WANT TO KNOW:

    Republicans and conservatives support "free speech" in EXACTLY the same way that they support "REFORMING" public education and "STRENGTHENING" social security. (and that's "not at all")

    The problem with this argument is that we're daling with THEIR terminology. The Republicans call something "the USA PATRIOT ACT" and sudenly it's un-patriotic to oppose it. What next? Do we seriously believe they've left no child behind?! That they've brought integrity back to the White House? If you seriously believe that the Bush-Loving GOP is interested in promoting an open dialogue with no boundaries, you'd have to believe that they didn't really make those attending their campaign functions sign LOYALTY OATHES before entering!

    My challenge to all real thinkers reading this forum: Google the definitions of the words "conservative" and "liberal" - [The ideal search query format is "define:conservative" - and "define:liberal"] - then just ask yourself which definition you'd like to be read about YOU - in your eulogy.

    The conservatives name things oddly, for a specific intent and purpose.

    Buenos Nachos

  128. Face it by morganie · · Score: 1

    Is it that hard for you guys to assimilate new information that doesn't fit in with your preconcieved ideas? Face it - the Democratic party is capable of doing something you don't like. They are not the "good guys" and Republicans the "bad guys" each party acts for complicated, calculated reasons and its possible they weren't with you on this one.

  129. No conflict - it's about both. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

    This bill is all about trashing campaign finance reform laws.

    No, it isn't. It's about exactly what it says it's about, which is exempting some opinionated dude in his pajamas from having to hire lawyers and accountants in order to exercise his first amendment right to free speech.


    Actually it's about both. That's because the campaign finance laws were intended, from the start, to stifle the free speech of grass-roots campaigners.

    Grass roots actions have been very successful, primarily in unseating Democratic candidates: Roberti, Roos, and Foley to name just three. (Tom Foley was the first House Speaker ever to be voted out of office, and that was entirely due to a grass-roots letter campaign.) These grass roots actions were organized via internet communication tools: Newsgroups, email, and blogs. (Campaign finance laws were "reformed" to make such grass-roots organization more difficult immediately thereafter. Now that blogging has been similarly effective on its own, it's time for another round of "reform" to spike it.)

    Major media gets the Democrats' viewpoints on issues out while the Republicans' side gets out mainly over talk shows (which preach to the choir), part-time on Fox News, and via internet outlets such as blogs. When the media omits or distorts in the Democrats' favor it's mainly the blogs that act as a truth squad to expose the omissiions and falisifications. (Think of Drudge and the Monica scandals, or Powerline and LittleGreenFootballs vs. Dan Rather's forged letters.)

    The Democrats also get lots of free publicity from major media and billions in campaign contributions from certain organizations (notably: labor unions) that were carefully exempted from the campaign finance laws. Practically the only place Republicans get such unregulated support is internet blogging.

    And then there's the likes of George Soros. (If you had any illusions left that "campaign finance reform" was really about keeping a few billionaires from trying to buy elections and control over political party machinery you need only look at what he's been up to, and how it was enabled by the last round of "reforms".)

    So it's hardly surprising to see the Democrats - with a solid lock on the media - trying to stifle grass-roots free speech, or the Republicans - its main beneficiaries - trying to defend it.

    However, that's not the only factor: Both parties tend to attract compensated psychopaths and put them in positions of power. But the two parties attract psychopaths with different styles of compensation. Democrats tend to get the "anything goes" type, Republicans the "rule-bound" type. So it's also not surprising to see Democratic politicians voting for whatever is most expedient for their own plans and programs, Republicans for whatever their theories say is "right" - even if it's not necessarily to their benefit. In this case theory calls for free speech, limitation on government power, and the people discussing candidates and making informed choices about who to select. This is perceived as a benefit for Republicans, so among Republicans both the idologues and the pragmatists are on the same page.

    "Campaign finance reform" is also known as "the incumbent protection act". It helps them keep their seats despite what they do to tick people off by erecting barriers against speech for anyone not part of the established power structure. (The big guys have the time and money to run the maze, while you and I would get stuck if we tried.)

    The Internet is the main way we little people have escaped the institutional roadblocks and shaken the power structure. So now the power-brokers are moving to extend their controls over political speech into the internet. Since the internet community's main power base is internet free speech, we should recognize and oppose this move - regardless of what candy-coating is applies.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    1. Re:No conflict - it's about both. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So it's hardly surprising to see the Democrats - with a solid lock on the media - trying to stifle grass-roots free speech, or the Republicans - its main beneficiaries - trying to defend it.

      I suggest you do some research on who owns the media. It ain't the democrats running GE and Westinghouse. You've fallen hook, line, and sinker for Republican talking point #1: Despite the fact that we own the media, the media is against us.

      Why does the mainstream media consistently fail to call George W. Bush on his utter lack of leadership and disastrous policies? Why was the last election (completely orchestrated by Rove), focused completely on Swift Boats and other things that happened 30 years ago instead of policy?

      The media is an arm of those in power. It exists to justify the actions of those in power. If you fail to question the motivations of these power brokers, you're nothing more than a partisan hack with an axe to grind.

    2. Re:No conflict - it's about both. by blincoln · · Score: 1

      Major media gets the Democrats' viewpoints on issues out while the Republicans' side gets out mainly over talk shows (which preach to the choir), part-time on Fox News, and via internet outlets such as blogs.

      Major media gets out whatever viewpoint is most likely to rake in advertising money.

      The biggest local paper in my area officially endorsed Emperor Dubyah for re-election, but they still somehow manage to get flooded with letters claiming they're a cesspit of lies and manipulation controlled by the Liberal Media Elite(tm).

      I hate both parties (although the Republicans are worse recently with their "that is not a parliamentary inquiry" / "nevermind that it's the second term under a fully Republican-controlled country, it's still Clinton's fault" horse shit), so I think I have a decent vantage point to comment from.

      The media is fairly balanced in terms of which side of the issues it covers - after taking into consideration the ad money factor. They don't make a big fuss about things like school shootings because they're in favour of gun control. They cover it because it brings them a bunch of eyeballs.

      My take is that people who get upset about "the liberal media" see something they disagree with and have a knee-jerk reaction before they notice that the week before there was something with the opposite point of view. Again, back to my local paper, I'll frequently see letters to the editor complaining about "damn liberals" in the same section as a Charles Krauthammer piece.

      Would you *rather* that the media be completely one-sided? So that Democrats could read the New York Times (oh... wait... I guess that doesn't work anymore, but bear with me) and Republicans could watch Fox, and neither would be exposed to points of view other than the ones they already have? Then everybody (except for people like me*) could feel safe and sound and not offended in any way by having their beliefs challenged. That would sure be great.

      * I believe in greater independence for states, so that if the South really wants to teach creationism and ban alcohol and abortion, that's fine as long as California can legalize recreational drugs and ban religion in schools. I'm against fascist empire-building like the Emperor is doing in the Middle East, but I'm also against gun control because I want to own an assault rifle. I believe in having strong military technology, but not throwing billions of dollars into the good old boy network that occasionally produces something cool every few decades that would have been really useful back when it still looked like we might get into a war with the Soviet Union. I believe in protecting the environment, but building tons of (pebble bed) fission plants. I think it's great that there are rich people, but that we shouldn't give them a tax break at the cost of food stamps and health care for the poor - because the smartest person I've ever met is a student who's on them right now. I think we haven't had a genuinely great president in my entire lifetime. I think people should grow thicker skin and learn to understand that not everyone has to agree with each other. I wear a suit some days, and combat boots on others. I drive a Japanese car because Americans still don't know how to design a reasonably-priced one that looks nice. I have green hair, and tattoos of Schroedinger's wavefunction equation, a barcode of my SSN, and a symbol from Legacy of Kain. My family has been on this continent since about 1620, and I am going to STFU now.

      --
      "...always new atoms but always doing the same dance, remembering what the dance was yesterday." -Richard Feynman
    3. Re:No conflict - it's about both. by floodo1 · · Score: 0

      yeah thanks for blastin on your parent post by limbaugh :)

      --
      I KUT J00 M4NG!!!
    4. Re:No conflict - it's about both. by floodo1 · · Score: 0

      nice post d00d

      --
      I KUT J00 M4NG!!!
    5. Re:No conflict - it's about both. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

      So it's hardly surprising to see the Democrats - with a solid lock on the media - trying to stifle grass-roots free speech, or the Republicans - its main beneficiaries - trying to defend it.

      I suggest you do some research on who owns the media. It ain't the democrats running GE and Westinghouse. You've fallen hook, line, and sinker for Republican talking point #1: Despite the fact that we own the media, the media is against us.


      I suggest you do some research into who RUNS the media, and how they run it.

      Hint: Owners mostly are interested in the bottom line and generally don't interfere in the editors' choice of political content. Meanwhile, activists among the boomer generation were consciously grooming themselves to take over and/or replace the "establishment media" to "get their message out to the people". (I was there - hanging out at a college newspaper as the journalism types learned their trade. Trust me on this.) These are the people who worked their way into the editorial and reportorial positions of the current mainstream media over the next 40 years.

      But you don't HAVE to trust me. Look into the research on objective measures of media bias that was done atStanford and UCLA. (And I trust you won't try to claim that THOSE are bastions of the right wing. B-) )

      Summary: Using:
        - The congress as a measure of US public opinion. (Congresscritters are elected by a large sampling of citizens and can be expected to roughly model the citizenry's biases)
        - Number and length of quotations of various thinktanks - by both congresscritters and media outlets - as a measure of the congress critters' or media outlets' bias.
        - ADA ratings to calibrate the congresscritters on a left-right scale.
        - Regression analysis to calibrate the thinktanks on a left-right scale from the congresscritters' quoting habits and build a single model that does a good job of predicting each critter's ADA rating from his quoting habits.
        - Applying the model to the media outlets' quoting behavior to get an "ADA rating" of the media outlets.
      they placed various media outlets on a left-right scale compared to the US voting population.

      The process is objective (and potentially automatable) through each step.

      Guess where the media outlets came out? B-)

      Since the end of the "equal time provision" of the FCC regulations the mainstream media have moved to the left fringe. They did it over a number of years, in good old boil-the-frog style. They're now so far out they can convince people that an outlet which merely gives Conservative and Liberal positions equal time (rather than voicing only Liberal positions while ignoring Conservatives' completely except when misrepresenting and/or ridiculing them) is on the wacky right fringe.

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
    6. Re:No conflict - it's about both. by Bill+Dog · · Score: 1

      You remind me of a guy I used to work with who believed that Bill Clinton never actually fooled around with Monica Lewinsky. I tried to explain to him that it wasn't exactly in dispute.

      --
      Attention zealots and haters: 00100 00100
    7. Re:No conflict - it's about both. by snarfer · · Score: 1

      "the Democrats - with a solid lock on the media"

      I love this stuff. People come out and say things that everyone can see are just nonsense and they think if they repeat it over and over people will believe it. "The media' is concentrated into a few corporate hands. A defense contractor owns NBC. ABC owned by a company that threw every liberal talk show host off its radio networks. Rush Limbaugh is the main source of news for much of the country because the company that owns almost every radio station won't put any alternate views on the air. One major network of stations runs Swift Boat stuff just before the last election. Etc...

    8. Re:No conflict - it's about both. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

      Why does the mainstream media consistently fail to call George W. Bush on his utter lack of leadership and disastrous policies?

      Because he exhibits extrordinary leadership and his policies have been wildly successful, and if they tried to "call him on it" they couldn't maintain the contrary illusion?

      I have a number of gripes about Bush. But "utter lack of leadership" and "disastrous policies" are not on the list.

      For instance: Can you imagine getting as far with 1930s Japan, Germany, or Italy, 1950s North Korea, or 1960s North Vietnam as he has with Iraq, completely toppling a mass-murdering totalitarian regime, setting up an interm ELECTED government, and getting a new constitution WRITTEN BY THE LOCALS approved by 78% of the voters in a 63% turnout election (despite terrorist threats to kill anyone voting), while losing only 2,000 US soldiers in the process? (Given the number of soldiers over there that death rate is comparable to staying home and commuting to work on the freeways.)

      Give the man credit where credit is due.

      Why was the last election (completely orchestrated by Rove), focused completely on Swift Boats and other things that happened 30 years ago instead of policy?

      I don't know. Ask John Kerry and Dan Rather. B-)

      (They must have been complete fools to follow Rove's instructions, don't you think?)

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  130. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  131. Free Speech by PacketScan · · Score: 1

    I will talk about about what ever i want with whom ever i want. What could i say that would have me ending up in jail?

  132. Take it easy on Zonk by Penguinoflight · · Score: 1

    If he wanted to be a lawyer he wouldn't be working at slashdot. Now you're probably thinking that now I'm putting the blame back on democrats who shot down this "pro-blogger" bill. Not the case. This is just typical congressional garbage that we are all just supposed to put up with. Rider laws have become the norm, and it's just wrong. Unfortunatly this isn't a them-vs-them issue, it's an US-vs-them issue and nobody is likely to take up a fight with congress.

    --
    "And we have seen and do testify that the Father sent the Son to be the Savior of the World"
    1 John 4:14
  133. *troll* Internet separatist by JimXugle · · Score: 1

    jeez. The FCC should just get their Hand out of the Internet and go do something unplesent to themselves.

    Government + Technology != Happyness

    Val(-Government) + Technology = Happyness

    */troll*

    --
    -jX

    Don't you just love politics? It's like a comedy of errors.
  134. Partisan submission by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow! When I wasn't looking, Democrats shot up to being 225 members of Congress! Go Democrats!

    Thanks for being assinine, original poster, trying to say that Democrat = hates bloggers.

  135. Re:Not sure the dems were ever friends of free spe by RexRhino · · Score: 1

    The DMCA doesn't say "Don't Steal", it says "Don't say or do anything that could in any way, intentiallly or unintentionally, help someone to steal".

    If I post on a website how to backup my copy protected video games, I can end up in jail! If I post a security flaw in a piece of software, I can go to jail.

  136. Free Speech? by Fordiman · · Score: 1

    Ok, so does this mean I can't say "Bush sucks big hairy donkey balls" on my blog anymore?

    --
    110100 1101000 1101000 1100110 0 1101111 1101000 1100011 1
  137. Democrats HATE losing control. by AJWM · · Score: 1

    The Dems didn't like this for the same reasons that Dems don't like talk radio -- they don't control it. They like the fact that Big Media tends to lean left (no, not exclusively, but that's the tendency). In turn, Big Media hates bloggers -- it undermines their control over popular opinion.

    Despite what they say, the left likes to limit free speech, so long as it is free speech on the right. The Campaign Finance Law itself is a limit on free speech -- you can't take out an ad supporting your favorite candidate why now? Be suspicious of anyone trying to limit your freedom, whether that's the Patriot Act or Campaign Speech^WFinance Reform or restrictions on blogging. Actually be more suspicious of the latter -- a limit on what you can say is more pernicious than a limit on what you can do -- with free speech you can at least complain, and maybe bring about a change.

    When black apears white or pigs appear to have sprouted wings, there's usually politics behind it, that's where Critical Thinking separates the herd.

    Indeed. You might apply some of that yourself.

    --
    -- Alastair
  138. Re:Why? (disclaimer I am core democrat ) by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

    ITs not regulated.

    You can say whatever you want. The freedom of speech applies to you.

    Lets say however you and I get into a nasty lawsuit? We go to court and I promise the judge $10,000 for being a nice guy towards his re-election campaign. Now the judge rules in favor of me.

    This is bribing that is legal called campaign financing as far as I am concerned. The idea of the bill was to let those under the guise of web organizations to have special powers immune to the McCain campaign finance reform laws. Its trick made by some republican and lobbiest laywers.

    Pat Robertson who supported bush in the republican primaries called bribing free speech as the anti abortition movement is one of the most powerfull lobbying groups in the country and that scared him. To this day opponents of the McCain-Feingold bill still call it free speech. Odd since he rallied agaisnt the teachers union slamming them as the most powerfull lobbying group in the country. Can you say hypocrite?

    You have freespeech all you want but purching advertising time is different. Its no different from only a selected few *rich* people talking on megaphones to the public while you can not.

  139. Why only some kind of paid political speech? by RexRhino · · Score: 1

    If, as a political candidate, I pay the American Steel Industry Journal to run an editorial endorsing me, it is somehow fraud and I get in trouble with the FEC.

    If, as a political candidate, I promise to give a billion dollar subsidy to steel manufacturing, and a billion dollar subsidy to the American Steel Industry Journal to promote "Steel Manufacturing Awareness", and of course they endorse me, I am A-OK?

    So why is it wrong to bribe people with your own money, but great to bribe people with other people's money?

  140. Those are former dixiecrats by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

    Those are the dixiecrats and are conservatives. They joined the republican party by the 1950's and 1960's. Ronald Reagan and controversial Strom Thurmond who ran on teh states rights party were part of the conservative democratic movement. Jesse Helmes is another conservative dixiecrat turned republican.

    President Johnson finished the split after the 1964 civil rights bill.

    More information is available here. You right about one thing. In the past the democratic party was teh conservative one.

    1. Re:Those are former dixiecrats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They joined the republican party by the 1950's and 1960's.

      Where the HELL did you go to school?

      Your remedial homework for today: the Senator who tried to filibuster the 1964 Civil Rights Act was named __________ and belonged to the ________ Party. In fact, he's STILL a Senator and STILL belongs to the ________ Party.

      Fill in the blanks.

    2. Re:Those are former dixiecrats by DoubleD · · Score: 1

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robert_Byrd

      since I was curious and all.

      --
      "He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep in order to gain what he cannot lose."
    3. Re:Those are former dixiecrats by Billly+Gates · · Score: 1

      Nice try being ac.

      Go read my link again here. Hmmm whats listed in the first paragraph after 1960? Why your man Byrd running agaisnt Kennedy for a conservative racist candidate for the south.

      Sorry it holds no water and Bryd is a democrat only by name aka dixiecrat as far as I am concerned. Ask what party most African Americans are today? Its the democrats as the racists have left towards the republican party.

    4. Re:Those are former dixiecrats by thelizman · · Score: 1

      You're an idiot. And only idiots would confuse Republican and Democrat parties with Conservative and Liberal philosophies. You clearly don't understand any of those concepts, so why don't you shut up until you have a clue.

      As per what "party" most blacks (they're not african americans, they're full blooded americans you dope) belong to... check how many vote. That ought to tell you how far out of touch with the black community Democrats have become.

  141. Both parties are corrupt by cpu_fusion · · Score: 1

    I'm sure this thread has already gotten into a "right vs. left", "dem vs. repub" flamewar.

    I am confident, though, that the majority of Slashdot readers are intelligent enough to see how that debate keeps both parties in power. It is an unholy doupoly that has paralyzed this country.

    Both parties are corrupt. Before you pick a banner to stand under, look at the entire party platform, not just the few issues that drew your attention. They polarize you on hot button issues, the things you care most about, but look deeper and you will see that there are huge portions of each parties platform that are ideologically inconsistent. Chances are you personally, yes you, are neither a republican nor a democrat. You are probably something else, a party that doesn't even exist, with issues that fall on "both" sides of the "political spectrum" (ha, what a concept.)

    The problem is that neither party represents a progressive, mainstream coalition of Americans that DOES EXIST and could actually be MOVING THIS COUNTRY FORWARD. Chances are, you are in that progressive, mainstream coalition, even if you are a gay stock broker who has a complex viewpoint on abortion. WE ARE MORE ALIKE THAN THEY LET US THINK.

    So please, think about whether its about choosing sides, or in fact, getting rid of the people who force you to choose.

    1. Re:Both parties are corrupt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      HERE, HERE!


      The only parties that matters is the Green Party and the Libertarian Party.

  142. Rathergate by snatchitup · · Score: 1

    Moderators....First post was Flamebate! Not insightful.
    The Dems still believe Kerry should've won, because 60 Minutes should be God!

    But, those pesky bloggers smelled a rat.

    They have very little benefit from the Web.

    Sites like Move On Dot Org were supposed to have Repubs trembling in their shoes, but, in reality, when instead, most people see it as a front to the Socialist Party.

  143. MOD PARENT DOWN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From the very link that you provides, just a few paragraphs down:


    Filibusters do not occur in legislative bodies in which time for debate is strictly limited by procedural rules, such as the United States House of Representatives. The House did not adopt rules restricting debate until 1842, and the filibuster was used in that body before that time.

    IFWM, I have noticed that just about all of your upgrades contain insults, progoganda, and FUD. It is a sad state on /., when just about all of your mod ups are either incorrect or border-line lies.

  144. Bullsh*t by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "You will not find a SINLE provision inside the act that can change the way you are treated as a citizen. "

    Yes you will. You'll find that if the AG defines you as a "terrorist", your fourth amendment rights disappear.

    Disgusting.

    You'll find that warrants are now obtained without proper judicial oversight.

    And you know what, with all those powers, this administration had not found one godd*mned terrorist.

    The next person who says "...but bush has kept us safe..." is going to get a punch in the nose. Idiots.

  145. Which party protects the little guy? by xtronics · · Score: 1

    It isn't Republicans or Democrats - time to look at the Libertarians

    1. Re:Which party protects the little guy? by moody.nugget · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, as much as I support the Libertarians (I'm currently a Republican but getting very disgusted with both parties equally), don't think that it's below Dems and Repubs to abandon ship if the majority of the United States wises up to the corrupt two-party system and jump onto the Libertarian boat and claim they've turned a new leaf.

      To put it simply, you can't judge a man by his party, you've got to thoroughly examine all of the people you elect, because whether or not a person is a member of your political party doesn't mean they aren't going to whore themselves out to the nearest person holding a pile of cash.

    2. Re:Which party protects the little guy? by DigiShaman · · Score: 1

      Nowdays, no party protects the "little guy" nor would I expect any party to do so.

      Little guy = someone who does not involve themselves in the political process at the civilian level.

      --
      Life is not for the lazy.
  146. Remember, everyone by Quattro+Vezina · · Score: 1

    The left is just as disgustingly evil as the right.

    --
    I support the Center for Consumer Freedom
  147. (a) HOUSE, not Senate (b) nuclear option, anyone? by llamafirst · · Score: 1

    > "It is impossible for the Democrats to stop anything in the House."
    > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filibuster
    > Nice try though, playing the victim. You are perfect Democrat material.

    who the parent up as insightful??

    first of all, the filibuster is only in the house, one of the US's 2 legislative bodies. the article was about a vote in the House, not the senate.

    secondly, the Republicans can take away the filibuster in what the *Republicans* called the Nuclear Option http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nuclear_option_(filib uster)

    I emphasized the "Republicans* in the previous sentence because a Republican came up with the term..."Sen. Trent Lott (R-MS), one of the proposal's leading advocates, coined the term before Republican strategists judged it a liability and urged Senate Republicans to adopt the term "constitutional option" instead."

    More info at
    http://mediamatters.org/items/200505180006

  148. so... by PGC · · Score: 1

    no more free speech for y'all americans, ey ?

    --
    The Dutch will inherit the earth. If not, we'll settle for a bit of ocean. Beta delenda est!
  149. Republicans == Theocracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The republicans are not for free speech but for a fundamentalist christian state.
    They want to do with the USA with christianity as Iran did with Iran with muslim.
    In other words they preachers will control people's life much like the mullahs control the life
    of people in Iran but in a christian way. At the end if you don't convert you'll die to please christ instead of dying to please Allah.

  150. Disclaimer: I'm a neo-nazi national socialist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is nothing more important than free-speech!

  151. Simply Amazing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's amazing the mental gymnastics die-hard party supporters will undertake to justify what is very simply bad policy supported by their party's elected officials in the name of self-promotion.

  152. False by bluGill · · Score: 1

    Your comment is false. True republicans have a simple majority in the house. That means they have more than 50% of the seats. However that doesn't not mean they control everything, some votes require more than a simple majority. This vote required a 2/3rds majority to pass, and the republicans do not have that much power. Even if all the republicans vote for it (so far I have not found any list of how the republicans voted so I'm not sure) that is not enough to get it to pass. 20 something (23? I saw the list but forgot the count) democrats voted for this, and it still wasn't enough to pass.

  153. It is urgent by bluGill · · Score: 1

    My state (not federal, state) congressmen is resigning. There is an election scheduled latter this month for his replacement. If this law directly affects how that campaign is run.

    If you live in an area where there is no election anytime soon there is no real urgency. However if there is an election you need this protection.

  154. Re:Not sure the dems were ever friends of free spe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I post on a website how to backup my copy protected video games, I can end up in jail!

    That is absolutely, totally false. Stop spreading that FUD. Read what the fucking law actually says and stop just repeating EFF talking points.

    Here's how it works. If you TELL somebody how to circumvent copy protection, you have COMMITTED NO CRIME, and have exposed yourself to NO LIABILITY. On the other hand, if you sell a tool that has no significant use but copy protection circumvention, then you have exposed yourself to CIVIL LIABILITY ONLY.

    Stop spreading FUD.

  155. Yes bloggers on both sides supported by SuperKendall · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Indeed as you point out bloggers on both sides of the fence and even the middle were all for the passage of this bill.

    Which makes it even more rediculous the Democrats by and large sunk it! Take a look at the list of people voting against, hardly any were Republicans.

    This bill being killed was all about the people not in power disliking the freedom blogs had to say what they wished, the freedom of blogs on thier own side be damned. Perhaps the Republicans would have acted the same in the same position, but all we know for sure is that the Democrats DID kill this bill. The people of the U.S. who are members of the Democratic (and Republican for those few cases) parties need to REMEMBER the votes on this bill come primary and election time.

    It really is as simple as it looks this time.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  156. Doesn't cost anything to run a blog? by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Ask the people running Daily Kos or Instapundit how mcuh it doesn't cost to run a blog.

    If you are writing a blog about your dog scooter and the day he spent looking at squirrels out the window - yeah that pretty much doesn't cost anything. But for sites with a lot of volume, tens or hundreds of thousands of readers a day - well that costs in terms of bandwith and server load. And some of these guys are doing it as a full time job.

    I mean, if you want to see your favorite political blog shut down (like the Daily Kos or other) then it's a bright day. Because a lot of political commentary online is going to go away as a direct result of the FCC ruling.

    Is it so hard to believe an idea coming from the FCC is garbage when they have so many other ideas it's generally agreed upon are poor ones?

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  157. Whoa there... by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Since when have unions been there to benefit the working man and not union leaders? You noted historically they backed some Republicans - I guess that was when they were still healty and honest. There's nothing healthy about a union supporting only one party.

    And you mistake the environmental groups listed for the only way to help the environment. There are plenty of Republicans for environmental groups like the Nature Conversancy, that are there to actually help the environment through brokering deals with buisness and outright buying large amounts of open space. The ones you mentioned are just there to keep themselves running and every now and then send out glossy flyers to members proclaiming how much they care about litttle flowers. That's great but what have they really done to help? As an avid outdoorsman and naturalist I prefer results to words.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Whoa there... by DeadPrez · · Score: 1

      I could careless that you believe the League of Conservation Voters as well as every union in existence corrupt. That's your worldview. I'm sure others take the opposing view. The facts simply put, show both union membership and political power on the decline (regardless of the effectiveness of 527s).

      What I find troubling is that you are using 527s as a way to attack these political enemies of yours. It seems to be unions are imploding just fine by themselves. 527s are red herring to real campaign finance reform.

  158. Except this very story disprooves the theory by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    If people would pay more attention to their actions than their rhetoric (especially over a period of time greater than a decade), they'd find they're disturbingly similar.

    Generally I think of them as the same too.

    But in this case, careful observation finds they are distressingly dissimilar. If they were the same the bill would have passed.

    Basically I find myself a liberatarian who is slowly being forced to vote Republican more often than not because when the parties do diverge, the Democrats are going the way I don't want to go.

    Often now I find myself wishing Perot had won the presidency years ago so there would be a viable third party.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  159. Agree, but is it good? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I still think that this ruling will provide for more truthful blogging and less politically funded punditry cluttering up the issues.

    I agree with your assessment, but it's no good to be killing off all the liberal blogs and leaving only the conservative ones.

  160. Yes, because it's pull vs. push!! by SuperKendall · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I can buy 1 million blogs. But that doesn't mean anyone will read them.

    That is entirely unlike TV advertising where my purchase of all ads means a specific number of viewers WILL be watching those ads.

    People seek out what to read on the internet. They are told what they will watch on TV. That is why campaign finance reforms for the internet are utterly ridiculous and harmful.

    The blocking of this bill is all about Democrats feeling that conservative blogs are, by and large, handing their ass to them on a platter. They want to see it all shut down, even if things like the Daily Kos end up taking collateral damage.

    If this bill was so wrong, why did it enjoy such a preponderance of support from the blogging community at large both conservative and liberal (and otherwise). Surely if it were bad some of the more rational thinkers (pick your favorite on either side of the fence) would have been against it.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  161. A convoy of trucks into the abyss by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Vagueries in the bill open up a fund-funneling loophole through which you could drive a convoy of trucks.

    But only on the internet, which has no limited detailed audience like other media does. The internet can take a convey of trucks, swallow them whole, then say "give me more" with not a single truck left to be seen.

    People are talking about "scary" things like the possibility of someone starting up a million blogs in favor of one thing or another. So what? Who is going to read them? On the internet the reader is empowered as to what he reads and when he reads it. It's just not the same area at all and is too young a medium to have rules for other media blindly applied. Just like in other cases where rules from other realms have been applied to the internet with disasterous results, so to are the new FEC rules going to be applied in ways that will make your blood boil - be you liberal or conservative. This is going to enable nuclear level conflict of lawsuits aimed at blogs on boths sides with the public taking the brunt of the damage.

    Are you worried about popular blogs taking kickbacks? Well there was a little bit of that going on in the last election and fellow bloggers outed them. As many have noted, bloggers police (vet) fellow bloggers far better than anyone else could ever hope to. The kind of runaway problems you are envisioning just don't happen because blogging is a self-limiting activity. People only read blogs they find credible and so bloggers cannot risk things like undisclosed kickbacks because it WILL destroy them.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  162. Why would you want that? by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    I'd want some amendments that make sure that any interests, be them liberal, conservative, etc., cannot give unlimited amounts of money, so long as done over the Internet.

    Outline ANY scenario where dumping an infinite amount of money into "the internet" gives one party any advantage whatsoever.

    The speech that people listen to on the internet is chosen by the people themselves. Would you also argue that you should cap the number of books it is permissible for Republicans or Democrats to publish in one year? Why would you ever argue to limit the number of books availiable in what is essentially a global library.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  163. Internet laws.... by Moofar · · Score: 0

    I wonder if there are any laws that you can break online but not in real life. I can't think of any.... Anything you can do both online and in real life thats breaking a law, is illegal both ways. The fact that our congress voted a majority to change this in order to get away with breaking campaign finance laws seems totally rediculous. Politicians are really rediculous people.

  164. How am *I* using 527's by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    I'm confused how I am using 527's for anything, when I have nothing to do with them. They are more related to old media than major internet activity. While they provide amusing diversions they are not as relevant to political activity on the internet as most bloggers are.

    Nor are unions in the generic sense my "Political enemy". I do not think all unions to be corrupt, just the large ones (the ones with all the lobbying money and thus the ones on that list). Like any human organization they grow beyond a useful size, whcih is why generally it's best to not have them in the first place or limit the scope they operate in.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  165. The Joke is on the Dems by Shihar · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    You are missing the point. Yes, the GOP sent the bill up under rules where it would fail. Why? They wanted the Democrats to scuttle a free speech bill. The Democrats obliged. Now the GOP can simply pass the bill under normal rules. This is win-win for the GOP. Not only do they get their bill, but they get a big headline of "Democrats scuttle free speech bill".

    From the GOP perspective, this was a highly successful way of getting the democrats to vote down a free speech bill at the cost of nothing. At the end of the day the bill will be passed through with a Republican majority amd be signed by a Republican president, but only after the Democrats unsuccessfully tried to stop it. I personally am baffled as to why the Democrats let themselves be set up so cleanly.

    The Democrats only savings grace is that the American public is much more interested in American Idol then free speech issues. The indifference of the American public will turn what would have been a political coo into a footnote and a nice blurb in some political campaign.

    If it makes you feel any warmer, I think neither party gives much of a care about free speech. I loath election day and having to pick between the lesser of the two evils. I feel like I am checking off who I think will be the lesser douche bag with my liberties, not the guy who has any interest in protecting them. Yeah yeah, the Republicans set this bill up to protect free speech. Of course, they are also the same dick heads who want to ban flag burning and passed a number of lovely measures via the Patriot Act (with democratic help none the less).

  166. MODS! GET HIM! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For fucks sake, what the fuck is wrong with you mods? What on earth about that post could possibly be considered flamebait? Did some fuck head not like that he made rational points not inline with their fanatical democrat/republican beliefs?

    You mods are such shit heads.

    Every time I watch a post get moderated on Slashdot, it reinforces my belief that politics are a waste of time because people are completely incapable of listening and accepting another's point of view if they don't agree with it. There is no bigger pox on politics then this partisan bull shit where one side can't ever accept when the other might possibly have a point and seek to drowned out the other side at all costs.

    I hate politics, and watching the mods work makes me hate it all the more. I should just stop reading these political articles as they just make me have less and less faith in humanity.

  167. Very easy answer by fishbowl · · Score: 1

    Don't take any money from any political party, and enjoy the freedom of speech you've always had.

    --
    -fb Everything not expressly forbidden is now mandatory.
    1. Re:Very easy answer by planetoid · · Score: 1

      Or, take money from a political party, and use a pseudonym for your blog and host your blog on a system that's outside of the U.S.'s jurisdiction.

      --
      Slashdot requires you to wait longer between hitting 'reply' and submitting a comment.
  168. The Dems and libs hate the freedom of the inet. by mattalex87 · · Score: 1

    Liberals and Socialists hate the freedom that the internet gives people.

    Look at the effect that the internet has had on China even the government there can't controll it and the freedom that it gives people.

    This is just another example of how far we have come as a country from our founding fathers intentions.

    The only kind of government that requires controll of political speech is marxism and that is simply not acceptable in the USA.

  169. UIDs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > People generally have more respect for individuals with low UID's.

    That's because there's about a tenth as many dicks with 5-digit UIDs as 6-digit UIDs. Clearly, a higher class of people!

  170. Re:Not sure the dems were ever friends of free spe by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    Hillary, Lieberman, Tipper Gore... all names that should ring bells in conjunction with the desire to censor.

    Santorum, Delay, Ashcroft, Fallwell, Dobson, Bennett, Corborn... That's more than twice as many Republicans, and that's just what I could come up with off the top of my head. The "religion & morals" crowd is currently the dominant wing of the dominant party...just look at how they sank Mier's nomination.

  171. Keep it up, and Republicans will rule forever by ccmay · · Score: 1
    people refuse to act in their own best interest. . . people vote for the candidate with name brand shoes rather than a candidate with a track record of acting to benefit society. . . my knee jerk reaction is to enact laws to protect those who are too simple to act in their own self interest. . . a tool for whichever group can instill the most fear

    Let me clue you in on a secret, smarty-pants. People don't like being told they are simpletons and tools. Until the would-be philosopher-kings on the Left learn this lesson well, they will be stuck on the margins of political power, and nobody will benefit from their radiant cosmic enlightenment.

    William F. Buckley once said he would rather be governed by a hundred people picked at random from the Boston phone book than by the faculty of Harvard. Posts like yours make me agree with him.

    -ccm

    --
    Too much Law; not enough Order.
    1. Re:Keep it up, and Republicans will rule forever by CoreWalker · · Score: 1

      Let me clue you in on a secret, smarty-pants. People don't like being told they are simpletons and tools.

      People don't like to be told a lot of things. That doesn't make those things not true.
      but ssshhhhhhh...
      It's a secret, too. Don't tell anyone or my group of pants-wearing smarties is bound to lose all future elections! Then what would we do with our cosmic enlightenment? We'd probably just sit around in our corduroy jackets with leather patched elbows and argue philosophy, poking at the air with the long stems of our pipes!

  172. [OT] cagle_.25 by JavaRob · · Score: 1

    Hi -- comments are closed in the "Start of Life" discussion; if you're interested in continuing the conversation, feel free to drop me an email. slashdot@my domain name.com

    Cheers,
    Rob

  173. Keep talking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Please keep talking, people like you are the reason the republicans will win the next election.

    Thank you for contributing to the Republican party :)

    1. Re:Keep talking by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 1
      Please keep talking, people like you are the reason the republicans will win the next election.

      I do not give a damn about corrupt Republicans or corrupt Democrats. What is important is to get the lobbyists, large business interests and career graft-surfing politicos out, but most importantly the Medieval Inquisition of Greed known as the Neo-cons. And in that regard, I am afraid that the Democrats stand far better chance of winning, at least the 2006 round, then the Republicans as the American public is finally taking notice of the activities of the Neo-cons and the resulting stench of death, busted open bank vaults and the image of plain, frothing at the mouth insanity of the prominent members of the White House is begining to seriously scare the voters. One has to only look at the recent polls by virtually any polster.

      One way or another, I am a Canadian and our political landscape is considerably different.