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Obama Significantly Revises Technology Positions

method9455 writes "Barack Obama has edited his official website on many issues, including a huge revision on the technology page. Strangely it seems net neutrality is no longer as important as it was a few months ago, and the swaths of detail have been removed and replaced with fairly vague rhetoric. Many technologists were alarmed with the choice of Joe Biden before, and now it appears their fears might have been well founded." Update: 09/22 18:07 GMT by T : Julian Sanchez of Ars Technica passed on a statement from an Obama campaign representative who points out that the changes in wording highlighted by Versionista aren't the whole story, and that more Obama tech-plan details are now available in a PDF, saying "there is absolutely no substantive change to our policy - folks who want more information can click to get our full plan."

46 of 940 comments (clear)

  1. All hail the new king, same as the old king. by h4rm0ny · · Score: 5, Insightful


    When are people going to learn to assess politicians and parties on their actions, rather than their promises? Those that might have really introduced change have already been weeded out. Vote for the puppet of your choice, folks.

    --

    Aide-toi, le Ciel t'aidera - Jeanne D'Arc.
    1. Re:All hail the new king, same as the old king. by xulfer · · Score: 5, Interesting

      When are people going to learn to assess politicians and parties on their actions, rather than their promises? Those that might have really introduced change have already been weeded out. Vote for the puppet of your choice, folks.

      Many have. Obama's tech-related voting record is certainly better than most candidates that come to mind. He's voted against telecom immunity, and FISA fairly vehemently in the past. Perhaps the vague language is merely a way to package both Biden/Obama's views into a single declaration? It was probably just a way to describe both of their technological goals without smearing their respective stances. Should that be the case, it's still the top of the ticket that calls the shots.

    2. Re:All hail the new king, same as the old king. by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 5, Interesting

      The problem is that you can't vote on actions until after they've been taken.

      Personally, I'm in favour of a nice, simple system where if a politician makes a promise before an election and then breaks it, a court can remove him or her from office. I imagine we'd soon see some changes in the way manifestos were presented, and perhaps those who are not just puppets and actually intend to act according to their stated principles would get a bit more recognition since voting for someone based on their campaign pledges would actually mean something. Those who just say whatever the current audience wants to hear but never really promise anything would stand out by a mile.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    3. Re:All hail the new king, same as the old king. by squiggleslash · · Score: 5, Informative

      The GP was correct, he voted against telecom immunity in the past. In addition, in the most recent vote, he voted against telecom immunity each time the subject came up (ie for all of the amendments that were aimed at removing telecom immunity from the FISA bill), but voted for the final FISA bill (which was about a lot more than telecom immunity.)

      Whether the FISA bill was a good thing is open to question, I was disappointed in Obama voting for it myself, but it's a stretch to claim he supported the telecom immunity aspect of it when he supported all the attempts to remove telecom immunity from it.

      --
      You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
    4. Re:All hail the new king, same as the old king. by Time_Warped · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Which is why I am voting 3rd party this election. I do not believe either major party candidate is worthy of my vote. Do I think the 3rd party types have any chance of winning? Not really, but if third party candidates took 20% or so of the vote away from major parties, it might force them to do a reality check.

    5. Re:All hail the new king, same as the old king. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I've also proposed this kind of system before (i.e. that a manifesto should be a legally-binding contract with the voters), but I suspect that the result would be candidates putting such fluffy terms in their pledges that the courts would never be able to determine whether they'd actually broken them or not.

      Before New Labour (same as the old conservatives) came to power in the UK, they handed out 'pledge cards' with five election pledges on them. A very simple and powerful message. The Friday Night Armistice made a massive version of these, and each week in their first year crossed off the ones that they'd broken. It was depressing how quickly they all went away.

      Democracy requires an informed electorate to function just as capitalism requires informed consumers. The same level of truth in advertising laws should apply.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    6. Re:All hail the new king, same as the old king. by gfxguy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The "Contract with America" worked really well in the '94 elections, though.

      Honestly, there are two reasons I can think of why politicians in the U.S. won't commit to anything:

      1. If lobbyists know they are committed for/against what they are lobbying for, they won't shower the politician with contributions and "gifts."

      2. Legislators often buy the votes of their colleagues by promising to vote for the colleague's legislation if their colleagues will vote for theirs.

      And then we need to keep one other thing in mind: riders. Legislation that gets ONE vote often contains extra pieces of legislation that has nothing to do with the original legislation. This is why I agree with notion that the president should have a line-item veto power, and I feel that way regardless who is in office.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    7. Re:All hail the new king, same as the old king. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      but it's a stretch to claim he supported the telecom immunity aspect of it when he supported all the attempts to remove telecom immunity from it.

      How much more "for it" can you be than a YEA vote for a bill which contains it?

      As a congress critter, if there is a part of a bill you don't like IT IS YOUR JOB TO VOTE AGAINST THE WHOLE THING!!!!

      That's what the whole "checks and balances" thing is all about.

      The immunity is unconstitutional (see ex post facto) even without the 4th amendment violations.

      Between FISA and the Patriot Act, why even have the 4th amendment any more?

    8. Re:All hail the new king, same as the old king. by Shakrai · · Score: 5, Interesting

      This is why I agree with notion that the president should have a line-item veto power, and I feel that way regardless who is in office

      I disagree. We've already made the Executive Branch much more powerful than the Framers intended it to be. Signing statements, refusals to testify, appointments to un-elected Federal agencies that can impose laws (err, "regulations") on the citizenry, warfare without a declaration, international agreements that don't need to be ratified by the Senate, trade agreements that don't need input from Congress, blah, blah, blah, blah.

      You really want to make the Executive even more powerful? Are you nuts?

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    9. Re:All hail the new king, same as the old king. by Shakrai · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm sick of people telling me I'm wasting my votes (it won't be the first time I voted for a third party), and yet the same people whine about how bad the government is.

      You aren't wasting your vote but if you live in a battleground state you really ought to consider the broader ramifications. Do you really think that if Al Gore had won in 2000 that we'd be in Iraq right now? Do you really think that he would have alienated all of our Allies?

      You say your sick of people telling you that you are 'wasting' your vote -- I'm sick of people telling me that there is no difference between the Democrats and Republicans. Both parties are too beholden to corporate interests but there are differences on extremely important issues.

      I've voted third-party myself when both major party candidates suck (as recently as the 2006 NYS Comptroller election) but I really don't think this is one of those times.

      --
      I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
      We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
    10. Re:All hail the new king, same as the old king. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      If you all (including the editor) would read the page, current as of 17 September, it specifically mentions Network Neutrality as a guiding principle.

      Seriously, the whole commenting section is debating about something entirely wrong. RTFA!

    11. Re:All hail the new king, same as the old king. by gfxguy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Why would I feel betrayed? Bush wasn't part of the contract with America.

      Bush has been a horrible president, and I'm voting third party. I've never much liked either of the mainstream parties or politics in Washington in general. If you want a real change, don't vote for Obama, vote for a third party.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    12. Re:All hail the new king, same as the old king. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Wow, nice dream world you live in. If "congress critters" actually did that then nothing would get passed.... though that might not be so bad :P

    13. Re:All hail the new king, same as the old king. by L4t3r4lu5 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Parent = Insightful.

      You can't go voting for a bill which contains all of the things you were just voting AGAINST, and it's idiotic to think that there is any reason to believe this would ever be acceptable!

      Here's a hypothetical situation for you; I draft a bill to reduce the criminal sentences for minor drug offences to fines (hefty fines, but still no prison time), and to revoke all patents on proven life-saving chemicals currently patented by multi-billion dollar pharmaceutical companies, but I include a clause which brings new legislation which states that terminally ill patients are not entitled to medical care of any kind, as it is quite simply a waste of resources.

      If you're against the last statement, how can you, in good conscience, vote for bill which contains it? Voting for the bill in whole is exactly the same as voting for its constituent parts seperately. He should have voted against it until the parts he disagreed with were removed, and he's a coward for not sticking to his principles.

      --
      Finally had enough. Come see us over at https://soylentnews.org/
    14. Re:All hail the new king, same as the old king. by nomadic · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm sick of people telling me I'm wasting my votes (it won't be the first time I voted for a third party), and yet the same people whine about how bad the government is.

      Funny, I'm sick of third-party supporters telling me that the democrats are the republicans are "the same," which is an utter lie, and I'm also sick of being urged to vote for someone whose policies I detest (like Ron Paul) simply to make a statement.

      I remember back in 2004 every political discussion devolved into people urging all of us to vote for the libertarian candidate, Michael Badnarik. It was ridiculous how much support he got here, and the idea was because he was a self-identified libertarian we should all jump on his bandwagon. Now if you did a little background checking you'd find out he was a paranoid conspiracy theorist who explicitly promised to violate the Constitution his first day of office, but that's the sort of background checking that people didn't want to do. Voting strictly along party lines is stupid, whether the candidate is democrat, republican, or part of a third party.

    15. Re:All hail the new king, same as the old king. by LordKronos · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So let me ask you a question. Do you ever vote in elections? When you do, are the guys you vote for positioned such that you agree with them on EVERY SINGLE TOPIC THEY STAND FOR?

      If so, then I can only imagine you are a politician yourself, and the only box you check on the ballot is your own name.

      If not, then you either don't vote (in which case, you just lost all ability to criticize how anybody else votes) or you vote for the candidate that overall most closely matches how you believe (which makes you a hypocrite)

    16. Re:All hail the new king, same as the old king. by Kingrames · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Look, there are a few laws that must be passed.

      Attached to each one are hundreds of laws that cannot be passed.

      Until this process is fixed so that this cannot happen, Congress MUST reject every single such law. No exceptions.

      "just deal" is how we ended up with 8 years of bush.

      --
      If you can read this, I forgot to post anonymously.
    17. Re:All hail the new king, same as the old king. by c6gunner · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It's a question of degrees.

      Imagine a bill were to be proposed which legalized marijuana, allowed for gay marriage, forbade "abstinence-only" sex-ed and created a federal mandate against teaching ID in science classrooms, created reasonable constraints on domestic surveillance, and placed tight limits on political lobbying ... but also happened to legalize curb-stomping puppies. I'd probably put in a lot of effort to get the puppy provision removed, but if my efforts failed I'd vote for the bill anyway. The bill would do more good than harm, so why withhold my vote?

      I'm not familiar with the contents of the rest of the bill in question, so I can't comment on Obama's decision, but I can certainly see that there are many situations in which a person would feel compelled to vote for a bill which contains portions to which he is opposed.

    18. Re:All hail the new king, same as the old king. by noidentity · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So let me ask you a question. Do you ever vote in elections? When you do, are the guys you vote for positioned such that you agree with them on EVERY SINGLE TOPIC THEY STAND FOR? [...] If not, then you either don't vote (in which case, you just lost all ability to criticize how anybody else votes) or you vote for the candidate that overall most closely matches how you believe (which makes you a hypocrite)

      It's a different situation. There WILL be a president/whatever elected, so it's just a matter of who, and one can either have some influence on this or not. In the case of something like the recent FISA bill, it could have been voted against with NO bill coming through. Congress isn't electing people for a position, it's considering whether to add new things.

  2. It's not just NN by Nursie · · Score: 5, Informative

    They've cut out about half the content, and large chunks about what they'll do for kids.

    Either they've had advice that they shouldn't be promising definite things (makes it harder to weasel out of stuff later) or they're just cutting down the page size for some reason.

    Either way, bit of a non story.

    Politician changes mind, big whoop.

    1. Re:It's not just NN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The main page got changed, not the actual plan pdf, which is available at the bottom of the page, and is the exact same as the old page was.

      It looks like they just cut down the word count for people who want to glance, and hid the details a layer under.

      http://www.barackobama.com/pdf/issues/technology/Fact_Sheet_Innovation_and_Technology.pdf

  3. Re:Vote with a bullet. by 4D6963 · · Score: 5, Funny

    They're all rich white men

    You mean, except the one black guy, right?

    --
    You just got troll'd!
  4. America vs Freedom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Every American election always reminds me of the phrase from Alien vs Predator.

    "Whoever wins, we all lose." or something like that.

  5. Net Neutrality Position Remains Unchanged by Alt_Cognito · · Score: 5, Informative

    "Barack Obama strongly supports the principle of network neutrality to preserve the benefits of open competition on the Internet."

    Barack is completely behind net neutrality, where as McCain is not, but don't let the facts get in the way of the way you try and put FUD out there.

  6. WTF? by Southpaw018 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Strangely it seems net neutrality is no longer as important

    What the fuck are you talking about? It's THE VERY FIRST GODDAMN THING HE MENTIONS.

    Barack Obama and Joe Biden's Plan
    Ensure the Full and Free Exchange of Ideas through an Open Internet and Diverse Media Outlets

    * Protect the Openness of the Internet


    If you're a McCain supporter trying to weasel votes away on Slashdot, you need to say so.

    --
    ACs are modded -6. I don't read you, I don't mod you, I don't see you. Don't like it? Don't be a coward.
    1. Re:WTF? by CrimsonScythe · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If you look at method9455's user info, this submission is his/her only activity since registering, which is quite recently if you go by the user number (1368959). No doubt this is just another republican troll.

      --
      The view was horrible and the smell was even worse; Julie severely regretted becoming a proctologist.
  7. Concise speech, soundbites by tergvelo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It looks to me like they hired an editor to cut the wall of text down to size. The first huge cut under the heading "Protect the Openness of the Internet" kept the main point while eliminating a massive unnecessary explanation. Readers who are unfamiliar with net neutrality would have been turned off by the wall of text anyway. Also, notice that Versionista doesn't track when blocks of text move to different locations on the page. There are a few paragraphs that simply got moved to other sections. This is just a sensationalist headline that doesn't really belong here. It isn't a "position revision." It is an edit that takes a very lengthy page & cuts it down to a more digestible size. Yes, there's new content, and yes, there are revisions. But on the whole, it's nothing to get up in arms about.

  8. Re:Vote with a bullet. by 4D6963 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Ha, but you're forgetting one thing. Well two actually, he can dance and he can jump! If that doesn't make him black, that makes him pretty fly for a rich white guy.

    --
    You just got troll'd!
  9. Re:Lobbiest money. by 4D6963 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yeah, if Harvard and the University of California count as big evil corporations. Refresh my memory, will you please, how many lobbyists work for John McCain again?

    --
    You just got troll'd!
  10. I call bullshit by GauteL · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This post is pretty much pure bullshit.

    If you look at the revisions, Obama has shortened some bullet points to make them more readable.

    He still lists what he supports, but he does not going into massive detail in each one of them.

    For instance, his current stance on network neutrality is now (emphasis mine):

    "* Protect the Openness of the Internet: A key reason the Internet has been such a success is because it is the most open network in history. It needs to stay that way. Barack Obama strongly supports the principle of network neutrality to preserve the benefits of open competition on the Internet."

    Instead of:

    "* # Protect the Openness of the Internet: A key reason the Internet has been such a success is because it is the most open network in history. It needs to stay that way. Barack Obama strongly supports the principle of network neutrality to preserve the benefits of open competition on the Internet. Users must be free to access content, to use applications, and to attach personal devices. They have a right to receive accurate and honest information about service plans. But these guarantees are not enough to prevent network providers from discriminating in ways that limit the freedom of expression on the Internet. Because most Americans only have a choice of only one or two broadband carriers, carriers are tempted to impose a toll charge on content and services, discriminating against websites that are unwilling to pay for equal treatment. This could create a two-tier Internet in which websites with the best relationships with network providers can get the fastest access to consumers, while all competing websites remain in a slower lane. Such a result would threaten innovation, the open tradition and architecture of the Internet, and competition among content and backbone providers. It would also threaten the equality of speech through which the Internet has begun to transform American political and cultural discourse. Barack Obama supports the basic principle that network providers should not be allowed to charge fees to privilege the content or applications of some web sites and Internet applications over others. This principle will ensure that the new competitors, especially small or non-profit speakers, have the same opportunity as incumbents to innovate on the Internet and to reach large audiences. Obama will protect the Internetâ(TM)s traditional openness to innovation and creativity and ensure that it remains a platform for free speech and innovation that will benefit consumers and our democracy. "

    So instead of a massive (and unreadable) paragraph, it is now a very simple bullet point saying that Obama strongly supports network neutrality. How on earth is this "downplaying" network neutrality?

  11. Re:Vote with a bullet. by Shakrai · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Obama is just another lawyer

    Could we please stop attacking lawyers just for being lawyers? Do civil rights attorneys bother you? Consumer rights attorneys? How about the lawyers who argued Brown v. Board of Education? How about Clarence Darrow (argued for the defense in the Scopes Trial)? What about John Adams (Founding Father)? What about Ray Beckerman (aka: NewYorkCountryLawyer)?

    I guess what I'm trying to say is that not every lawyer is a RIAA extortionist.

    --
    I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
    We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
  12. Re:Vote with a bullet. by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Informative

    lives in suburbs - check

    Um, Barack lives right here on the South Side of Chicago. And brother, let me tell you, this ain't the suburbs.

    Also, he only became a "millionaire" in the past three years or so after writing a couple of best selling books. He only paid off his and his wife's student loans about five years ago.

    He was never "just another lawyer". Ask any of his students from the UofC law school or the people at the community organization at which he worked, for about $29,000 per year.

    Don't be a bozo.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  13. Important Differences by copponex · · Score: 5, Insightful

    These are guesses, or even hopes. I agree that any of the viable candidates are going to serve the corporate interest, but there are important differences.

    1. Obama will engage in diplomacy with Iran, and hopefully in covert ways with Hezbollah, Hamas, and the nationalist Iraqi forces. If you're serious about ending terrorism, you have to engage the enemy dipomatically and address the conditions that lead to it. Protip: killing more muslims with western weapons isn't helping.
    2. His Administration will sweep out the Bush/Reagan Administration, while McCain would probably keep a lot of it. That's worth my vote right there.
    3. Obama does not pander to Jerry Falwell or any of his imitators. It's America, so he has to recognize the religious element, but he doesn't associate with the fundamentalist nutcases.
    4. Obama has shown his distaste of the Bush and Clinton Dynasties. Change is good.

    Most importantly, Obama is not McCain. McCain has turned from a moderate Republican, who I would have seriously considered voting for in 2000, to a complete shill, pandering to evangelicals, touting proto-fascist military slogans, and most importantly, has shown the same inability to engage in serious self-criticism that has truly frightened the rest of the world in regards to the Bush Administration. McCain also claims to believe that the Iraq war has something to do with counterterrorism or the spread of freedom, which to any serious observer, is total fucking nonsense.

  14. Re:Vote with a bullet. by jacquesm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I think the legal profession is a bit like a priesthood, it actually thrives on obscure interpretations of language and on serious consequences of failing such interpretations. It's like an arms race, if your opponent has a lawyer then you'd better get one yourself and so on. The end result is a legal system that is well beyond the average smart persons capability to interpret.

    It should have never ever gotten this far.

    If you simply removed all lawyers and let the parties argue their own cases exclusively we'd see two things:

    - a significant drop in caseload
    - a return to reasonable verdicts instead of verdicts on technicalities

    Of course it's a pipe dream (especially in criminal law) but like with most extreme positions it has a grain of truth in it somewhere and it would be nice to be able to shift the 'middle ground' to the point where lay people would stand a chance against a seasoned lawyer, and where verdicts would actually make sense to an informed outsider.

  15. Re:Vote with a bullet. by Shakrai · · Score: 5, Funny

    He became a 'millionaire' because he wrote a couple memoirs? Huh? So writing a couple memoirs is a 'get rich quick' scheme that we should all engage in, it isn't a way for the politically connected to siphon in some green?? Well, then, I guess we should all write our memoirs.

    So now we hate authors too?

    --
    I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
    We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
  16. Re:Vote with a bullet. by jabithew · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Okay, well. He fulfills the requirements of 'blackness' for racial stereotyping, or at least he fills in the checkbox on two items on the list, for the camera.

    Er, he also fits the white guy by racial stereotyping. Is it any wonder the blacks in America have such a crappy time if people question their "blackness" as soon as they start to achieve? It's like to be black is to fail from these posts.

    --
    All intents and purposes. Not intensive purposes.
  17. Re:Vote with a bullet. by kperson · · Score: 5, Funny

    I keep forgetting -- does having a wife and kids make you rich, or white?

  18. Re:All hail the new lump, same as the old lump. by Shakrai · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Eh, I just don't see a line-item veto as anything more than a power grab by the Executive. Have the balls to veto the whole bill if the riders are that bad.

    If you really want to fix this problem then I'd suggest starting with gerrymandering and not the line-item veto. If Congressional races were actually competitive maybe our Congress-critters would be more responsive to the citizenry.

    --
    I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
    We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
  19. "Change" is normal: Look at earlier campaigns. by TerranFury · · Score: 5, Informative

    I was watching campaign ads from previous American presidential elections here -- it starts with the Eisenhower campaign and works forward -- and I was struck by how many candidates used the same rhetoric. "Change" has been a staple campaign theme for a long, long time.

    It seemed there were three major types of ads:

    1. "You don't switch horses in midstream."
    2. "Change!!"
    3. "He said X, but now he says NOT(X); don't trust him."

    There might also have been a fourth, "Our candidate is a nice human being!"

    Here are some examples of #2, "Change," below (I've quoted the last sentences from a number of the ads at the above URL):

    1. "Vote for new American leadership. The country needs it; the world needs it. John F. Kennedy for president."
    2. "Jimmy Carter: A leader, for a change."
    3. "Clinton-Gore: For people, for a change."
    4. "[George W. Bush]: A fresh start for America."

    "Change" is exactly what you can expect the opposition party to be selling in any election. The only reason Obama's campaign seems novel is that we have the collective memory and attention-span of a goldfish.

  20. Re:Vote with a bullet. by thedonger · · Score: 5, Interesting

    His blackness was questioned by other black people. I believe the quote was about him "lacking slave blood." [Charles Kenzie Steele, Jr.] And let's not forget that by having a white mother he is just as much white as black.

    Funny how both sides can simultaneously make race an issue and denounce race as an issue.

    --
    Help fight poverty: Punch a poor person.
  21. Re:Vote with a bullet. by c6gunner · · Score: 5, Interesting

    We will be able to do without lawyers once we can all agree to make and abide by the rules rationally, i.e never. We COULD do with fewer lawyers which could happen but probably won't.

    Or, alternately, we could probably do without lawyers if we'd just simplify the damn legal code, and we could DEFINITELY do with fewer lawyers if we'd stop making stupid laws.

    Take drug laws for example. The US annually arrests upwards of 800,000 people for marijuana violations alone. That means you're creating 1.6 million opportunities for lawyers (prosecutor and defense) on an annual basis. I don't know about you, but I'd much rather open up that industry to farmers, pot-bar/"coffee-house" owners, and other related private ventures, instead of creating jobs for lawyers, judges, police officers, and criminals.

    There are countless such examples - marijuana was just the first one to come to mind because I was recently discussing the idea with some friends in law enforcement. Eventually it evolved into a discussion about law enforcement as a whole, and the general consensus seemed to be that we just have way too many pointless laws.

    If you want to have a society in which law and order are taken seriously, it's much better to have a few very important laws which you enforce with a high degree of success rather than having a whole slew of laws, half of which you can't effectively enforce, and the other half of which you can only enforce sporadically because you're forced to waste resources on stuff that shouldn't be illegal in the first place. Not only does the current criminal code make law-enforcement less effective, but it makes the legal system unnecessarily complex, wastes taxpayer money on jobs that shouldn't even exist, and actually encourages crime.

  22. Give Obama a Break, and Your Vote by tjstork · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm a right wing Republican whose endorsing John McCain but I am appalled at the way you liberals are once destroying yourselves and your candidate with your withering self doubt. We have on the right have a joke, that is, only Democrats could be so smart as to figure out a way to blow election after election and here you go again.

    Can you please have some hope?

    What Obama did with his web site was to basically rewrite it from the mishmash that it was into something more coherent. There is nothing substantively different about this restructuring. Obama has always been in favor of strong IP legislation, but, so what of it?

    Do you really think that a man who spent his formative years arguing in favor of some form of socialism will suddenly turn his back on that?

    Do you really believe that a man who has worked his entire life organizing his own liberal constituency into an election machine is suddenly going to come out looking like Reagan?

    I mean, seriously, don't you think Michelle would kick his rear if he even thought of selling out?

    I mean come on liberals. You are getting a guy whose is your best standard bearer for your commy liberalism in easily 40 years, if not since Roosevelt, and arguably all time. Obama knows well that which he argues and that's why on the right hate the son of a gun so much. If you are liberally inclined, don't throw the baby out with the bathwater. Obama is a committed idealist with the trappings of greatness about him and in spades. A minor shift in a political position or a rephrasing of a web site is not going to alter the overall thrust of this man's policy or his life.

    So, don't lose faith because some staff member re-edited the web site. Obama is going to deliver for you liberals nearly everything that you believe in if he is elected. Obama is the real deal of liberalism. This is your chance. Don't f--- it up.

    Now, quit whining, liberals, as you so often do, and get off your asses and vote for this guy. He's the best you'll have in your lifetime and now is the time to go for it.

    --
    This is my sig.
  23. Re:FP! by iserlohn · · Score: 5, Informative

    You really have to question the submitters' motivation on this one.

    If anybody bothered to read the diff, it is obvious that the page was re-written to improve accessibility, so that more voters can understand the issues. Long paragraphs were shortened and some of the details were omitted so that the page does not sound like a treatise.

    Some of the items like immigration was taken out, I suppose, because it didn't belong on the technology page. A lot of the text was rearranged, I assume, for better structure.

    If all you wanted to know about is net neutrality, then yes, a lot of the material that described the mechanism in detail is gone. However, this issue has been debated to death online and most people have less of an idea of how the internet works than Ted Stevens. I seriously don't think Obama has changed his stance on this, other than to put it on equal footing with other issues related to technology on that page.

  24. Re:Vote with a bullet. by SageinaRage · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If you removed all lawyers and let all parties argue their own cases, you'd immediately see a drastic shift in power to the upper class and more educated, who would actually know the law, and have time to study and interpret it. The reason we have lawyers is so that EVERYONE has an expert on the law on their side. Also there'd be a shift in power towards prosecution, since the state pretty much by definition has to have a lawyer, or at least one person who puts forward cases against a multitude of defendants.

  25. Re:Vote with a bullet. by Killjoy_NL · · Score: 5, Funny

    In the US, it usually makes you a man ;)

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    This is the sig that says NI (again)
  26. Yes, obviously an elitist by Mark_in_Brazil · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes, Barack Obama, by mentioning arugula, has shown he is the elitist among the major party candidates.

    John McCain, on the other hand, is just chock-full of mavericky goodness and simple values, and isn't elitist at all, despite the fact that he and his wife own a private jet and 8-12 homes on 8 properties (McCain says he doesn't know... it must be hard to keep track), spent $273,000 on household employees last year, and THIS JUST IN: own 13 cars. Oh, and despite McCain's claims that he has only bought American cars all his life, those cars include a Honda, a Lexus, and a Volkswagen, and also in the family is the Prius he boasted about his daughter buying just last year when he was pandering to voters with different concerns.

    Oh, and Cindy McCain may have worn a $313,100 outfit on the first night of the Republican convention and said you just can't get around Arizona without a private plane, but trust the people who brought you the Iraq war: she's as down-to-Earth and "simple folk" as they come.

    Those "uppity" Obamas, with their one house, on which they got a better-than-average mortgage deal (gasp!) based on Obama's senate income and book proceeds, have one car for the family. And both Obamas paid for their education with student loans, with Barack, who was raised by a single mother and his grandparents, ending up as president of the Harvard Law Review. John McCain, the son and grandson of Navy Admirals, was practically the definition of a legacy admission at the U.S. Naval Academy.

    Yeah, that arugula comment really tells the whole story of who's an elitist.

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    "It is nice to know that the computer understands the problem. But I would like to understand it too." --Eugene Wigner