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Libertarian Candidate Excluded From Debate For Refusing Corporate Donations

fishdan writes "I'm a long time Slashdot member with excellent karma. I am also the Libertarian candidate for U.S. Congress in the Massachusetts 6th District. I am on the ballot. I polled 7% in the only poll that included me, which was taken six weeks ago, before I had done any advertising, been in any debates or been on television. In the most recent debate, the general consensus was that I moved a very partisan crowd in my favor. In the two days since that debate, donations and page views are up significantly. Yesterday I received a stunning email from the local ABC affiliate telling me they were going to exclude me from their televised debate because I did not have $50,000 in campaign contributions, even though during my entire campaign I have pointedly and publicly refused corporate donations. They cited several other trumped up reasons, including polling at 10%, but there has not been a poll that included me since the one six weeks ago — and I meet their other requirements."

627 comments

  1. And your point is? by kav2k · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Not asking a question, not suggesting to act.
    So what is it, just a story to tell?

    1. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Free advertising from the Slashdot crowd.

    2. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It is called Streisand effect, I believe. It could be put to good use. The networks cannot pull these stunts when the public knows about these.

    3. Re:And your point is? by SomePgmr · · Score: 4, Informative

      So what is it, just a story to tell?

      The answer is on his site:

      #2 Can we blow this up? Slashdot. Reddit. Anywhere you post political talk -- they need to see this. I'm not a fringe candidate. Any research at all reveals I am a calm and rational proponent of the ideas of liberty. Video Bloggers? What do you think?

      It seems the theory is, "Make a big enough stink, this ABC affiliate will cave." It doesn't look like there's been any back-and-forth with ABC on this, though. And she did include her name and email address. And their phone number is right on their website.

      Asking them about it seems like the first, and most appropriate course of action. Don't just assume it's a conspiracy and grab the pitchforks. Just a thought.

    4. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This guy is a libertarian, why is he whining? He's fighting for the right for people & organizations to do whatever they want regardless of fairness, ethics, or consequence. ABC is a corporation, privately owned. If ABC doesn't want to include a candidate in their debate because they don't accept corporate donations that is their right and I support ABC in this right due to the inherent dramatic irony. if he wants ABC to treat him fairly he should get a better political ideology.

    5. Re:And your point is? by fishdan · · Score: 4, Informative

      I wrote back and they replied insisting that the $50k was a firm number. I had forgotten too that they had approached me about buying advertizing from them several weeks ago and I rejected them because although Boston is the major DMA, my campaign can't afford to pay to broadcast to 5million who are not in my district.

      --
      Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm
    6. Re:And your point is? by hairyfeet · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Why did this guy get marked troll? If you believe voting is any more real than pro wrestling I have some magic beans you might be interested in. Want proof? As much as I think the guy is snooker loopy on a lot of thing Alex Jones has the proof in video on his website. When the Ron Paul supporters asked to be heard according to the RNCs own rules they held a vote to change those rules and someone managed to get their cell camera to where you can see the teleprompter and the teleprompter had the results of the vote before the vote had been cast thus showing the whole process fake.

      The "choices" you WILL get, no matter what you do, will be corporate approved shill A or B, that's it. Go to YouTube and watch the videos of those that actually counted the ballots in CN and NH where they say "The numbers for our district and what the RNC claimed are not even close" as Mittens was doing poorly in those states so they just gave him magical free votes. Remember if you control the primary outcome then it doesn't matter what happens in the general election, since both sides are "your guy" so its heads you win tails they lose. They control the primary process, they control the debates, they make sure only shills get the two slots so who gives a shit which shill gets it? A shill is a shill is a shill and as long as he'll cash the checks and give them the laws the corps don't give a rat's ass.

      In the end I urge everyone to watch this video about voting as while i don't agree with the libertarians on much, being more of a socialist myself, i have to agree with this libertarian on this issue, its pointless. you can't change a corrupt institution by using the rules set forth by that corrupt institution, because as with Paul they'll just change the rules and there is nothing you can do about it.

      Personally I say grab every damned dime you can and wait for the collapse, which now is pretty much inevitable. Here is another video by the same guy where he simply gives you the numbers and lets you decide. Look at the hockey stick chart in the middle of the video, in 1929 when the stock market collapsed we had 125% of GDP in the market and that took us to 1953 to fully recover to pre crash levels. How much do we have in now? Over 400% of GDP and rising which means when this bubble pops it'll make 1929 look like a minor glitch.

      You have one party that is tax slightly and spend heavily, another that is give tax breaks and spend MORE heavily, nothing you can say or do will change the direction we are heading, a collapse is inevitable. Grab what you can, take care of your own, its all you can really do. On the bright side when the whole thing collapses hopefully we can start over and have a true democracy instead of the corporate sham we've had for half a century. Ike warned us the MIC would be just the start and he was right, now the corps own the whole show and its pro wrestling to entertain the public and keep their minds off what is really happening.

      Sorry for the length but this is a subject I feel strongly about and I'll just end with the wisdom of George Carlin "Know why they call it The American Dream? Because you have to be asleep to believe in it".

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    7. Re:And your point is? by Vaphell · · Score: 4, Informative

      This guy is a libertarian, why is he whining? He's fighting for the right for people & organizations to do whatever they want regardless of fairness, ethics, or consequence.

      citation needed.
      Libertarians believe that people have a right to make an informed decision that suits best their needs. Suppression of information is not libertarian, even the idea of the free market itself requires informed players.

    8. Re:And your point is? by SomePgmr · · Score: 1

      For your own sake, I'd consider the two separately. One is something you have in writing, the other is an accusation.

      I assume you haven't raised $50k total for your campaign? What did they say about the polling requirement?

    9. Re:And your point is? by tlhIngan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      #2 Can we blow this up? Slashdot. Reddit. Anywhere you post political talk -- they need to see this. I'm not a fringe candidate. Any research at all reveals I am a calm and rational proponent of the ideas of liberty. Video Bloggers? What do you think?

      It seems the theory is, "Make a big enough stink, this ABC affiliate will cave." It doesn't look like there's been any back-and-forth with ABC on this, though. And she did include her name and email address. And their phone number is right on their website.

      The problem is, Joe Q. Public does not care. Slashdot? Reddit? They'd be lucky to know about those sites, even if their friends send them links constantly.

      No, the only way to "blow it up" is to get your voice out there in the mainstream media. Write an op-ed in the papers. Possibly buy some advertising. Get the word out there that you exist.

      On the day of the debate - run your own commentary - in real time, as the debate goes on. If you've done it right, people will be bringing your commentary up (especially said mainstream media) as well.

      Trying to get that ABC affiliate to cave? Remember - never mess with the ones who own the press.because they'll always have the final say. You might get invited to the debate, but everytime you speak, they may have "technical" troubles or cut to advertising when it's your turn. Or just make it look like you're a wacko in the runup ads for the debate.

      Or even worse, invite other fringe parties to your podium, calling it the "fringe party podium" during the debate - in the name of fairness, it's everyone who couldn't (note the word I used) pay for the position (even though it's because you refused the money).

    10. Re:And your point is? by Tenebrousedge · · Score: 3, Informative

      Mod parent insightful.

      As I am sure /. is unaware, the Green Party candidate for the Presidency this year is Jill Stein. Ten years ago she debated Mitt Romney and a Libertarian candidate for the gubernatorial race. This year neither she nor Mr. Johnson of the Libertarian Party have been able to debate Mitt. If this is how the national party representatives are treated, is it surprising that a House candidate is also given short shrift?

      A sensible political system might indeed include mandatory airtime or debate privileges. As the parent poster has stated, this would require government action. Are you in favor of such a system? How do you justify telling a private company what to do? Why aren't you demanding this same privilege for your party at the national level -- did I miss that slashdot article?

      P.S. : If any libertarians want to take up the gage, I have some general comment on your philosophy here.

      --
      Those who advocate genocide deserve every protection afforded by law, and none afforded by common human decency.
    11. Re:And your point is? by BasilBrush · · Score: 0

      Libertarians believe that people have a right to make an informed decision that suits best their needs.

      I've never, ever, heard a Libertarian put that forward as a fundamental of their beliefs. Changing the definition to suit what the candidate needs?

      I'm with the GP. It's amusing to see the libertarian hoist on his own petard.

    12. Re:And your point is? by just_a_monkey · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yes? Notice how you do not see him arguing for a law that ABC should be forced to televise him? Libertarianism is about not forcing people to do things. Critizing how things are done, however, is perfectly cromulent with being a libertarian.

      --
      How inappropriate to call this planet Earth, when clearly it is Ocean.
    13. Re:And your point is? by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      His point is that Slashdot should totally be his personal army.

    14. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      John Steward on Ron Paul in his Corn Polled Edition shows how the media works in practice.

    15. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Best /. post this year, by an AC too! I doff my cap to you, good sir! Had I mod points, they would be yours also, but alas fate, cruel mistress that she is, has seen fit to deny me the exuberance of rewarding your glorious endeavor.

    16. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Given your sig, this is pretty amusing also, since the GGP was an AC...

    17. Re:And your point is? by Vaphell · · Score: 1

      there are people that don't think their shit through in any group, news at 11

      is the free market one of the core ideas of libertarianism? yes
      does the perfect free market require perfect information? yes
      can the suppression of information be seen as a kind of fraud leading to suboptimal choice? yes
      are people free to complain when they see things they don't like? yes

      who should make sure the information gets out to the people is another thing whatsoever. I don't think the problems with the list legitimize govt interventions, because almost always the interventions break more things than they fix.

    18. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am running for a state legislative office. Cable television, while not as widely viewed, can be significantly less expensive and more geographically targeted, which is why my campaign was able to afford it. In my case, TV won't replace mailings, since much of my district is rural and does not have cable TV access. However, over half my district's population does live in areas with access to this cable system. The broadcast will include some area outside the district, but not much. My campaign only has about $17,000 total, about half of which is from the state. It's an option if you don't have tons of cash.

    19. Re:And your point is? by AcidPenguin9873 · · Score: 2

      Critizing how things are done, however, is perfectly cromulent with being a libertarian.

      Oh come on. The mere act of criticizing something does not imply any philosophical views or ideals. (Well, unless your ideology specifies that nothing should ever be criticized. But that's not the case here.)

      No, it's the reasoning and content of the criticism, viewed with the ideology of the person making that criticism, that determine if that person's criticism is valid or not. The reasoning behind this criticism is inconsistent with libertarian ideology, thus it's invalid.

    20. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So this has 0 to do with where your campaign contributions came from and entirely to do with the amount.

      You've already shown you can't be trusted by trying to bias your audience by claiming its due to refusing corp contributions.

      Nothing of value is lost by you not being allowed in, you're a liar and manipulator, we have plenty of those already.

      --BitZtream

    21. Re:And your point is? by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      Not asking a question, not suggesting to act.
      So what is it, just a story to tell?

      Hey! He's a libertarian. He doesn't tell people what to do.

    22. Re:And your point is? by aztracker1 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Why is it that people assume that just because you are libertarian, that there should be no rules at all enforced by the government? Or is this typical group think? I mean, Democrats tend to buddy up to corporate interests as much as Republicans. Just look at all the corporate welfare in this country from both parties. At least libertarians aren't going to afford special protections to corporations... for that matter, it's more likely that corporate protections would be limited in favor of increased competition.

      Specifically not posting as anon, and dumping my mods on this topic because I'm not afraid of people knowing my opinion here. More government subsidies, spending, and gross overreaching policies haven't made things better... perhaps those that founded our country on the premise of a limited federal government were right, and we should move towards that goal once again.

      --
      Michael J. Ryan - tracker1.info
    23. Re:And your point is? by diamondmagic · · Score: 1

      does the perfect free market require perfect information? yes

      Absolutely not. If we had perfect information there would be no such thing as risk, so there would be no such thing as money, and there would be no such thing as prices.

    24. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He doesn't have to have corporate donations. They want the campaign to show at least $50,000 in donations. He could get 500 people to give him $100 and that would meet the qualification. The policies are most likely to weed out the kooks and joke candidates.

    25. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Were you ever offered corporate donations? If not, you can't make te claim that was the reason. You can only make this claim if you can point to enough refused corporate donations to add up to the amount you fall short.

    26. Re:And your point is? by Vaphell · · Score: 1

      Imperfect information is the reason the risk exists in the first place and the rest doesn't really follow.

    27. Re:And your point is? by jfengel · · Score: 0

      This guy is a libertarian, why is he whining?

      I've never known a libertarian who wasn't whining.

      I assume the non-whining libertarians are out there, and I'm just not noticing. But among those libertarians I have heard speak, what comes out of their mouth always seems tantamount to "Why doesn't everybody listen to MEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE?"

    28. Re:And your point is? by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 2

      Man, wait until you see the socialists, or even just mere progressives.

    29. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well how the fuck are you going to get perfect information for your masturbatory fantasy of a perfect free market without strong regulation? It's mildly hilarious to see you slowly dawn to the realization that regulations are - horror of horrors - fucking necessary. Douche.

    30. Re:And your point is? by hairyfeet · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Like I said, you own the primary process? You control the election. What amazes me is that so few realize that you have the ENTIRE MEDIA IN THE USA is owned by just a handful, less than the amount of people in your average Mickey D's on a weeknight!

      I mean how can anyone with 2 functioning braincells think its anything but fixed? Again watch the video on voting, he says it better than i ever could. you have a handful of oligarchs at the top, old money with their fingers in all the pies and who own the media, that make damned sure the ONLY two that will EVAR get to the ballot will be both bought and paid for. Why do you think that every media pundit treats any third party candidate as a pariah? Because The Ds and Rs are all on the payroll and follow the corporate line.

      So I hope many do as I'm gonna do and just not bother anymore, all you do by voting is give your sanction to a corrupt third world joke of a political process. the ballots may as well have only two choices 'Push here to say how much you love the system!" and "Show your anger for those in power...by voting to support the system!" because that's all you'll ever get, its fixed, been fixed for decades, its 3 card monty only the public just refuses to accept the fact they'll never win the game when the only winning move? Not to play at all.

      Again its completely impossible to change a corrupt system by following the rules set up by that corrupt system, as they'll simply change the rules until they get the outcome they want. The debt will continue to spiral, we'll keep getting into wars we don't want, and trillions will be given to the MIC and the friends of the elite, there is no difference in the two sides its just phony differences to give the masses something to argue, that's all.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    31. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what the hell are we supposted to take from his bizzare post, then? Does he want us to rise up and do some crowd-sourced justice against ABC, forcing them by the weight of our emails and phone calls to change their decision? Does he think that sort of coercion is more fair to ABC than regulations brought in by democratic government?

      Does he pine for a society where, instead of a democratically elected government bringing in rules and regulations for the common good, fairness goes to whoever can raise an angry flash mob?

    32. Re:And your point is? by zippthorne · · Score: 2

      I'm not sure you understand libertarians at all. You seem to have confused them with anarchists...

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    33. Re:And your point is? by thoth · · Score: 1

      Why did this guy get marked troll? If you believe voting is any more real than pro wrestling I have some magic beans you might be interested in. [...]
      When the Ron Paul supporters asked to be heard according to the RNCs own rules they held a vote to change those rules

      Sounds like your diatribe is directed against the GOP and not voting in general.

      Sorry, but this attitude is cynical bullshit. If citizens of the USA don't even believe voting is nothing more than crap, why are we starting wars with the stated purpose (admittedly after shifting the goalposts a few times) of bringing freedom to people and the right to vote?

    34. Re:And your point is? by bcrowell · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm a libertarian. Been registered libertarian for most of the last 20 years. Have a Gary Johnson bumper sticker on my car right now.

      Nevertheless, my reaction is the same. What is the point of this? Why would anyone care?

      Neither of the following facts should be a surprise: (1) TV is a passive medium of communication designed for the lowest common denominator. (2) The US has a two-party system designed to lock out third parties.

    35. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that would be a perfect market, the one that people like to pretend is anything like the free-of-restrictions markets they advocate.

    36. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If AC by any chance confused US Libertarians with anarchists it is only because US Libertarians are confused anarchists. AC seems to understand this just fine, however, it is exactly what makes this so fucking hilarious.

    37. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Link on the RNC vote issue here.

    38. Re:And your point is? by davydagger · · Score: 1

      I'm not giving ABC or any large RIAA controlled media the benefit of the doubt.

      fuck them. they are all known liars.

    39. Re:And your point is? by davydagger · · Score: 2

      " is it surprising that a House candidate is also given short shrift?"

      OP was polling at 7%, niether green nor libertarian canidate get more than %1

      congressional races actually have a chance of being taken seriously.

      case and point, Bernie Sanders

    40. Re:And your point is? by jfengel · · Score: 0

      There aren't many socialists, while the libertarian whiners are all over the Web.

      The Occupy-style progressives were pretty whiny, but fortunately they've mostly gone away. Libertarian whiners, by contrast, are quite convinced that if they whine long enough somebody will finally listen to them.

    41. Re:And your point is? by Crosshair84 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yup. Years ago the people said, "THE STATES ARE JERKS, WE NEED THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT TO STEP IN AND STOP THEM." How well has that worked out? Federal government is being a jerk, who are we gonna get to put them back in line?

      Once the real crisis hits it would be wonderful if we could get back to what the US was originally, a series of self governing states with a federal government whose main purpose was national defense.I want to live in a US where people care more about who their Governor is than who is President.

      The whole point of the Federal system was to copy what made Western Europe rise to prominence, decentralized power. No leader could become too aggressive in taxes or rules because people and their money would simply leave. We saw this during the Jim Crow South. As bad as that was for blacks, it is a perfect example of how the system was supposed to work. Yes the southern states enacted stupidly racist legislation and the states paid for it. What young person in 1950 would look in the mirror and say to themselves, "I'm going to go make my fortune in Alabama." NOBODY.

      About 6.5 million blacks between 1910 and 1970 simply moved from the Jim Crow South to states without those laws.Those that left tended to be the most motivated, hardest working, and most talented. Businesses did not want to move or operate in the South because maintaining two separate facilities for whites and blacks is expensive. As a result of their stupid actions the South became an economic backwater.

      The vital part of this equation was the easy of movement between jurisdictions, both by the jurisdictions being small and movement between them being free. For a practical example,for people reading this to consider, imagine what it would take you to move two states away from where you are now. now imagine what it would take you to move two countries away from where you are now. The easier it is to move, the sooner the government will be punished for its stupid policies. First the money leaves, then the people leave.

      Very few people have a positive view of Washington DC, the only reason anyone listens to what any of them say is because they hand out money. Once the printing press no longer works it's gonna get mighty interesting. They won't be able to use the military since, for starters, the military industrial complex has resulted in our military having such overpriced and under performing equipment that anything that actually does work will soon be out of service due to cost and logistics, leaving the DC forces with little more than M113s and C130s, much like what we had in Iraq, except with far less air support.

      Second, you're going to have a portion desert and go fight for the state or local militias, whatever happens to pop up, and take as much heavy hardware as they can. How many actually do this is a wild card, but if the currency collapses and the infantry are basically working for food, expect to see fragging incidents begin at the very least.

      Third, our military is so effective because everyone can trust everyone to do their job. In such a domestic crisis we will see that go out the window, in Vietnam, sabotage by conscripts was commonplace. Sabotage will be at the back of every ones mind and everyone will be watching their back.

      Hopefully it will be a mostly peaceful transition back to the states asserting their sovereignty, trying different things out, copying what works and abandoning what doesn't. While people are free to move to the jurisdictions they find most attractive. Hope for the best,prepare for the worst.

    42. Re:And your point is? by 1u3hr · · Score: 1
      "I'm a long time Slashdot member with excellent karma. I am also the Libertarian candidate for U.S. Congress"

      Obviously he was bumped for the 4chan candidate.

      Let's imagine a Slashdot member of Congress:

      We open debate on Bill number 3245.... FIRST PSOT!

      I draw the honorable member's attention to clause .... RTFA newb!

    43. Re:And your point is? by X.25 · · Score: 1

      Not asking a question, not suggesting to act.
      So what is it, just a story to tell?

      Awareness, for start.

      Would you like me to continue, or you would be willing to take advantage of that brain you (presumably) have inside your skull?

    44. Re:And your point is? by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 1

      does that mean libertarians support regulations requiring the labeling of foods? public health warnings on cigarettes, as explicit as possible? that doesn't sound like any kind of libertarian platform i've ever heard. what other mechanism for producing "perfect information" - or even adequate information - would you suggest?

    45. Re:And your point is? by shiftless · · Score: 0

      Sounds like your diatribe is directed against the GOP and not voting in general.

      Sorry, but this attitude is cynical bullshit. If citizens of the USA don't even believe voting is nothing more than crap, why are we starting wars with the stated purpose (admittedly after shifting the goalposts a few times) of bringing freedom to people and the right to vote?

      ..............Because voting is useless and we're stuck with the warmongering fascists whether we want them or not? Think about it.

    46. Re:And your point is? by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      Suppression of information is not libertarian, even the idea of the free market itself requires informed players.

      Unequal access to information is a very libertarian viewpoint,
      unless they've suddenly started advocating for laws preventing insider trading.

      Libertarians believe in a very specific type of free market, with the emphasis on "free."
      Their presumption is that "free" leads to 'competitive.'

      That said, I'd rather have more viewpoints than less.
      The way debates are generally rigged to avoid including 3rd party candidates is a state and national disgrace.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    47. Re:And your point is? by spongman · · Score: 1

      Wait. Did I miss something? I thought those wars were started to jack up oil prices and increase military spending.

    48. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Libertarians believe that people have a right to make an informed decision that suits best their needs. Suppression of information is not libertarian, even the idea of the free market itself requires informed players.

      ABC is not suppressing information, they are just not using their resources to distribute it. Sadly a lot of libertarians don't seem to be able to foresee even the most obvious consequences of libertarianism if they have a negative impact.

    49. Re:And your point is? by adri · · Score: 1

      So now you know that in 4 years time, the minimum fund raising you need to do in your area is $100,000.

      Good luck!

    50. Re:And your point is? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      can the suppression of information be seen as a kind of fraud leading to suboptimal choice? yes

      There is no suppression of information. Free speech applies. The Libertarian candidate has the right to say whatever he wants. He can put them on the internet, on a TV advert etc. What he can't do is force someone else to carry his message. And as a Libertarian he should support the networks right to choose the content of their output.

      What are you going to do? Force networks to have Libertarian content?

      are people free to complain when they see things they don't like? yes

      Sure. And I'm free to point out their hypocrisy.

    51. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One thing I've always found confusing (not necessarily about libertarianism, but just in general) is the idea that it is ok to shame or coerce a business into a specific action (such as by doing what GP is doing), but when you get fed up with having to repeat such actions again and again and you decide to use government as the tool that it is supposed to be to make sure that said business cannot keep playing this game, suddenly it's "wrong" and/or "evil".

    52. Re:And your point is? by halltk1983 · · Score: 1

      He's not forcing it. Going to the FCC and trying to make them do it governmentally would be anti-libertarian. Calling for a protest is precisely what a libertarian should be doing. Asking the market to help decide a financial decision. After all, the only reason the news stations hold the debates is to sell ads. He just has to convince them that including him will sell more ads than it will cost them.

      --
      Watch for Penguins, they eat Apples and throw rocks at Windows.
    53. Re:And your point is? by DJ+Particle · · Score: 1

      I trust the company you have to convince is Hearst (owners of WCVB in Boston, the local ABC affiliate), not ABC themselves.

    54. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is why I don't participate in politics or vote. The system is rigged, everything is predetermed, it's a zero-sum game. You're finding out the hard way, that they honestly don't care about you and they never will.

    55. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see a collection of facts in search of an argument.

    56. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And by GP I meant the poster of the story. Sorry for any confusion.

    57. Re:And your point is? by 10101001+10101001 · · Score: 2

      Why is it that people assume that just because you are libertarian, that there should be no rules at all enforced by the government? Or is this typical group think?

      Well, given that's not what was said... No, people assume that libertarians don't want government forcing the presses to be an open forum to everyone or to be able to set arbitrary standards. After all, the whole point is that the ABC affiliate has set a standard of $50,000 campaign contributions. What if this were a government mandated standard? It'd seem leaving it up to ABC affiliate to decide is closer to the libertarian ideal. It just happens to be that said candidate is unable to meet the standard and is complaining about how that standard is unfair. Well, its certain his right to complain, but I don't see how it's particularly unfair--nor the complaint of their standard of 10% in the polls when he only got as high as 7% in the one poll that had him. As much as it points out he doesn't take corporate contributions, he could just as well get 1,000 people to give $50 contribution to reach ABC's requirements, so even that line argument of fairness doesn't hold.

      In short, his major complaint seems to be focused on the obvious truth that there's great deal of inertia in the Democrat and Republican parties. Hence, to reach even reasonable standards is incredibly difficult because its difficult for his party and he himself to appear as credible. That's just a simple fact. Government stepping in would seem entirely against the process of a free and fair system as it would allow government to, intentionally or not, choose the winners and losers of an election. The only way it makes sense to interfere is to state that the inertia they possess is not unlikely the rich with old money or large corporations with inherently powerful economy of scale and influence and there should be clear and extant regulation of a heavily focused, open, multipartisan, etc scope. Well, that right there is a very massive government influence, very much counter to just about every claim I've heard about libertarian ideology that it is in fact government that is the chief cause and retention of such massive inertia and monopolies.

      I mean, Democrats tend to buddy up to corporate interests as much as Republicans. Just look at all the corporate welfare in this country from both parties. At least libertarians aren't going to afford special protections to corporations... for that matter, it's more likely that corporate protections would be limited in favor of increased competition.

      Sad but true, a large reason for all the buddying up to corporate interests and afford[ing] special protections to corporations is because it is short-term advantageous to voters. I mean, in the long-term, the best interests of the world is to massive global trade. But, that means a worsening of living conditions for a lot of people in the US for decades--as they lose the ability to work. Meanwhile, the very corporations that will have that increased competition will also see exploding profit margins as those who can still work will continue to buy products at the same or greater prices while manufacturing costs drop. The only way to resolve this "problem", as most people are likely to see a further entrenching of large corporations, is some sort of wealth redistribution program.

      Specifically not posting as anon, and dumping my mods on this topic because I'm not afraid of people knowing my opinion here. More government subsidies, spending, and gross overreaching policies haven't made things better... perhaps those that founded our country on the premise of a limited federal government were right, and we should move towards that goal once again.

      The founders of our country focused on a limited federal government for two main reasons: they had extant, large state governments and at a time with such slow communication it was felt that only "local" control w

      --
      Eurohacker European paranoia, gun rights, and h
    58. Re:And your point is? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "Imperfect information is the reason the risk exists in the first place and the rest doesn't really follow."

      What doesn't follow is your use of "perfect". That's the fallacy of reductio ad absurdum.

      (Which isn't always a fallacy, I should add. Like slippery slope, it is only a fallacy when used inappropriately.)

      A good and VERY workable market needs information. But nobody -- other than you, apparently -- insists that information has to be perfect. I have seen you make this argument before, and it is indeed quite absurd.

    59. Re:And your point is? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "And as a Libertarian he should support the networks right to choose the content of their output."

      Say WUT?

      Um... hate to give you the news, guy, but TV networks get government money. Look it up. Therefore they are not independent entities, and therefore they do NOT get to choose.

      Now, I know that the "equal time" rule was repealed. Nevertheless, recipients of our tax money are morally and ethically bound to give us a balanced view. If they refuse to do so, then they can fuck right off, and try to take their advertising dollars with them.

    60. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... its 3 card monty only the public just refuses to accept the fact they'll never win the game when the only winning move? Not to play at all.

      Actually, if the game if going to happen no matter what (life), not playing also guarantees you lose. What you really should be advocating, is playing the game by breaking the rules. In this case it likely means breaking laws, and causing some type of revolution. By your definition, if you can't fix things from within the system, the system must be changed from the outside. Think hard on that, really hard on what you believe, truly believe is right for this country, your loved ones, and the future generations that will follow. I think the more people that realize this now, the better off we will be when the impending collapse happens, and hopefully some of us will be organized and ready for it.

    61. Re:And your point is? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "Unequal access to information is a very libertarian viewpoint, unless they've suddenly started advocating for laws preventing insider trading."

      You've been sucking up the nonsense that non-Libertarians say about Libertarians. The key words here are "sucking", and "nonsense".

      Libertarians are Adam Smith capitalists. As such they believe (as Smith himself wrote about, in his original treatise) that a reasonable and robust body of antitrust laws are necessary for a free market to exist. Because "totally free" logically ends up in monopoly or oligopoly, which is no longer a free market.

      Contrary to the belief of some, Libertarians are NOT anarchists. They have their own party. Libertarians are not for totally "free" everything. Economically, the party platform is not "no regulation". It is "the minimum regulation THAT WORKS".

      "The way debates are generally rigged to avoid including 3rd party candidates is a state and national disgrace."

      Yes. Agreed. But that does not excuse the misinformation in the rest of your post.

    62. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the Libertaran ideas sprouted from, and go hand in hand with, old-school Anarchism. They have changed since then, granted, but there is still a lot of "do what you want as long as you don't hurt anyone else, especially me" aspects in the modern version.

    63. Re:And your point is? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Johnson? I agree with your point but what about Paul? Talk about exclusion... he is just about the only Congresscritter with a perfect voting record (if voting the way you say you will is the criterion) and a decades-long history of honesty and incorruptibility... yet he was excluded from debate.

      Let's face it. The "Big 2" have rigged the game. And it's a disgrace. It's a disgrace to this country (not "nation"... we are a republic, not a nation, and have never been a nation, get that straight) and it's an insult to other countries we pretend to support in their struggles for freedom.

      This is why both the Republican and Democrat parties can go stuff it. They haven't been looking out for your interests, for most of your life. But they HAVE been taking your money.

      If you vote for the same shit, you will get the same shit. And don't come knocking on my door.

      (That was not aimed at parent, but at the general readership.)

    64. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In line with your philosophy, you're on your own hook to solve all of your problems.

    65. Re:And your point is? by AlphaWolf_HK · · Score: 1

      Who gets to decide what is fair? Who decides what is ethical?

      Personally I'd rather that be up to me rather than the government. The majority of corporations out there are ethical far beyond the standards required by law. Take for example, those who I know slashdot loves to target, big pharma, specifically Johnson and Johnson. When some psychopath put cyanide pills in the bottles and replaced them back on the shelf, they knew the incident was isolated to a very specific area. Yet just to be sure, they recalled all tylenol bottles across the US, costing them untold millions of dollars when there was really no ethical standard requiring it, rather they just wanted to be sure.

      I trust private entities over the government. If you don't like them, you can always boycott them or disassociate yourself with them. If you boycott the government though, you go to jail.

      I'm a libertarian because I believe that we know what is best for us, not the government. So what if somebody wants to drink soda or eat food with salt, that's their decision. Same thing if they want to own firearms. That doesn't mean I'm a republican either. I believe that marriage for example isn't something that the government should be involved in to begin with, and I also believe in the full legalization of all drugs, and legalization of brothels.

      Here, have a look at some pictures of what happened when East Germany went from socialized ownership to privatized ownership:

      http://www.petapixel.com/2012/05/08/photographs-of-east-germany-locations-captured-decades-apart/

      You know why we eat high fructose corn syrup, where the rest of the world eats sugar? Because of sugar tariffs that are supposed to keep farmers jobs, even though they don't actually benefit them in any way. If the market decided what we ate, it would be sugar. Instead the government effectively tells us that we must eat high fructose corn syrup, or pay up.

      That's why I'm a libertarian. I lose karma all the time for making libertarian statements on here, but so what, it's worth it.

      --
      Careful with names containing L slashdot.org/~AiphaWolf_HK slashdot.org/~AlphaWoif_HK slashdot.org/~AiphaWoif_HK
    66. Re:And your point is? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Labeling of foods? Yes. That is just honesty in a fair marketplace, hard to be had without labeling.

      Health warnings about cigarettes? No. I do not pay the government to be my babysitter. We ALREADY know that tobacco causes cancer. How much warning do you fucking need? Do you honestly think that a picture of a diseased lung is going to stop somebody who wants to smoke? Well, guess what? The EXISTING warnings don't work. The only thing that has reduces smoking is that it is no longer "cool". Societal pressure, not government pressure.

    67. Re:And your point is? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Pardon me... I know you were not arguing that those things are necessary, you just asked about Libertarian platform. And I was just trying to explain.

    68. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People have been programmed to fear liberty. As if it would disempower them some how and not enable them to take a fair and active role in their own governance.

      No, in a libertarian society, people could get together and fairly critisize ABC for its anti-libertarian actions. Infact they could probably work at getting on a public broadcast for fairer economical prices to inform people. If our country truly followed libertarian ideals.

    69. Re:And your point is? by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      The scary part though Crosshair is what is gonna happen to all those nukes and other seriously nasty weapons when the whole thing falls down, it'll be the stuff of nightmares.

      And not meaning to Godwin but there really is only one example I know of that had a highly militarized nation basically come unglued and they turned into the bad guys and cost millions upon millions of lives. With the USSR you had a bunch of little countries that had existed for centuries and were simply forced into one blob by Stalin, whereas with the USA its just one country, easily swayed by jingoism and flag waving, with a shitload of hardware and firepower.

      So what worries me is that we'll get some fascist el presidente type and South America will become our Poland. Lets face it it really wouldn't be hard to spin all the drug and gang violence and commies like Chavez into a bogeyman for the people to get behind taking over Mexico and then South America "for their own good" and the cutting off of supplies in retaliation would mean things would have to be made in the USA, along with wars meaning lots of factories cranking out bombers to bullets. Don't forget until 42 the Germans inside the country were generally doing well, lots of jobs, lots of "We're winning!" propaganda to make them feel good, until Stalingrad it looked like it was gonna be a cakewalk.

      So that is what gives me the worries, that we may end up doing the same kind of nasty shit we condemned others for in WWII because nothing like having to build more weapons and sending the men off to war to stimulate a dead economy. Hell we're even ripping off their bad design choices, such as the Germans building a handful of really high tech fussy as hell designs while the allies cranked out cheap and reliable.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    70. Re:And your point is? by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      TV networks get government money.

      This isn't PBS.

    71. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What party is Paul running for again? There are four candidates whose names are on the ballot in all 50 states, and he ain't one of them. Why then is he relevant?

    72. Re:And your point is? by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1
      The shallowness of thinking is illustrated by the sig.

      "How inappropriate to call this planet Earth, when clearly it is Ocean."

      Common misconception. But it *IS* a misconception.

      Roughly 3/4 of the surface of this planet is covered by a thin skin of water. But doesn't mean the planet is 3/4 water. Far from it. Only a tiny fraction of this planet is water.

      It is Earth. Properly, justifiably, demonstrably.

      Next, let's argue about how round it is.

    73. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      correct. fuck ABC for giving a bad name to the first three letters of the alphabet...

    74. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Libertarian ideology has nothing to do with just letting everyone do what they please without criticism, it's that the regulation of such shouldn't automatically fall back on the government to deal with. His efforts fall completely in line with Libertarian philosophy of bringing an issue or injustice to public light and letting the voice of the people bring about change. Liberty doesn't mean silence, it means speaking up against such ridiculous practices.

    75. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Libertarians believe that people have a right to make an informed decision that suits best their needs"

      At the same time they deregulate to the point where "informed decisions" are not capable of being made.

      He's bitching because he can't inform them of his candidacy, which is hilarious.

    76. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Why is it that people assume that just because you are libertarian, that there should be no rules at all enforced by the government?"

      Because Libertarians are for small government that only interferes in the matter of contracts (at the same time they look for ways to break those same contracts...)

    77. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This. LOL

    78. Re:And your point is? by fishdan · · Score: 1

      Yeah, my TV buys are all going to be local cable, which is indeed a remarkable bargain

      --
      Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm
    79. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AFAIK ABC and any other media with an "FCC License" is no longer bound to provide "Public Service" as they once were, so the Libertarians are winning.

    80. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speaking as a libertarian myself, I agree with the parent to your post. Better information means a better libertarian society (or any society), but forcing anybody to provide that information is immoral from a libertarian standpoint. And as such, I'm disappointed in Gary Johnson and Michael Badnarik before him, as much as the inconsistent part of me would love to see them force their way into the debate. Though, they may have an argument about the debate commission having some sort of state privilege, which would forfeit their rights to do what they want, but I don't know if I'm that convinced yet. Gary as I understand is trying to get them for monopolizing, which isn't a very libertarian argument.

      And lest you change me with being a purist and making libertarianism look bad in the process, that's just fine if you have a different point of view, or think libertarianism sounds great except for a few points like this. But libertarianism by its nature has to remain principled, if for nothing else, then to establish what those principles are. So I argue you're just not quite libertarian given the view you hold.

    81. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a libertarian, I agree with what you say about the debate commission and ABC, but I think that it's not fair to change us with allowing organizations to be unethical. Depends on your definition I guess. Fraud is unethical, and we don't support anybody's right to be fraudulent. Or to steal, or break contact, or to hire better lawyers to violate the rights of others ( using eminent domain to steal property for instance). I think there are plenty of unethical things that libertarians oppose. Deciding not to feature Gary Johnson is not one of them. Or shouldn't be, anyway.

    82. Re:And your point is? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Some of us are.

    83. Re:And your point is? by dave87656 · · Score: 1

      Thank you. Very well put.

    84. Re:And your point is? by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 1

      I think you might want to check into the statistics about smoking cessation. Government intervention has been extraordinarily successful in reducing smoking, in the US and elsewhere.

    85. Re:And your point is? by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      There aren't many socialists, while the libertarian whiners are all over the Web.

      Where were you in the lead-up to the election 4 years ago? Just because they all went back to their holes once they realized their messiah wasn't wearing any clothes doesn't mean they're not there.

    86. Re:And your point is? by jfengel · · Score: 1

      You might want to check your watch. That moronic "messiah" meme died off four years ago. Perhaps it's time for some new batteries.

  2. Get someone else to report this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    With the author of the article being simultaneously the allegedly wronged party, this just sounds like whinging.

    1. Re:Get someone else to report this by fhuglegads · · Score: 0

      Since you used the word whinging I will assume you are British and have no idea how broken our political system is and are used to a parliamentary system which represents people in a weighted way. The US has a winner take all system that only allows 2 people to compete and they only get to compete if they are what the media and the corporations say is ok.

    2. Re:Get someone else to report this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wing-ing?

    3. Re:Get someone else to report this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suppose he's one of them Brits who pronounces scheme with a hard 'C', but refuses to pronounce schedule with a hard 'C'

    4. Re:Get someone else to report this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I suppose he's one of them Brits who pronounces scheme with a hard 'C', but refuses to pronounce schedule with a hard 'C'

      Actually, I do pronounce schedule with a hard c. Did you have a point or was that just racist trolling?

    5. Re:Get someone else to report this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like you're doing right now?

    6. Re:Get someone else to report this by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure it was nationalist trolling.

    7. Re:Get someone else to report this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is it racist if we are the same race?

  3. Re:Why? by PaulBu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I would say, f*ck the first two! Or, do you have a very strong preference between R and D?

    Paul B.

    P.S. I'll wait a little bit more until changing my .signature...

  4. Business owns government. Government owns business by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    These socio-economic forces work hand in hand with the same agenda. Sadly the American public thinks that there are really two controlling parties and business is on the outside of this circle of power except to write checks. The truth is that they're all one and the same.

  5. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    More like fuck the voting system that fucks the third parties.

  6. Slashdotter in congress by AwesomeMcgee · · Score: 4, Funny

    I'm not sure if I should be terrified or elated.

    One things for sure, he's got my vote just to see how a slashdotter's trolling skills stand up in the big leagues.

    1. Re:Slashdotter in congress by cje · · Score: 5, Funny

      "Mr. Speaker, I move that we... pour a bowl of hot grits down our pants!"

      --
      We're going down, in a spiral to the ground
    2. Re:Slashdotter in congress by NatasRevol · · Score: 2

      I vote for Android. And emacs. And Windows. And vim. And iOS. And Ford. And federally subsidized health care. And Chevy. And independent health care.

      Wait, that sounds like most politicians platforms.

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    3. Re:Slashdotter in congress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mr. Speaker, I move we mod that spending bill as flamebait so as not to incite the trolls from the media.

    4. Re:Slashdotter in congress by spiffmastercow · · Score: 1

      I vote for Android...

      Not surprising, he's leading in the polls.

    5. Re:Slashdotter in congress by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      Heh, and has no money.

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    6. Re:Slashdotter in congress by nschubach · · Score: 1

      Slashdot... Ford? Not with Microsoft Sync, buddy!

      --
      Every time I start to have faith in humanity, I ruin it by driving to work between 7 and 8 am.
    7. Re:Slashdotter in congress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In order to gain our approval, during the debate you must promise to wear the 8 bit tie from thinkgeek and use the word gongoozler in a sentence.

    8. Re:Slashdotter in congress by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      +1

    9. Re:Slashdotter in congress by cuncator · · Score: 1

      Emacs and vim? Android and iOS? I was hoping we could keep religion out of this debate.

  7. ok, I'll bite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's fucked up, How can we help?

  8. I think we can help with one of these things.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Can we get a Slashdot poll for this guy? I'm sure he'll hit at least 10%.

  9. Well, that was your mistake. by tekrat · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You should have accepted those donations. That doesn't means you have to listen to whoever is giving you money. In fact, if I was you, I'd take their check, and then do the exact opposite of whatever they are asking for.

    --
    If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
    1. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Applekid · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Even if he did, the debates would have found some other reason to exclude him. This isn't actually about money at all, or, at least, his campaign money.

      --
      More Twoson than Cupertino
    2. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Ichijo · · Score: 4, Funny

      In fact, if I was you, I'd take their check, and then do the exact opposite of whatever they are asking for.

      Unless they knew you were going to do the opposite of what they ask for, in which case they would ask the opposite of what they want you to do. "So I clearly can not choose the wine in front of me."

      --
      Any sufficiently unpopular but cohesive argument is indistinguishable from trolling.
    3. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by SomePgmr · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It doesn't say anything about who has to make the contributions. By the sound of things it could be people from his neighborhood. It doesn't have to be Halliburton.

      And really, I'd bet it's more of a "If you don't have $50k, you don't actually have a serious campaign" type of requirement, in their opinion. I don't think it's a conspiracy to make sure you have corporate overlords, it's to make sure they don't have 500 whackjobs on stage preaching about all manner of insanity.

    4. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by gruber76 · · Score: 4, Interesting

      There are ample peer reviewed studies showing that doctors medical decisions are influenced by things as simple as free dug samples for their patients. "Just take the money" is a very bad idea.

      (Here's one of those studies, for example: http://baywood.metapress.com/app/home/contribution.asp?referrer=parent&backto=issue,9,13;journal,49,167;linkingpublicationresults,1:300313,1 )

    5. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Hatta · · Score: 2

      I suspect that a significant proportion of his 7% support would not support him if he had accepted corporate donations.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    6. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Nocturnal+Deviant · · Score: 2

      Completely agreed. Why would you go back on your morality for anything really....oh wait..... that's what the people in the debate do...and how they got there......is it any less corrupt across the pond? I am seriously debating on moving out of this country.

      --
      -Noc
    7. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by gruber76 · · Score: 1

      I can't believe I typed that poorly on a full sized keyboard. *hangs head in shame*

    8. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just like Cru and Helltrack. Those bastards!

      TEAM RAD!

    9. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But why? Because it's no longer illegal to take corporate donations? If you're running on a campaign of principle, you can't do the exact thing that you say is corrupt. And anyway, maybe it's just my inner pragmatist, but it's often best not to childishly spite people using their own money.

      Speaking of taking corportate contributions, can you imagine if Nixon had run in the era of Super PACs and Citizen United? In the eyes of history, he's a crook, but in today's game he'd be one liberal small fry.

    10. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by jalefkowit · · Score: 2

      You're right, it's not about money. It's about him demonstrating that he has supporters other than the voices in his head. If you don't have those, you shouldn't expect to be able to take time away from candidates who do.

    11. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by boristdog · · Score: 1

      Never go against a politician when money is on the line!

    12. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You should have accepted those donations.

      You're presuming he was offered any.

      A "strong candidate" would be able to raise $50k from private citizens. His immediate blaming of his lack of funds on his stance against corporate donations means either he 1) had no plan in place for soliciting donations from ordinary people who want him to win or 2) those people don't exist.

      I'm not about to assume he had corporations beating down his door to throw money at him, and he spent so much time standing up for his principles he forgot all about the rest of running a campaign.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    13. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you know this because....?

    14. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Hey, at least he would know better than to start a land war in Asia. That's one up on the major parties.

    15. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Wahakalaka · · Score: 1

      He may not (on purpose) have tons of cash, but he has 7% of the vote, in one poll, one debate, zero advertisements. 500 whackjobs * 7% = 3500% of the population. Elections should be about voters, not cash. In my perfect world, campaigning would be limited to large number of debates, and a rotating segment on pbs or c-span or some other public tv. No room for BS.

      --
      The truth is somewhere in the middle.
    16. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by FishOuttaWater · · Score: 1

      Truly, you have a dizzying intellect.

    17. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't believe I typed that poorly on a full sized keyboard. *hangs head in shame*

      We all hit the wrong key occasionally. What's your excuse for not using the preview?

    18. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by robot5x · · Score: 1

      But what has money really got to do with fulfilling the role of a politician? My neighbor might be a great politician - given the chance - he's got some great ideas, he can debate well, and I'm sure that if he took part in a televised debate he might do pretty good and grab vote share from his opponents.

      Yes I know that people in politics historically were generally wealthy or connected but we're living in the middle of an epidemic of voter apathy. Isn't it possible that getting rid of these ridiculous requirements, that favour incumbents or at least discourage real political outsiders, can actually do some good for reinvigorating democracy and notions of citizenship in the general population? What's wrong with having a 'crank' in a debate? Have we become so afraid of difference, or new thinking?

      --
      Hej! Nasi tu byli!
    19. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not about money. It's about him showing in a recent poll that he's relevant.

    20. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by jalefkowit · · Score: 4, Interesting

      According to the State of Massachusetts (warning: PDF), 260,618 people voted in the Congressional race in the 6th District in 2010.

      He says he's polling at 7 percent support in that district; let's take him at his word. That means to estimate his base of support we can multiply 7 percent by 260,618, which yields 18,243.

      So what would it take to raise $50,000? If he limited himself to raising money strictly from that 7 percent -- who are presumably his base -- he'd only need them to give $2.75 each to hit that mark. Two dollars and seventy-five cents. If he raised his ask to $10 -- still a small ask in the world of political contributions -- he'd have $182,000. That's not a huge amount of money -- the current incumbent spent $2 million in the 2010 cycle -- but it can buy an awful lot of mailers, yard signs, campaign t-shirts, and other tools to get your name and message out. No corporate contributions required.

      Look, I'm as big an advocate for getting money out of politics as you're likely to find, but this is simply not a case of being required to raise Big Money in order to play. You don't have to raise Big Money, you just have to raise some money, because without a little money you can't afford the most basic tools a campaign needs to win. There's nothing un-democratic about giving your supporters yard signs. If you can't rouse yourself to gather the resources needed to do even that, it shouldn't come as a shock when people start assuming you're not a serious candidate.

    21. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 2

      My neighbor might be a great politician - given the chance - he's got some great ideas, he can debate well, and I'm sure that if he took part in a televised debate he might do pretty good and grab vote share from his opponents.

      Do you really believe that? Do you believe it enough to give him $10 to help him advertise this fact to others? No? Then is he really that great?

      If his campaign isn't organized enough to get the word out and find people willing to support him and his principles, or there aren't actually many such people, then he doesn't have a chance given debate airtime or not. And yes I do think the ability to manage a staff to accomplish a goal has a lot to do with fulfilling the role of a politician. There's a lot more to being a US Congressman than just having some ideas.

      Personally I'm nearly as sick (read: actually not nearly but enough that I'm not impressed) of rich people running campaigns as personal vanity projects (*cough*Trump*cough*) as I am of corporate influence in politics.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    22. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Seumas · · Score: 1

      It's a moot point. Corporations don't particularly care about giving money to fund a libertarian candidate, because they are only interested in buying-off the gratitude and consideration of the candidates who have a chance to win. Backing a guy who can never win, by dint of not wearing a red or blue jersey, means you will never get a return on your investment. A guy who isn't in office can't help your interests.

    23. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by jalefkowit · · Score: 1

      Crud, I pasted the wrong link into my comment above. (Op-ed: it's 2012 and we still can't edit comments after submission on Slashdot? Seriously?) The vote count for 2010 in MA-6 is here.

    24. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      Getting elected is actually an important part of the job of a politician. Now I am as against the massive amounts of money in modern American campaigns as anyone, it's been detrimental to the overall discourse and causes politicians to be beholden to those who contribute the most. But some money is required and that is perfectly fine and reasonable. $50,000 is a token amount, if he can't get even that much in statewide election the system is not his biggest problem.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    25. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      Oh, and the reason having cranks in a debate is a problem is because in a high profile election the number of cranks that would be willing to debate would be almost limitless. We have better things to do with our time then to listen to them all.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    26. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by gl4ss · · Score: 1

      it's more of a "if you don't buy advertising, then you're not running".

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    27. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by chrismcb · · Score: 2

      The world isn't as cynical as everyone makes it out to be. Whoever is organizing the debate wants to have serious candidates. They came up with a list of what qualifies a serious candidate. And this guy didn't make the list. It is possible that they would have come up with another excuse, but until it happens...you know innocent until proven guilty.

    28. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Hatta · · Score: 2

      You don't have to raise Big Money, you just have to raise some money, because without a little money you can't afford the most basic tools a campaign needs to win. There's nothing un-democratic about giving your supporters yard signs. If you can't rouse yourself to gather the resources needed to do even that, it shouldn't come as a shock when people start assuming you're not a serious candidate.

      Why isn't being on the ballot sufficient?

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    29. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because it's easy to get on the ballot. I would sign every petition that came along, even for people with whom I disagree.

      To be a viable candidate, on the other hand, requires your "supporters" to...you know, support you.

      This crybaby doesn't have supporters, he has complainers who *may* vote for him just to vote against the system. (Yes, there might actually be a couple of people who will vote for him because they want him to be elected.)

    30. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      Or he should just accept a $50,000 check in escrow, and later just give back the money as soon the live debate has ended.

    31. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      As to the poll, he should just have his friends run an independent poll and publish the results somewhere. That's usually how the Republicans and the Democrats do it. Why not do the same thing?

    32. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Chuckstar · · Score: 2

      Because you only need 2,000 signatures to get on the ballot. Get a few volunteers to stand around a local shopping mall and you can get that in a weekend or two. ABC has no interest in being required to put anyone on TV who has two friends and a couple free weekends. It would tend to undermine the usefulness of the debate to the viewer, anyway. I know I have no interest in hearing from a bunch of fringe candidates who can't possibly win. That's why they generally have some kind of cutoff of "serious candidateness". Being able to raise $50,000 is not a ridiculous test for the seriousness of a U.S. congressional campaign.

      If the original poster is serious about being a U.S. congressman, they should mount a serious campaign and I'm sure ABC would be happy to have them in the debate. A candidate who polls at 7%, has raised no money (regardless of the reason), and gets a few applause lines at a debate is not even remotely in the running.

      Besides, the claim of refusing corporate donations is totally bogus. It is still illegal for corporations to donate directly to candidates' campaigns.

    33. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by quantaman · · Score: 1

      Its because they want a serious debate, the viewers watching are generally interested in a choice between R and D, if there's a 3rd party candidate they have no interest in than viewers will just be annoyed with the distraction. Now it could be the affiliate misgauged the interest but I think this is an issue of the network trying to give the viewers what they want.

      --
      I stole this Sig
    34. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In fact, if I was you, I'd take their check, and then do the exact opposite of whatever they are asking for.

      Unless they knew you were going to do the opposite of what they ask for, in which case they would ask the opposite of what they want you to do. "So I clearly can not choose the wine in front of me."

      Best movie ever!

    35. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I didn't know democracy was about bribing your representatives, I guess that's what demoncrazies are for..

    36. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by jfengel · · Score: 1

      If he had accepted corporate donations he might have been able to get his name out there to generate more support than 7%. People can't vote for candidates they've never heard of.

      He seems to imagine that the world owes it to him to get out his message that the world doesn't owe you anything. That alone is good enough reason not to vote for him.

    37. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Chuckstar · · Score: 1

      Actually, he'd go to jail if he knowingly accepted corporate donations. So the claim is bogus, anyway.

    38. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      And you still don't know that, because you do know that a single entity giving a large sum of money in exchange for kickbacks isn't the same as many people giving someone a modest sum of money because they believe in the candidate and the platform they have chosen to run on.

      I am of course giving you the benefit of the doubt here. But I have faith.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    39. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by shiftless · · Score: 0

      But where would you move to? Everywhere else is just as bad. The days of running from our problems are over. It's time to stand and fight.

    40. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by shiftless · · Score: 0

      Do you really believe that? Do you believe it enough to give him $10 to help him advertise this fact to others? No? Then is he really that great?

      What if I don't have $10 to spare, because every dime I earn goes into politicians' pockets already, thanks to a system they've colluded to set up which puts such a ridiculous barrier to entry on newcomers who would like to participate and work to change the system?

    41. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by spongman · · Score: 1

      I think you excellently summarized why this situation represents a complete failure to inform the electorate.

      If you're giving them what they want then, by definition, you're not giving them anything they don't already know.

    42. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by tenco · · Score: 1

      500 whackjobs * 7% = 3500% of the population.

      401 voters in one district where polled. And the poll had an error margin of 4.9 %

      RTFA.

    43. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Cederic · · Score: 1

      How the fuck does being unlikely to win election make someone 'not a serious candidate'?

      Maybe some of his policies aren't popular. Maybe he's seen as too inexperienced for the role even if his policies are good. Maybe he just doesn't have the funding to buy a victory in the same way that everyone else does.

      Maybe he's just not newsworthy, but none of these things stop him being a serious candidate.

      Blocking the same public exposure enjoyed by richer candidates is not democratic, and also lets those candidatesavoid having to address the specific policies he's putting forward.

      That's a massive issue. In the UK someone has been elected on the policy of "I'm not as corrupt as the incumbent" and won with a landslide. Someone else has stood on a policy of "I hate all these foreigners nicking our jobs" and got enough of the vote that the more mainstream parties are changing their policies to avoid losing voters to these niche interests.

      It's important whether you agree with the policies or not, and it's fucking insulting to suggest that a candidate isn't serious.

    44. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by DJ+Particle · · Score: 1

      I think the Citizens United decision disagrees with you.

    45. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Cedarbridge · · Score: 1

      I wasn't aware that your donation income was directly tied to your supporting voters. Its rather hard to reconcile that with the huge piles of money that corporations and wealthy individuals throw behind the bigger names.

    46. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What he might do in office is a theoretical exercise, of course. But he should have taken the $ for two reasons. First, his required campaign reports would list MA corporate donors who contributed, and consumers could make decisions based thereon. Second, the $ would have enabled more publicity--Libertarians draw more otherwise R votes than D votes while flaming out.

    47. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by cavebison · · Score: 1

      it's to make sure they don't have 500 whackjobs on stage preaching about all manner of insanity

      Indeed. You definitely don't want whackjobs in politics, saying things like vaginas reject rape sperm and evolution is a lie from the pit of hell.

      Considering the behaviour of the existing crowd, do you really think these measures are working?

    48. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Preview? WAit there's a pr

    49. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Chuckstar · · Score: 1

      Then you should read up on Citizens United. Because that's not what it says.

    50. Re:Well, that was your mistake. by Budgreen · · Score: 1

      they are both poisoned...

      --
      The greatest right given is the right to be wrong...
  10. Question by SomePgmr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Too little information here.

    What are the criteria for being included in these independent polls? Does one normally request inclusion?

    Have you asked ABC about these requirements?

    1. Re:Question by DJ+Particle · · Score: 1

      Hearst owns the Boston ABC affiliate, Gormally Broadcasting owns the Springfield ABC affiliate. MA has no ABC O&Os

  11. Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by realmolo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I mean, the ABC affiliate doesn't even NEED a reason to exclude you, right? It's their station. You want to be on TV, buy your own affiliate. Right? Isn't that the "free market" at work? Are you saying they should be FORCED to let you into the debate?

    Libertarians are nothing but Republicans that are upset they aren't rich/powerful enough to fuck people in the ass. They want it to be easier to get into the "Fuck you, I've got mine" club.

    1. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by kwerle · · Score: 1

      Dude (or dudette). I have mod points, but I'm split between Insightful, Funny, and Flame bait.

      You had me with the first paragraph. There was no need for the second.

    2. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, ABC is part of a government enforced oligopoly. Stop thinking the US has a free market--it doesn't. It had one a hundred years ago, but the descent into fascism has been swift since that time, and it is getting swifter. And it is all because people like you think we just don't have the "right" government, and fail to realize that the system is set up in such a way that only the corrupt can win.

      Also, thanks for judging a bunch of people who you clearly know nothing about. We are tired, and poor, and long to be free. I guess we aren't welcome here any more.

    3. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by tekrat · · Score: 4, Funny

      Don't be silly. According to Romney, you can borrow money from your parents. Or roll down the window on a airplane, I forget which.

      --
      If telephones are outlawed, then only outlaws will have telephones.
    4. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      >I mean, the ABC affiliate doesn't even NEED a reason to exclude you, right? It's their station. You want to be on TV, buy your own affiliate. Right?

      Yes, although buying your own affiliate sounds really like a really dumb way of doing things. Instead just broadcast.

      >Isn't that the "free market" at work?

      Yes.

      >Are you saying they should be FORCED to let you into the debate?

      I hope he isn't. Hopefully, he is instead exercising his right to tell others why ABS sucks ass. A right libertarians would DEFINITELY let you keep. I see nothing on his page that says he wants to use government laws to force them to do anything. Instead he wants to use their market against them. A completely legitimate tactic for a libertarian, and the one that is usually suggested by most libertarians after "Don't buy their service" if they're the only game in town.

      >Libertarians are nothing but Republicans that are upset they aren't rich/powerful enough to fuck people in the ass.

      Stefan Molyneux. Need I say more about why you're wrong?

    5. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      I mean, the ABC affiliate doesn't even NEED a reason to exclude you, right?

      Except that this is about elections. Unless Libertarians don't believe in the democratic process, including the public debate, saying that people and institutions in democratic states should have the right to twist the election process is like saying that Wahhabis should be allowed to do whatever they want because of our freedom of religion and tolerance.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    6. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I thought they were Republicans who want to legalize weed.

    7. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Charliemopps · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You see, you're playing the same game the 2 party system wants you to. You lump everything into "republican" or "democrat" and then, once you've placed a person, idea or proposal into it's basked you pick the most extreme ideas in that party and make a strait line from A to B. He's libertarian, which is the same as republican, which is conservative... Nazis... HE WANTS TO KILL THE JEWS!!!!

      Well fuck... you're wrong. Libertarians are not republicans. Libertarians just have some ideas that are more congruent with the republican party than the democratic party. On many issues libertarians are much more liberal than Democrats will ever be. Gay marriage for example... Libertarians don't even think marriage should be something the government has anything to do with. Mary a goat for all they care. That's between you and your religion.

      Then you get into this nonsense about the station should have free speech. Sure, they should. But so does this fellow. They can exclude him from the debate, and then he has the right to make a big stink about it and make them look like shills for the 2 major parties, which in fact, they are. It's not like he's suing them. And even if he were to... there's no 100% right way to be a libertarian. He can have his own views, and be as Libertarian as he wants to be. Just because you're libertarian doesn't mean you want to shut down public schools and start selling missile launchers at the local walmart tomorrow. There's plenty of middle ground.

      Climb out of our political parties sand trap and start think for yourself for a change.

    8. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Infernal+Device · · Score: 2

      I thought they were Republicans who want to legalize weed.

      These days the Libertarians sound less crazy than the Republicans, thanks to the Teabaggers.

      It hasn't always been that way.

      --
      "My God...it's full of trolls!"
    9. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Desler · · Score: 1

      Twist the election? They guy has no chance of winning. If he did he could have easily met their requirements for being part of the roundtable debate.

    10. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by afidel · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So how do tv stations work in your utopian libertarian pipe dream? Does the person with the most money just buy the most powerful transmitter to drown out everyone elses signal?

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    11. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by desdinova+216 · · Score: 1

      I thought he was asking why there are requirements other than being on the ballot for the debate.

    12. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Twist the election? They guy has no chance of winning. If he did he could have easily met their requirements for being part of the roundtable debate.

      The day he gets to 15% in five national polls is the day the Commission on Presidential Debates raises the requirement to 20% and six national polls.

    13. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Wtf are mod points??? Dude he doesn't accept any mod-points or donations RTFA you insensitive clod.

    14. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      What are the requirements for joining the public debate?

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    15. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Nocturnal+Deviant · · Score: 0

      I am sure we slashdotters could easily come up with enough tin foil from our hats to make such transmitter.

      However "utopian libertarian pipe dream" goes a tad too far. This country is corrupt. That is a fact. If you think that it is a "utopian non-libertarian pipe dream" you are ignorant.

      --
      -Noc
    16. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Mary a goat for all they care. That's between you and your religion.

      Who would name a goat 'Religion' ?

    17. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by mrchaotica · · Score: 2

      On many issues libertarians are much more liberal than Democrats will ever be. Gay marriage for example... Libertarians don't even think marriage should be something the government has anything to do with. Mary a goat for all they care. That's between you and your religion.

      Let's not get too carried away now; I think most Libertarians would still care about all parties being capable of consent. So maybe group marriage would be OK, but marrying animals and children not so much.

      --

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

    18. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Belial6 · · Score: 4, Informative

      I have yet to hear a single Libertarian claim that anarchy is a good thing. Every Libertarian I have ever discussed politics has taken the stance that Government was a necessary evil, and that the goal should be to only use it in places that can't work without it. It should be a measure of last resort. What constitutes a necessary place would differ from Libertarian to Libertarian, but none of them have said that there should be no government at all.

      Trying to paint Libertarians as Anarchists doesn't make you right. In fact it makes you that much more wrong.

    19. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by ewieling · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Republicans: regulate people's personal lives, don't regulate business

      Democrats: regulate business, don't regulate people's personal lives

      Weed comes under "personal lives" most of the time.

      --
      I really shouldn't have used someone else's email address for this account.
    20. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On many issues libertarians are much more liberal than Democrats will ever be. Gay marriage for example... Libertarians don't even think marriage should be something the government has anything to do with.

      It's a bit disingenuous to claim that this makes them liberal - someone like Ron Paul, for instance, is really just a Christian-right conservative on this issue. He wants to let the states refuse to recognize the legal marriages of other states, supports DOMA, and has been a cosponsor of the Marriage Protection Act in each Congress since the bill's original introduction. It's a similar situation with abortion rights - you'd think that libertarians would be all in favor of keeping laws off women's bodies, but again, Ron Paul is a strong opponent.

      I'll agree that there are some libertarians who may be less inconsistent on such matters, but the most prominent one I know of is Paul...

    21. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Divide the spectrum up into frequencies, and the ground into territories. Sell them as property. If you own a frequency in a territory, you get to broadcast on that frequency in that territory. You do not get to broadcast on other frequencies or at a power that interferes with the property rights of the neighboring territories.

      It isn't dissimilar to land use rights.

    22. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by MightyMartian · · Score: 0

      Most of the Tea Parties *are* Libertarians, except when it comes to *their* Medicare, or any other government benefit they're receiving. I look upon Tea Partiers as the low-hanging fruit of the Libertarian movement. The full-blooded Libertarians are far more clever in burying their fundamentally sociopathic ideology and high-sounding rhetoric.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    23. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Maudib · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yes it is their station. However the airways are owned by the commons and are licensed to them by the public. The license mandates that the stations provide equal access to political candidates.

      From the Communications Act:

      "If any licensee shall permit any person who is a legally qualified candidate for any political office to use a broadcasting station, he shall afford equal opportunities to all other such candidates for that office in the use of such broadcasting station."

      There is nothing anti-libertarian about insisting they live up to their contractual obligations.

    24. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by afidel · · Score: 1

      Since I was responding to someone shooting off about how a tv station "is part of a government enforced oligopoly" I think it's perfectly valid to shoot back that licensing of the EM spectrum is a necessary function of government (even if I did do it in an obtuse manner).

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    25. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by gr8_phk · · Score: 1

      I mean, the ABC affiliate doesn't even NEED a reason to exclude you, right? It's their station.

      That's true, but then they shouldn't claim to fair or unbiased.

    26. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, actually, libertarians have nothing to do with democrats or republicans and look at both of you as a bunch of petty and selfish idiots. Accusing them of having anything to do with republicans is pretty fucking ridiculous and quite offensive. But I'd expect that from child molesters like you.

    27. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by afidel · · Score: 1

      That's almost exactly how the spectrum IS broken up with the exception that many older licenses were granted instead of purchased.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    28. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      Wow, what a great system. It sounds so much better then what we have now. Have you thought up a name for what you would call those frequency/territory property units? I was thinking we could call them something like "broadcast licenses".

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    29. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought they were Republicans who want to legalize weed.

      These days the Libertarians sound less crazy than the Republicans, thanks to the Teabaggers.

      It hasn't always been that way.

      In the old days before the misappropriation of the word, libertarian meant anarchist. Which... humorously enough sounds less crazy than Libertarians, Republicans, Teabaggers, Democrants, etc.

    30. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by bmo · · Score: 3, Insightful

      >. Libertarians don't even think marriage should be something the government has anything to do with.

      It's this idea and others that make the Libertarians look like loonies.

      Marriage has been, and is always, a public statement of contract. It is basically civil in nature. Whatever religiosity that is thrown around it is mere window dressing. With this idea that the government should not be involved in validating marriages, you alienate *both* the religious nutjobs, and people like me who think one of the functions of government is to make things like contracts enforceable.

      For glub's sake.

      --
      BMO

    31. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, ABC is part of a government enforced oligopoly. Stop thinking the US has a free market--it doesn't. It had one a hundred years ago, but the descent into fascism has been swift since that time, and it is getting swifter. And it is all because people like you think we just don't have the "right" government, and fail to realize that the system is set up in such a way that only the corrupt can win.

      Also, thanks for judging a bunch of people who you clearly know nothing about. We are tired, and poor, and long to be free. I guess we aren't welcome here any more.

      You're also forgetting that ABC is using the *public* airwaves. It is not their property. If they are going to use our shared resource, you should be allowed in.

      Just like a park. I don't care who reserved it for their party, it's just as much my property as it is theirs--I can't exclude them and they can't exclude me.

    32. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They all have an equal opportunity. Any party who's raised 50 grand can join the debate. It's not like the Democrats get a special discount where they only have to have raised 10 grand.

    33. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Maudib · · Score: 2

      That is not an equal opportunity. Also you know damn well that if it was an R or D with less then 50k they would be in.

      If they are on the ballot they should get equal access. If the stations don't like it then they can give back the spectrum.

    34. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Guppy06 · · Score: 0

      Libertarians just have some ideas that are more congruent with the republican party than the democratic party. On many issues libertarians are much more liberal than Democrats will ever be. Gay marriage for example... Libertarians don't even think marriage should be something the government has anything to do with.

      Yes, in a Libertarian Utopia, you would be free to marry a member of the same sex. And then your private employer would be free to fire you for doing so, and your private insurer would be free to deny benefits to your chosen spouse, and private hospitals would be free to deny visitation, and private orphanages would be free to deny adoption, etc, rendering the entire exercise pointless for anyone who isn't independently wealthy.

      Libertarians ultimately believe that all rights have a price tag, and you are only truly entitled to exercise the rights you can monetarily afford. This so-called "fiscal conservatism" overrides any claims of "social liberalism" Libertarians attempt to make, firmly establishing themselves as the GOP's ilk.

      and then he has the right to make a big stink about it

      He obviously does not have that right. He has, at best, the "right" to make a rather insignificant stink, one that is easily ignored by everyone. Even if we assume that he has persuasiveness and charisma on his side (and his own poll numbers suggest otherwise), he only has the right to make a big stink if he has the money to reach a big audience.

      Big stinks, in this regard, are the sole domain of those who can afford their own airtime.

      Just because you're libertarian doesn't mean you want to shut down public schools and start selling missile launchers at the local walmart tomorrow. There's plenty of middle ground.

      What you call "middle ground" others would call "willful ignorance of consequences." Avoiding both of those scenarios requires government coercion, which Libertarian philosophy necessarily considers the greatest of all evils.

      start think for yourself for a change.

      Heal thyself.

    35. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by markass530 · · Score: 2

      You don't think thats a bit of a generalization? Also there are degree's of Libertarians. I consider myself one, but think Regulations are absolutely vital, and we have a duty as a country to provide things like foodstamps. and from a fiscal stand point a government run healthcare is just common sense.

    36. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but Communications Act jazz is just interference by the government in free enterprise. I mean, that law shouldn't even be there, man. </libertarian>

    37. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > They want it to be easier to get into the "Fuck you, I've got mine" club.

      Yes, of course we want it to be easier for people to become rich and powerful. You don't?

    38. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by archen · · Score: 1

      SATIN

    39. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, in a Libertarian Utopia, you would be free to marry a member of the same sex. And then your private employer would be free to fire you for doing so, and your private insurer would be free to deny benefits to your chosen spouse, and private hospitals would be free to deny visitation, and private orphanages would be free to deny adoption, etc, rendering the entire exercise pointless for anyone who isn't independently wealthy.

      All those things would be illegal and you should kill yourself.

    40. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Libertarians: Regulate as little as possible while preventing some other gang from taking over
      Socialists: Regulate as much as possible to prevent some other gang from taking over

    41. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by cgt · · Score: 1

      As a libertarian—a quite radical one, actually—it bothers me that so many people misunderstand this aspect of libertarianism. Libertarianism is a simple ideology, it only deals with when it is just to use physical force. To solve this issue, we have the non-aggression principle. The non-aggression principle asserts that aggression—defined as the initiation of physical force, or the threat thereof, against persons or property—is immoral.

      Does ABC aggress against this man by not including him in their debate? No. However, he does not aggress against ABC by complaining about being excluded. Another example: I am opposed to banning narcotics, but I don't want to have anything to do with them. In fact, I strongly oppose recreational drugs, including alcohol, yet I do not wish to aggress against anyone for consuming or producing such things. I wouldn't let people doing such things on to my property, but I wouldn't come on to theirs and beat them up either.

      I hope this clears up the confusion.

    42. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      All those things would be illegal

      When marriage is strictly a contract between two private parties (and Libertarians want everything to be contracts between two private parties), there is no incentive for any third parties (employers, service providers, etc.) to even recognize it, let alone respect it.

    43. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Chuckstar · · Score: 1

      Debates do not fall under that obligation. Debates are group interviews. A station can interview anyone they want. "Use" in that context generally relates to giving a candidate his own air time (whether paid or gratis) to do with as he/she pleases. So you cannot refuse to sell ad time to a candidate at the same rate as another candidate. You cannot give a candidate unmoderated air time (e.g. editorial speech at the end of a news segment) without giving the same air time to all candidates. But you are not required to provide the same amount of interview time (or any interview time) to all candidates.

    44. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then you would end up with an infinite number of people on TV during a debate. How does that serve the public good? That and the OP struck out on two of the criteria (fundraising *and* polling).

      That and the station can argue "we set the guidelines for all candidates and applied them equally".

    45. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Democrats: regulate business, don't regulate people's personal lives

      Weed comes under "personal lives" most of the time.

      I'm wondering where you live in which democrats do not try to regulate personal lives, because I'm in California, and the notion they do not try to do so is laughable.

    46. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Libertarians: Don't regulate people's personal lives, don't regulate business.

    47. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However the airways are owned by the commons and are licensed to them by the public.
      Restricted by a coercive government actually. Don't bring the social contract Libertarians piss on into this.

    48. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by tobiah · · Score: 1

      It's the public's airwaves.

      --
      "The ability to delude yourself may be an important survival tool" - Jane Wagner -
    49. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by CosmicMuse · · Score: 0

      Libertarians are not republicans.

      Yeah, you are. No government regulation of the "free market" (a mythical creature), no government regulation of private sector impact on the environment, no regulations on financial institutions, prohibitions on the government doing ANYTHING that the private sector can do, including education and health care, eliminating Social Security... guess which group shares those values with you 100%? You're embarrassed by Republican social values, which is a good thing, since hating on gays, women and minorities is a fairly disgusting thing, but that's about the only point where your parties diverge.

      Just because you're libertarian doesn't mean you want to shut down public schools and start selling missile launchers at the local walmart tomorrow.

      You need to go back and read your party's platform, because that's almost EXACTLY what they advocate. Their platform explicitly calls for shutting down public schools, and says there should be no criminal penalties for gun ownership. For someone who's advertising "climbing out of the political parties sand trap", you might want to remember that blind faith in ideology can exist in 3rd parties too.

    50. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Nocturnal+Deviant · · Score: 1

      to a certain extent they are...look at the lobbying history of their parent companies.

      --
      -Noc
    51. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by shiftless · · Score: 0

      Except Obama has arrested and imprisoned more drug users than Bush ever did.

      Republicans: fascists

      Democrats: fascists

    52. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by shiftless · · Score: 0

      Sorry, no, you're wrong. Ron Paul wants the government OUT of marriage entirely.

    53. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by shiftless · · Score: 0

      Marriage has been, and is always, a public statement of contract. It is basically civil in nature. Whatever religiosity that is thrown around it is mere window dressing. With this idea that the government should not be involved in validating marriages, you alienate *both* the religious nutjobs, and people like me who think one of the functions of government is to make things like contracts enforceable.

      LOL.

      So exactly how are you going to "enforce" a "marriage contract"?

    54. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by spongman · · Score: 1

      I wonder if it could be argued that the imbalance of airtime represented in this situation corresponds to a significant corporate investment in those candidates that do appear in the debate. In reality it's a political advertisement for those candidates. They get to argue their moslty identical positions and the excluded candidates do not get to respond. Sounds like an ad to me. I wonder how much 90minutes of ad time goes for these days?

    55. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Trying to paint Libertarians as Anarchists doesn't make you right. In fact it makes you that much more wrong.

      Most anarchists are "libertarian communists". I guess such a concept seems just weird in the USA.

    56. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by thebigmacd · · Score: 1

      For one thing it's an exclusivity contract, and bigamy is criminal...

    57. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Rinikusu · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately for me, I have. They're like little covens of Austrian Anarcho-Capitalism and when you find one, you find a dozen.

      --
      If you were me, you'd be good lookin'. - six string samurai
    58. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a Christian and Libertarian, I have to disagree. I personally think the government should not be involved in "marriage". I do however think civil unions should be handled by the government. This means: Straight, Gay, whatever, can get a civil union, recognized by the government, with the benefits/drawbacks that come with it. Marriage's are religious by definition, but do NOT have to be government sanctioned. I say, separation of church and state....have legal contracts, and religious contracts. So each religion can do whatever they want for marriage....it isn't a legal issue, just religious. For me, I would get/have both a civil union (government contract/recognition) and marriage (religious contract/recognition) with my wife.

      Everyone is happy, and the definitions are accurate. The government can still have its say for tax and legal purposes, and the religious community still practices its beliefs.

    59. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Maxwell'sSilverLART · · Score: 1

      Allow me to refine the statement, then. Speaking only for myself--though I suspect many will agree, I am not appointed as their mouthpiece--I've no problem with the government enforcing contracts. The issue is that the government has taken it upon itself to say that for this type of contract, we're putting very narrow qualifications on who is permitted to enter into the deal. Having such strict limitations is relatively rare, and in nearly all other cases, has been struck down as unconstitutional. Even in the same realm (marriage), we've struck down such restrictions as anti-miscegenation rules (see Loving v. Virginia, 388 U.S. 1 (1967)). Outside of marriage, there are almost no restrictions on who can enter into a contract; the few that exist tend to center on capacity. Individuals are free to come as pairs, small groups, or very large groups, with structures to allow all to act as a single entity; to allow one to make binding decisions for the others; to own property in common; to share in gain or loss; etc. In fact, we even have a name for such coming-together:

      Incorporation.

      --
      Moderate drunk! It's more fun that way!
    60. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by bmo · · Score: 1

      >incorporation

      But without government to make sure everybody honors that incorporation, then the incorporation is worth as much as you can put a gun behind it.

      You have substituted one contract for another, and you have done nothing but make things more complicated.

      The libertarian universe is nothing but a gedankenexperiment based on fantasy.

      --
      BMO

    61. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by bmo · · Score: 1

      > Marriage's are religious by definition,

      No, they're not. Atheists get married all the time. Are you now saying that all Atheist marriages are now invalid?

      > but do NOT have to be government sanctioned.

      The religious ceremony is already not sanctioned by the government. A marriage only counts if you've signed a marriage license.

      --
      BMO

    62. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Marriage (the word) is religious by definition (roots to the middle ages). Remember, I'm talking about Marriage specifically, which refers to the Judeo-Christian tradition. Look it up. It doesn't matter who does it. Atheists can also physically go through the act of communion, it doesn't make communion in general a non-religious act. It is a religious ceremony, that governments decided to honor/recognize. They took the name "marriage" to mean civil union, and allowed JoP to perform it.

      I agree the religious ceremony (wedding) is not sanctioned by the government,...I think that is how it should be. But, to say the religious ceremony doesn't "count" only shows which side of the religious fence you are on. I would say the opposite. Only the religious ceremony "counts" when talking about marriage. The paperwork/license, "counts" when talking about civil unions. The issue is, both ceremonies (signing courthouse papers & weddings) result in something both groups call marriage, but neither recognize as the same thing. One is civil, in the eyes of the government; one is religious, in the eyes of God. To me and my wife, we were not married until the ceremony at our Church, despite already having a piece of paper from the government saying we were. We only run into issues when we use the word marriage to refer to both items. Why not just separate the two?

    63. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Marriage's are religious by definition,

      No, they're not. Atheists get married all the time. Are you now saying that all Atheist marriages are now invalid?

      In the eyes of God, yes, it is invalid. In the eyes of the government, no, it is valid. See the issue? I don't think you actually understood what I was saying.

      I would say their civil union is valid, but they did not get married. Why would two Atheists ask for God to sanction and bless the union, and what Pastor/Minister would do that?

      If you aren't religious, then I can understand it being hard to see...I wish I had a good car analogy. Here goes... You know a car is a car...a truck is a truck...but you also know those people that call trucks...cars? "I want that car" as they point to an F150, etc. Then Ford starts selling their new F150 "car". WTF, its a truck, but since everyone is calling it a car, they are too now. Well now, it gets confusing. Which car has the biggest towing capacity? Is it the Buick or the F150? The F150 obviously tows more...but is it a car? Buick is clearly pissed off they can't advertise the biggest towing capacity anymore because the government decided the F150 is a car now. That person that wants the F150 car, doesn't notice the problem. The person trying to find a truck, or the biggest towing capacity car, is pissed! So lets just call a car a car, and a truck...a truck. Plus well its religion, so people get fired up anyways :)

      Wow that has to get a vote for the absolute worst car analogy ever on Slashdot. I'm ashamed to post it, but it is worth it just for the laugh!

      Oh, and if anyone is curious about my take on Gay's and Gay marriage? I don't really care too much...I mean, I don't think they should get "Married", in the sense the church needs to recognize it. But I have no objection to the government recognizing their civil union and affording them the same protection and rights as others. Gay or Straight, not much of my business. How God feels about it is what matters, he can deal with it after death how he chooses. In this life, I just try to be caring and a good person towards others, gay or not. Its not my place to condemn, even if I don't wish to partake.

    64. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On many issues libertarians are much more liberal than Democrats will ever be. Gay marriage for example... Libertarians don't even think marriage should be something the government has anything to do with. Mary a goat for all they care. That's between you and your religion.

      Let's not get too carried away now; I think most Libertarians would still care about all parties being capable of consent. So maybe group marriage would be OK, but marrying animals and children not so much.

      You're entirely missing the point. The government doesn't have to care if some whackjob says he's married to his cat or even his son. They can make sexual and other kinds of abuses between the whackjob and others illegal without saying anything about the word "marriage."

    65. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >. Libertarians don't even think marriage should be something the government has anything to do with.

      It's this idea and others that make the Libertarians look like loonies.

      Marriage has been, and is always, a public statement of contract. It is basically civil in nature. Whatever religiosity that is thrown around it is mere window dressing. With this idea that the government should not be involved in validating marriages, you alienate *both* the religious nutjobs, and people like me who think one of the functions of government is to make things like contracts enforceable.

      For glub's sake.

      --
      BMO

      You don't know a whole lot about history, do you? Marriage as a societal institution, both culturally and religious, is much older than any laws about it. Also, there's no reason two people who consider themselves married can't enter into a legally binding contract just like two business partners. Laws specifically about marriage are not necessary to make such contracts enforceable.

    66. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought they were Republicans who want to legalize weed.

      These days the Libertarians sound less crazy than the Republicans, thanks to the Teabaggers.

      It hasn't always been that way.

      The Tea Party's focus on reducing government regulation and intervention is a more Libertarian attitude than most of the Republican Party.

    67. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >. Libertarians don't even think marriage should be something the government has anything to do with.

      It's this idea and others that make the Libertarians look like loonies.

      Marriage has been, and is always, a public statement of contract. It is basically civil in nature. Whatever religiosity that is thrown around it is mere window dressing. With this idea that the government should not be involved in validating marriages, you alienate *both* the religious nutjobs, and people like me who think one of the functions of government is to make things like contracts enforceable.

      For glub's sake.

      --
      BMO

      Then have people wishing to get married form a corporation, just like any other group looking to form an economic union.

    68. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by bmo · · Score: 1

      >In the eyes of God, yes, it is invalid.

      Who's god?

      The Christian God?

      Marriage predates Christianity. Marriage is independent of religious preference.

      >.I mean, I don't think they should get "Married",

      The church I grew up in, the Episcopal Church, aka C of E, American Version recognizes gay marriages.

      Grow up.

      --
      BMO

    69. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gay marriage for example... Libertarians don't even think marriage should be something the government has anything to do with. Mary a goat for all they care. That's between you and your religion.

      Marriage is one of the oldest common-law institutions on the planet, and it has a huge impact on things like insurance, taxes and legal rights. It's religion that shouldn't have anything to do with it, at least when it comes to establishing the legal guidelines.

    70. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Mary a goat for all they care. That's between you and your religion. ... and your goat, presumably.

    71. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      One can recognize the contract inherent in marriage without licensing marriage.

      You don't have to get a license from a government official to enter into other civil contracts, why marriage?

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    72. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      Uh... at least locally, the Tea Party was started by libertarians, and eventually co-opted by the religious right and social conservatives in general.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    73. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      > I have yet to hear a single Libertarian claim that anarchy is a good thing.

      Anarchy is a good thing.

      Anarcho-Capitalists are in fact libertarians. All libertarians are not anarchists.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    74. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by bmo · · Score: 1

      >You don't have to get a license from a government official to enter into other civil contracts, why marriage?

      Because there are laws against marrying your sister, laws against concealing blood borne illnesses, etc.

      This shit is obvious, man.

      Unless you *like* having more people with recessive genes.

      --
      BMO

    75. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by lwsimon · · Score: 1

      > Because there are laws against marrying your sister

      Why? Why not make it illegal to reproduce with you sister instead? I agree that it's repugnant, but if they're sterile it doesn't hurt anyone but them.

      > laws against concealing blood borne illnesses, etc.

      Oh, you mean "fraud"?

      > Unless you *like* having more people with recessive genes.

      I'm not even going to respond to the strawman argument.

      --
      Learn about Photography Basics.
    76. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The usual form of the idea is that marriage in anything like its current form should be replaced by some kind of tax-efficient n-ary partnership with no membership restrictions other than that the members can enter into a contract - you could form a "marriage" with your siblings, or parents, or a bunch of mates, and usually have no interdependence beyond joint responsibility for the house, appliances, and utility bills.

      Child custody is usually supposed to make no distinction about whether the parents were married, but instead be the responsibility solely of the biological parents unless the father[1] gives up his "share" of the child (with the consent of the mother[2]), or all the current legal parents accept another person as a joint parent[3]. Most of those aspects exist in at least some US states: the key changes are that the father has custody rights whether or not he is married to the mother (which isn't the case at present in some states), and, often that equal-shared custody should be the presumption in the absence of specific evidence that that would be inappropriate.

      Alimony is generally considered to be an orthogonal problem to property settlements, to be handled by separate contracts, although most proponents are either in favour of promoting more child-care places (which is a net benefit to everyone provided kids aren't harmed by being in child care) or are anti-natalist and think that the harmful effects of being a primary caregiver are a person's own silly fault for being a parent.

      Typically supporters of that kind of marraige-lite also want to eliminate mutual responsibility for debts incurred by single members of the partnership (which is an obviously unfair aspect of current marriage law in some states).

      [1] Theoretically, the mother could give up her "share" to the father (i.e. be a surrogate mother, but I suspect that would be less common because pregnancy is a PITA and she has the option of abortion)

      [2] I.e. he is a sperm donor.

      [3] That's called things like second-parent adoption.

    77. Re:Isn't this what Libertarians WANT? by bmo · · Score: 1

      And after reading this as a response to my original message, I have to conclude that libertarian thought is a gedankenexperiment that exists only in an entirely fictional universe.

      To make a direct analogy:

      Libertarianism is to social structure and dynamics as perpetual motion is to physics.

      --
      BMO

  12. A couple problems by MyLongNickName · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There are a couple problems with your story

    1. $50,000 is not a high amount and doesn't require corporate donations. I've seen missionaires collect more money from friends and family than that.
    2. Why are you posting to Slashdot about this? I may not like ABC's position, but have no control over it.
    3. Why did Slashdot accept this? They aren't even close to their mission statement on this

    --
    See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    1. Re:A couple problems by h4rr4r · · Score: 2, Insightful

      1. You are correct
      2. Even more correct.
      3. Because we have a cadre of resident ayn rand nutters. They love anything that means they get to feel superior and blaming their problems on others. They hate being responsible for anything, even more so another human being. They like to talk about personal responsibility, but have no real interest in it. They will forgo insurance and rip me and you off by getting free care at the ER. They talk about how being forced to get car insurance is a moral outrage, but would still drive with no way to cover any costs incurred in an accident.

    2. Re:A couple problems by Anonymous+Psychopath · · Score: 1

      There are a couple problems with your story

      1. $50,000 is not a high amount and doesn't require corporate donations. I've seen missionaires collect more money from friends and family than that.
      2. Why are you posting to Slashdot about this? I may not like ABC's position, but have no control over it.
      3. Why did Slashdot accept this? They aren't even close to their mission statement on this

      1. Why should there be any minimum amount? Isn't setting a financial threshold just affirming we're only interested in politicians that are good at raising capital? Is that what we want?
      2. Because we have an opportunity to do something about this ridiculous policy but letting this ABC affiliate know how stupid this policy is. Or not, it's your choice.
      3. This falls under "stuff that matters". At least it does to me.

      --

      Eagles may soar, but weasels don't get sucked into jet engines.

    3. Re:A couple problems by omegadot · · Score: 1

      This and I'm rather suspicious when someone generalizes "trumped up reasons" then follows that by something that is pretty damn relevant to a TV show. This seems like a bit of a stunt to me... I'm always happy to see more contributions to the public forum and I hope you meet with success or at least make some contribution, but this isn't it.

    4. Re:A couple problems by AwesomeMcgee · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm sorry but; 50g's is a lot of money. Missionaries collecting that just from family and friends? I take it you live in Manhattan? I come from a fairly intelligent professional family, but none of my family members *own* a home more less have thousands of dollars burning holes in their pockets. Any extra cash laying around from my family and friends is in their rainy day fund because they need one or being slowly saved to get something a little pleasant, think 50 dollars a month until they can afford a nice big screen tv after a full year. Not the kind of money that would ever amount to 50 grand.

      People with means are apparantly clueless about what the average household revenue and costs are just to stay afloat.

    5. Re:A couple problems by afidel · · Score: 1

      My guess is since it's a tv station they set the limit for a "legitimate" candidate (ie one who can afford to buy advertising time on their station).

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    6. Re:A couple problems by larry+bagina · · Score: 1
      Not only that, the OP has no understanding whatsoever about corporate donations. Corporations are limited to $2500 per candidate, same as a person. PACs and party committees can give $5,000 so being libertarian puts him at a disadvantage there.

      Maybe he means Citizens United. Those aren't donations, they're independent expenditures and aren't counted as a donation (and you as an individual aren't limited, either).

      --
      Do you even lift?

      These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

    7. Re:A couple problems by Desler · · Score: 1

      Then if he can't raise it then he has no actual chance to win. If he really did poll 7% he could easily make the $50,000 even if only a fraction of those people donated.

    8. Re:A couple problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since it's no big deal to you and your high-roller missionary friends, please send me a "not high amount" like $50,000 - preferably in small unmarked bills.

      Signed, the other 99%.

    9. Re:A couple problems by thomst · · Score: 1

      MyLongNickName complained:

      There are a couple problems with your story

      1. $50,000 is not a high amount and doesn't require corporate donations. I've seen missionaires collect more money from friends and family than that.
      2. Why are you posting to Slashdot about this? I may not like ABC's position, but have no control over it.
      3. Why did Slashdot accept this? They aren't even close to their mission statement on this

      That's not "a couple problems". It's THREE problems.

      That's the problem with /. Apparently even nerds can't do math ...

      --
      Check out my novel.
    10. Re:A couple problems by AwesomeMcgee · · Score: 1

      I'm not disagreeing about that, I'm just disagreeing with the concept that 50k is pocket lint. That's just obtuse.

    11. Re:A couple problems by gruber76 · · Score: 1

      1. Possibly. How big and rich is the district? (Okay, turns out I was born there. Median income $70k with 600k people...)
      2. We own those air waves. We should not relinquish that.
      3. Posted in the government section and meeting pretty much all of the criteria in the FAQ (well, certainly not neutral.) Other than broadcast media being a little on the old-guard for technology, I think this is reasonable.

    12. Re:A couple problems by desdinova+216 · · Score: 1

      but the only real requirement should "on the ballot"

    13. Re:A couple problems by Antipater · · Score: 1
      --
      Everything is better with chainsaws.
    14. Re:A couple problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Either that, or he's one of those non-traditionalists who think that "a couple" means 2-3.

    15. Re:A couple problems by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I was confused because the headline and start of the summary implied it was the lack of corporate contributions that meant he was excluded, and that would indeed suck, but then the rest of the summary and linked "stunning email" also only says "campaign contributions", nothing about them having to come from a corporation.

      But then he turns right around and says that of course he doesn't have the money, because he's not accepting corporate donations.

      *raises hand*
      Um, Mr. Candidate, shouldn't a campaign which is explicitly refusing corporate donations have, I dunno, some other method of acquiring funds to run a campaign and pay for those ads? Like, already, before the televised debate issue even came up? Why is your response "Duh, of course I don't have any donations!" Shouldn't that kind of amount be easy for a "strong candidate"? Were you planning on running this whole campaign out of pocket?

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    16. Re:A couple problems by NatasRevol · · Score: 1

      I wonder if they accept bitcoins.

      --
      There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
    17. Re:A couple problems by MightyMartian · · Score: 2

      Let's put it this way. A would-be Congresscritter who wants to play with the big boys at the debate, but who can't raise $50,000, is like the would-be ace pilot who can't even afford a pair of aviator's sunglasses.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    18. Re:A couple problems by niado · · Score: 1

      Well, in his district about 300,000 people voted in 2004. 7% of voters would be about 21,000 people. I'm not sure what percentage of voters actually donate to congressional campaigns (a quick google raised no useful information), but I would bet that it's very small. Let's be generous and say 10% of voters donate...soooo 210 of his supporters would have to average around $238 each. I don't see this happening in the real world.

    19. Re:A couple problems by niado · · Score: 1

      3. Because we have a cadre of resident ayn rand nutters. They love anything that means they get to feel superior and blaming their problems on others. They hate being responsible for anything, even more so another human being. They like to talk about personal responsibility, but have no real interest in it. They will forgo insurance and rip me and you off by getting free care at the ER. They talk about how being forced to get car insurance is a moral outrage, but would still drive with no way to cover any costs incurred in an accident.

      I thought this was an insightful observation myself, though it seems the "resident ayn rand nutters" got the mod points today.

    20. Re:A couple problems by Randle_Revar · · Score: 1

      "a couple" is not always a synonym for two

    21. Re:A couple problems by publiclurker · · Score: 1

      That depends on what we are talking about. For general pocket change, it's a lot, but for running an actual political campaign, it's not.

    22. Re:A couple problems by funkboy · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry but; 50g's is a lot of money. Missionaries collecting that just from family and friends? I take it you live in Manhattan?

      My brother has raised about that much over the last few years for a charity he runs that builds schools & orphanages in rural Africa, and he lives in suburban Virginia.

      I think the OP's point wasn't that he *couldn't* raise $50k, it was that he *didn't feel he needed to* until ABC put up this arbitrary barrier to being included in their debate.

    23. Re:A couple problems by NoMaster · · Score: 1

      There are a couple problems with your story

      1. $50,000 is not a high amount and doesn't require corporate donations. I've seen missionaires collect more money from friends and family than that.
      2. Why are you posting to Slashdot about this? I may not like ABC's position, but have no control over it.
      3. Why did Slashdot accept this? They aren't even close to their mission statement on this

      That's not "a couple problems". It's THREE problems.

      No, he's right. There are a couple of problems (1 & 2) with the OPs story.

      The third is a problem with Slashdot...

      --
      What part of "a well regulated militia" do you not understand?
    24. Re:A couple problems by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      None of your family own homes? Over 2/3rd of housing units in America are owned not rented.

      And if a person can't find 1,000 people willing to pony up $50, that is not a sign of a strong candidate. 70% of American households have cable TV with an average bill of $128/month. So, please don't tell me how the average citizen can't afford anything...

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    25. Re:A couple problems by sedmonds · · Score: 1

      You lost a factor of 10 in there. 10% of 21,000 would be 2,100, donating an average of $23.80 each.

    26. Re:A couple problems by tqk · · Score: 1

      Perhaps it has something to do with the fact that Rand wasn't libertarian. Maybe it's just the phrase "Ayn Rand nutters" pretty much screams flamebait, not serious knowlegable discussion. If he's that far off the mark on those two simple matters, perhaps he's never even bothered to read a wikipage on any of this, and is just whinging on second hand hearsay.

      --
      "Tongue tied and twisted, just an Earth bound misfit ..." -- Pink Floyd.
    27. Re:A couple problems by thomst · · Score: 1

      Randle_Revar protested:

      "a couple" is not always a synonym for two

      I see that Merriam-Webster agrees with you: "4: an indefinite small number : few <a couple of days ago>

      Shame on them.

      --
      Check out my novel.
    28. Re:A couple problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where do you live? In a fairly intelligent household with where my wife and I both work, but neither are "professionals" (I didn't finish college, she did, but works outside the field for crap pay) and we can certainly save more than $50/mo. I bought a home a few years back and already have close to 40% equity, bought a new (2 years used) car, and will have it paid off in 8 more months. Her student loans are getting paid off very quickly (4-5 years to pay them all off), while still saving 10% for retirement, and 10% for rainy day funds and future investments (i want to buy rentals). I don't understand people who make more money than I do, and always claim to be poor. I see it at my work all the time. Co-workers who make more, and their wive's make more than mine, but are always broke. Take some personal responsibility and stop eating out all the damn time, smoking, drinking, buying big screen tv's, and keeping credit card debt at stupid rates.

      Stupid people broke our economy. Yes, banks handing out home loans to unemployed/underemployed didn't help....but who the f_ck accepts that loan? Who takes out $120k worth of CC debt with a $50k/year job? It is still happening. I personally know nearly a half a dozen people that bought a hbome in the last 12 months with under 10% down, and they don't make much money. I have no idea how they got the loans, but the rates are under 5%, even with crappy credit history, low income, and low down payments.

    29. Re:A couple problems by niado · · Score: 1

      Thank you!

      Math (read: basic arithmetic) is hard. =[

    30. Re:A couple problems by AwesomeMcgee · · Score: 1

      I didn't say they rented, I said they didn't own, ownership means you have the deed. The bank own the vast majority of those 2/3rd you're referring to.

    31. Re:A couple problems by MyLongNickName · · Score: 1

      Ah, you are one of those people who use the term ownership incorrectly and then use it to confuse other points. Your friends who have mortgages own their houses. Your definition is wrong if you think a mortgage means I don't own something.

      Your frieds own their house. They also have a loan that uses the house that they own as collateral. If they didn't own the house, they would not be able to use the house as collateral. The bank or other institution cannot interfere with your friends' ownership or enjoyment of the house in any way. if your friends fail to pay, then there is a process by which the bank starts a foreclosure in order to take the house away.

      Saying your friends don't own a house because of a mortgage is like saying I don't own a house because the government could claim imminent domain. Both would be incorrect.

      --
      See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
    32. Re:A couple problems by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think you're apparently clueless about the costs of politics. A poster above worked out how much he would need from each of the people in the 7% who voted for him, it was <$2.50. It is not, by any stretch of the imagination, a lot of money for a serious political candidate.

  13. Huh by kamapuaa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is ABC's decision. As a Libertarian surely you wouldn't want to interfere with the choice that a private company made.

    With a 0% chance of winning, basically you would be wasting people's time. Similarly, Jill Stein isn't a part of the presidential debate.

    --
    Slashdot: providing anti-social weirdos a soapbox, since 1997.
    1. Re:Huh by jdastrup · · Score: 2

      I agree with your first statement about not interfering with the private company's choice. But, I disagree about wasting people's time. I would bet that many people, especially conservatives that only vote Republican because that's what they think conservatives are supposed to do, would be surprised and possibly learn that there are other options besides the Republicans. In some ways, that's what the Tea Party was all about, unfortunately it had no real leadership.

    2. Re:Huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      All the debates are 100% waste of time.
      What's your point?

    3. Re:Huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As a Libertarian surely you wouldn't want to interfere with the choice that a private company made.

      Libertarians are only against violent interference.

    4. Re:Huh by Omnifarious · · Score: 5, Insightful

      This is ABC's decision. As a Libertarian surely you wouldn't want to interfere with the choice that a private company made.

      Ahh, yes, that old trotted out stupid fallacy. If you don't want a government to interfere in a decision, that must mean you think every decision made by a corporate entity should be met with a tub full of KY-jelly and a re-enactment of the scene from goatse.

      For your information, it is possible to object to a decision, or even something someone said, without asking a government to back up your objection with violence. It's even possible to arrange a boycott, or a protest outside a studio, or any number of other private or popular actions in protest of a decision you don't like, yet none of those require the invocation of coercive force.

      Not that I'm really much of a liberatarian in many ways. But this stupidity always really irritates me.

    5. Re:Huh by Guppy06 · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Libertarians are only against interference that doesn't work in their favor.

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

      You've got the wrong idea. From what I'm seeing here this guy isn't asking for any government interference. He's drawing attention to what's going on. In this way an informed public will have a better understanding what who backs who. I'm all for this. I believe in the power of boycott. I say boycott the station/network in question by boycotting their sponsers. This is the power of the free market.
       
      And a candidate doesn't need to win to make it worth his or her time. A spoiler candidate shows a general disinterest from the public. That forces the larger parties to reconsider who they run, what their platform is and how they present that platform. This does make a difference if you can do it.
       
      So, it's his decision and his right to say whatever he wants on the matter. It's your decision on how to spend your dollars and how those dollars support entities that may not have the public's best interests in mind. Spoiler candidates can and do work.
       
      So basically, you're wrong. Have a nice day, douche.

    7. Re:Huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny, pretty sure ABC isn't purely a private company when it comes to political debates.

      See, they have this agreement with the FCC...

    8. Re:Huh by desdinova+216 · · Score: 1

      The TL;DR version of that is catch-22

    9. Re:Huh by amicusNYCL · · Score: 0

      With a 0% chance of winning, basically you would be wasting people's time. Similarly, Jill Stein isn't a part of the presidential debate.

      I don't know what the official term is for that logical fallacy you just demonstrated, but the major reason that people like Gary Johnson and Jill Stein have effectively no chance of winning is because they aren't included in the debates. Many people have no clue that there are even more than 2 candidates running, because those 2 are the only ones who get coverage. They aren't excluded from the debates because they probably won't win, they are excluded because the Ds and Rs don't like competition and, because of that exclusion, they probably won't win. I still see people saying "well, I really don't like this guy, so I'm going to vote for the other guy that I dislike slightly less". There are other people running, people who deserve your votes more than either major party. Go to isidewith.com and figure out who fits your ideas the best.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    10. Re:Huh by thoth · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      This is ABC's decision. As a Libertarian surely you wouldn't want to interfere with the choice that a private company made.

      Ahh, yes, that old trotted out stupid fallacy. If you don't want a government to interfere in a decision, that must mean you think every decision made by a corporate entity should be met with a tub full of KY-jelly and a re-enactment of the scene from goatse.

      What fallacy? The poster that brought up government interference here was you. And isn't essentially correct that libertarians believe that a private corporation can do what it wants outside of illegal activities? So their choice to exclude him from debates - too damn bad. I don't remember a Constitutional right to appear in debates.

    11. Re:Huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, and Republicans and Democrats don't do that. Clearly we should all continue to vote for them. Change==bad, scary, terrorism, etc.

    12. Re:Huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Poster #41635229 here.

      My suggestion could be an Amendment 1 violation. However, if we apply it to free OTA TV stations, it could be argued that it is justified.

      Still worth the -1 points. I hope someone mods me back to zero though. I hope my point isn't lost on too many people. It is a serious issue.

    13. Re:Huh by lexman098 · · Score: 1

      In some ways, that's what the Tea Party was all about, unfortunately it had no real leadership.

      Yes and no. It had Sarah Palin, but your point still stands.

    14. Re:Huh by shentino · · Score: 1

      This is ABC blatantly using their status as tinpot dictator to keep out someone they can't control once nominated.

    15. Re:Huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's appealing to a public forum and evoking the civic right of politicians to be heard, in regards to a business decision ABC made.

    16. Re:Huh by dargaud · · Score: 1

      With a 0% chance of winning

      Why is it always about WINNING ? Why can't you just influence the outcome ? For one winner, everybody else is a looser.

      --
      Non-Linux Penguins ?
    17. Re:Huh by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      What fallacy? The poster that brought up government interference here was you. And isn't essentially correct that libertarians believe that a private corporation can do what it wants outside of illegal activities? So their choice to exclude him from debates - too damn bad. I don't remember a Constitutional right to appear in debates.

      The fallacy that because you don't believe in government interference in corporate affairs, you don't believe that corporations should ever be criticized for doing anything that isn't illegal.

      No, of course, there's no constitutional right to appear in a debate. And if you feel like it's fine for them to exclude him, that's great too. But implying that he should feel just hunky-dory about being excluded because all decisions made by a corporation are automatically above any sort of reproach at all is ridiculous and wrong.

    18. Re:Huh by steelfood · · Score: 1

      It's even possible to arrange a boycott, or a protest outside a studio, or any number of other private or popular actions in protest of a decision you don't like,

      But real life doesn't really work like that. When you have plenty of time on your hands, you sure can go protesting. But when you have a job (or need one), you're too busy putting food on your table. And when you have kids, you're too busy dealing with them. Protesting takes time and energy, which some people may have in sufficient abundance, but most constructive members of society do not.

      Boycotting works sometimes. Primarily, it works when there are choices. For example, many here (myself include) have an active boycott against Sony. I even discourage others from buying Sony. I also know people who've stopped purchasing gas from BP stations as a form of protest. But it doesn't work then there are no choices, or when the additional effort from the boycott is more than trivial, or when the information necessary to do the boycott is not available (How do you know the components of your camera isn't made by Sony? How do you know the plastic fork you're using is not made from oil refined at a BP plant? In fact, if there were no regulations, you couldn't even be sure what your alternatives are or even who you're boycotting.) Besides which, nobody's going to jump through hoops or put their lives on hold for what, ideology?

      So yes, for the most part, it's either put up or shut up. Because you individually lack any power to take on a large corporation by yourself. And if you're the only one affected, nobody else cares enough to stand with you, at least not if they're not getting something out of it.

      Be glad this is television, and the worst that can happen is a loss of some popularity numbers. Just look at the recent outbreak of meningitis. The lack of strong regulatory controls for such situations means people die. Yeah, the free market will put that company out of business. But you or your loved one will still be dead. The free market isn't going to fix that minor detail.

      Libertarianism and marxist communism are opposite extremes of the same spectrum. Most people already recognize one is not practical. I cannot for the life of me understand how they haven't realized that the other isn't practical either for the same reasons.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    19. Re:Huh by AcidPenguin9873 · · Score: 1

      The fallacy that because you don't believe in government interference in corporate affairs, you don't believe that corporations should ever be criticized for doing anything that isn't illegal.

      Alright. Libertarianism states that if enough people don't like how things are done, the free market will fix them. In this case, you're supposed to either start a new corporation to compete with the existing one, or convince one of their competitors to do things differently such that the existing corporation either goes out of business or also changes. Those are the options that are consistent with the libertarian ideology.

      Put into context, this guy's options are to start his own TV station, or convince one of the other, competing stations in that market to host their own debate with him on it (or get enough people to say that they're going to stop watching that ABC affiliate so that the lose enough ad revenue to change).

    20. Re:Huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man you are dumb.

    21. Re:Huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, where will libertarians allow us to demonstrate again?

    22. Re:Huh by thoth · · Score: 1

      The fallacy that because you don't believe in government interference in corporate affairs, you don't believe that corporations should ever be criticized for doing anything that isn't illegal.

      I hadn't heard this new hippy libertarian attitude towards corporations - criticizing them! Whoa I thought libertarians worshipped the almighty free market which not only ignores everything outside supply/demand, but consists of amoral unthinking fictitious legal persons called "corporations" which only seek to maximize profit and ignore all criticism. What's next, organizing a protest and inciting a strike?!

      Translation: fuck libertarians in general. The non-hypocritical way to fix this in a manner consistent with his political philosophy is to create a competing corporation. If he's going to govern according to a set of ideals then he should use those same ideals to fix this predicament and show us that libertarianism actually works somewhere at a level larger than some guy with his own property and chicken coop out in the sticks.

      Or he could just get 5000 people to pony up $10. If he can't do that his candidacy is a total joke anyway.

    23. Re:Huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Believe it or not, there are libertarians who believe the ability to incorporate at all should be strictly limited, and corporate dissolution should be liberally applied to companies who break the law.

      Translation: fuck everyone and their mother, because almost everyone with a relatively informed opinion is hypocritical on some level and hypocritical on a higher level based on some bullshit assumption of what their "actual" stance is according to a random person on an Internet forum.

    24. Re:Huh by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      Getting people to boycott the station or write letters or otherwise give them really bad publicity is also a perfectly valid option.

    25. Re:Huh by Raenex · · Score: 1

      In this case, you're supposed to either start a new corporation to compete with the existing one, or convince one of their competitors to do things differently such that the existing corporation either goes out of business or also changes. Those are the options that are consistent with the libertarian ideology.

      Libertarians also believe in free speech.

    26. Re:Huh by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      The anonymous coward who replied to you said it as good or better than I could've.

      I'm not much of a libertarian, but you have let your hatred of an ideology blind you to what it's actually about.

    27. Re:Huh by Omnifarious · · Score: 1

      Believe it or not, there are libertarians who believe the ability to incorporate at all should be strictly limited, and corporate dissolution should be liberally applied to companies who break the law.

      Yeah, libertarian or not, I'm in that camp. A modern corporation is a state sponsored way to dodge responsibility while still wielding vast authority.

    28. Re:Huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He is not trying to get the government to force ABC to do something. That would be anti-libertarian.

      He is asking the public to speak out. That is the libertarian way to do things.

      I'm not a libertarian. I'm an anarchist.

    29. Re:Huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm writing letters to ABC to tell them that I support their decision to ignore the Libertarian candidate.

    30. Re:Huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If ABC weren't using public airwaves, the use of which compels a contractual agreement to equal political coverage, a libertarian might be hypocritical in making a complaint. Unfortunately for you and your utter lack of understanding of libertarianism.. ABC does use public airwaves.

    31. Re:Huh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Ahh, yes, that old trotted out stupid fallacy. If you don't want a government to interfere in a decision, that must mean you think every decision made by a corporate entity should be met with a tub full of KY-jelly and a re-enactment of the scene from goatse."

      Of course not. But it shouldn't be regulated against, no, never.

    32. Re:Huh by Magius_AR · · Score: 1

      Yes and no. It had Sarah Palin, but your point still stands.

      Nope, the OP was correct. The Tea Party had no leadership. By the time of Palin, it was already co-opted.

  14. misleading title by danlip · · Score: 2

    You shouldn't need corporate donations to reach the $50,000 mark. You could do it with $5000 people donating $10 each. That's 0.076% of the Massachusetts population. I think it is a fairly reasonable concept that if you can't do that you are not a serious candidate.

    1. Re:misleading title by Talderas · · Score: 2

      Hmmm.... where can I get some $5000 people. I would like to breed them for $5000 babies to sell.

      --
      "Lack of speed can be overcome. In the worst case by patience." --Znork
    2. Re:misleading title by Antipater · · Score: 1

      They're don't exist yet. We're only what, three generations removed from the $6,000,000 man? The gene pool needs more time for the value to spread around.

      --
      Everything is better with chainsaws.
    3. Re:misleading title by AwesomeMcgee · · Score: 1

      Whether or not your post had a point, I like reading it as though it didn't and you were just interjecting a non-sequitor, for which it is a magnificent one.

    4. Re:misleading title by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      So begging for money = serious candidate.

      Holy crap. What country is this?

    5. Re:misleading title by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Like any other country with democratic elections. If you can't even muster sufficient support to raise some cash, how precisely do you propose to actually win an election? Hanging chads?

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    6. Re:misleading title by gr8_phk · · Score: 1

      You shouldn't need corporate donations to reach the $50,000 mark. You could do it with $5000 people donating $10 each. That's 0.076% of the Massachusetts population. I think it is a fairly reasonable concept that if you can't do that you are not a serious candidate.

      Perhaps if they hadn't excluded him, he'd become a serious candidate. Perhaps being on the ballot should be enough - there are some hoops to jump through, don't you need X number of supporters or some such? I can't imagine any old dork can just register and be on the ballot. He made the legal hurdles to be a candidate, so to exclude him is pure partisanship.

    7. Re:misleading title by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Discussing the issues? Rather than advertise with half truths?

      It doesn't actually take money to do that.

    8. Re:misleading title by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      It does if you want to do it on TV.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    9. Re:misleading title by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      The title isn't just misleading, it is an outright lie. It is the type of the thing that would make me NOT want to vote for this person. (I'm assuming the submitter makes the title?)
      The ABC affiliate decided not to include this person because he wasn't what they considered a serious candidate. He didn't raise enough cash nor had a high enough approval rating. Even 7% is fairly low. It doesn't appear as if the reason was he didn't accept corporate donations (which is what the title claims)
      In his defense, it would have been nice for the affiliate to have published the rules earlier. But if he is serious about running, then go out and raise more cash. Drum up more support. I'm not sure what he wants us to do about it.
      From TFA "I don't got it. Deliberately. I am refusing all corporate donations" I don't exactly see how not having $50K and accepting corporate donations are the same. Does it mean you aren't qualified? No, but not having enough money to run a campaign shows you aren't serious about running. They've decided to run a serious campaign costs at least $50K. They don't want EVERYONE at the debate, just the serious contenders. Perhaps you can show them you can run an effective campaign with less money. But don't jump to conspiracy conclusions.
      I can't argue to much about the poll numbers, and the independent polls. But again it comes down to the serious contenders. Again, they aren't looking for a room full of runners, they want the 2 or 3 top runners. It doesn't sound like you are a top runner. Perhaps if you had some of that $50K you didn't get, you could be a top runner?
      Can you buck the system? Sure, if you try hard. But whining about it, and jumping to conspiracy conclusions isn't the way to do it. Campaign harder.

    10. Re:misleading title by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

      Says a guy that's never adopted. Babies aren't $5k. Even internationally, they're closer to $20k.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    11. Re:misleading title by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like any other country with democratic elections. If you can't even muster sufficient support to raise some cash, how precisely do you propose to actually win an election? Hanging chads?

      You shouldn't pretend to know how "any other country with democratic elections" does it, when clearly you don't. The amount of money a candidate can collect is far more important in US elections than most other countries. Other countries see the result it has in the US, and make laws to avoid ending up in the same situation.

  15. That sucks! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sounds like you're trying to walk the straight and narrow. ABC can go fuck themselves.

    Good luck dude!

  16. ABC is a private business? by Bookwyrm · · Score: 0

    I rather thought ABC is a private business, so from a Libertarian point of view, I would think they could decide whatever they want as far as who to include on their own debate?

    Or, if you are not accepting corporate donations, why are you interested in going on a debate that is essentially sponsored by a corporation -- i.e. ABC -- and their advertisers?

    Unless there is something else here, this sounds a bit petulant.

    1. Re:ABC is a private business? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Yawn, why are strawmen arguments being up modded?

      Libertarians would be against the government regulating private decisions. They do not have a problem with citizens pressuring private companies who have made decisions they don't like. And even this is a gross simplification, because libertarians are not against all regulation.

    2. Re:ABC is a private business? by ThatsMyNick · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I rather thought ABC is a private business, so from a Libertarian point of view, I would think they could decide whatever they want as far as who to include on their own debate?

      As a libertarian he would not support government intervention (though laws, FCC mandates, etc) in these debates, but as far I can see that is not what he is asking for.

      Or, if you are not accepting corporate donations, why are you interested in going on a debate that is essentially sponsored by a corporation -- i.e. ABC -- and their advertisers?

      He doesnt hate corporations (atleast thats my opinion of what he believes in). He hates corporate money in politics. There is a difference between the two.

    3. Re:ABC is a private business? by Anonymous+Psychopath · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I rather thought ABC is a private business, so from a Libertarian point of view, I would think they could decide whatever they want as far as who to include on their own debate?

      Or, if you are not accepting corporate donations, why are you interested in going on a debate that is essentially sponsored by a corporation -- i.e. ABC -- and their advertisers?

      Unless there is something else here, this sounds a bit petulant.

      Creating legislation forcing ABC to permit his participation in the debate would be against Libertarian principals. Applying public pressure to revise their policy is not. I don't think you really understand Libertarian principals at all.

      --

      Eagles may soar, but weasels don't get sucked into jet engines.

    4. Re:ABC is a private business? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From a Libertarian point of view, he could set up his own radio transmitter and broadcast. But the airwaves are a government regulated monopoly.

    5. Re:ABC is a private business? by Desler · · Score: 1

      That's great, but there requirement just said $50,000 in donations. It neither said nor implied that he needed to take corporate money. If he can't get $50,000 from people to donate to his campaign or get more than 10% in the polls he has no chance to win.

    6. Re:ABC is a private business? by ThatsMyNick · · Score: 1

      I agree with you on both points, I was just answering to GP's point about why he wants to be on the debate, run by ABC, funded by corporations.

    7. Re:ABC is a private business? by afidel · · Score: 1, Insightful

      He doesnt hate corporations (atleast thats my opinion of what he believes in). He hates corporate money in politics. There is a difference between the two.

      Huh? How can you be a libertarian and be against corporate money in politics? I mean the Citizens United decision is almost exactly a page out of libertarian philosophy, a corporation is a collection of people who have the right to assemble their money and use it to buy advertising (aka speech) in the free market. Anything blocking corporate donations would require the force of law aka government interference which is surely something libertarians are against.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    8. Re:ABC is a private business? by Bookwyrm · · Score: 1

      I can't tell what he's asking for, or what he actually believes. I think your opinion about what he believes in might be true, but who knows?

    9. Re:ABC is a private business? by ThatsMyNick · · Score: 1

      Ok, let me rephrase that, I did not mean that he wants to ban corporate money in politics (or may be he does, I dont know, but that is not what I meant in my comment). He does not want corporate money to influence him and his decisions and he doesnt want to depend on corporate money for basically everything he does. Irrespective of your political views, I think it is a decent opinion to hold.

    10. Re:ABC is a private business? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What the fuck? I've seen like 10 posts like yours already, I'm not a Libertarian, but he's not saying it should be illegal for them to do this. He's interested in going to the debate because he wants to debate I don't see how that contradicts his views. Just because someone's a libertarian doesn't mean that they have to accept whenever anyone fucks them over.

    11. Re:ABC is a private business? by SydShamino · · Score: 1

      At the same time, a corporation is a collection of people who have been granted special exceptions to the sole proprietorship tax code and legal liability code. The default for legal taxation is that everyone pays, so if an assembly wishes to incorporate, it can and should give up its right to participate in the political process. The same people are most welcome to form a second assembly which does not incorporate and thus can do whatever political activities it wishes. But the first one can't fund the second as the first is banned from politics in exchange for favorable tax code.

      This is the same as is already done with non-profit organizations. Why hasn't this already been extended to corporations? Oh yeah, greed.

      --
      It doesn't hurt to be nice.
    12. Re:ABC is a private business? by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      I rather thought ABC is a private business, so from a Libertarian point of view, I would think they could decide whatever they want as far as who to include on their own debate?

      Sure, they can. But that doesn't mean you can't point out that they didn't include someone?
      He isn't asking for government intervention. He just wants a fair shot with the big boys.

    13. Re:ABC is a private business? by Bookwyrm · · Score: 1

      Uh, what? If he wants to play with the big boys, he ought to be a big boy. That's like saying everyone ought to get a fair shot to be on an Olympic athletic team -- and, in fact, everyone does, but you have to be able to qualify. He cannot even raise $50K in non-corporate donations, and wants to play with the big boys? And is whining on slashdot for help, not to raise contributions, but to whine harder?

      It would be more respectable if instead of the misleading headline of "Libertarian Candidate Excluded from Debate for Refusing Corporate Donations", as opposed to "Libertarian Candidate Excluded from Debate because No One Will Donate", and whining, the article instead had been more of a "What is the most efficient/best ways of soliciting/gathering online political contributions for a third party candidate from small/non-corporate donors?" Or perhaps inquiring about the equivalent of a kickstarter site for political candidate, etc.

    14. Re:ABC is a private business? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They get paid to write this stuff

    15. Re:ABC is a private business? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, technically, the government is granting ABC a monopoly on a piece of the broadcast airwaves.

      If he followed his principles to their logical conclusion--viz. anarchism--he'd simply erect an antenna and broadcast his own signal on the ABC affiliate's wavelengths for the duration of the debate. He could probably reach at least 7% of his voting area that way.

    16. Re:ABC is a private business? by thoth · · Score: 1

      Applying public pressure to revise their policy is not. I don't think you really understand Libertarian principals at all.

      I understand this much: given a corporation will only react when their profits are threatened, so unless he can show that getting left out materially affects ABC's profits, they aren't going to give a rats ass. They set the threshold at $50K: if he can't cobble together that much money from his support base, he isn't worth dealing with.

    17. Re:ABC is a private business? by lightknight · · Score: 1

      "How can you be a libertarian and be against corporate money in politics?" -> You're joking, right? I take it you watched a Ron Paul rally on TV or talked to someone claiming to be libertarian, or talked to someone who claims they knew someone who knew a libertarian, and just totally believed the simple summary they gave you, right?

      --
      I am John Hurt.
    18. Re:ABC is a private business? by JackPepper · · Score: 1

      Holy crap! Just like the Ds and Rs, there is a spread of thought in the LP. They are not all Ayn Rand assholes.

    19. Re:ABC is a private business? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ABC is a public Corporation. If you, a mamber of the public, want to won shares you can.

  17. Re:I think we can help with one of these things... by SQLGuru · · Score: 3, Funny

    But he wouldn't win against Cowboy Neal.

  18. Broadcast yourself? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Make your own video. Post it on Youtube. Make it viral.

    --
    Ezekiel 23:20
    1. Re:Broadcast yourself? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      ya, edit a video and insert yourself answering the questions, as if you are part of the debate. you'll have to somehow avoid the copyright trolls, but I think it could be fair use...

    2. Re:Broadcast yourself? by snadrus · · Score: 1

      I second this guy. Hey you could even grant ABC news rights to air it.

      --
      Science & open-source build trust from peer review. Learn systems you can trust.
    3. Re:Broadcast yourself? by Tomji · · Score: 1

      and yell at the TV while your at it. Works great!

    4. Re:Broadcast yourself? by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      Better yet, hold a pep rally outside the venue. Get someone inside to text out the questions... answer them yourselves.
      Think outside the box. Get some of that "swelling" support to help you out.

    5. Re:Broadcast yourself? by funkboy · · Score: 1

      Or, if you're this year's GOP presidential candidate, you could just handle both sides of the debate by yourself.

    6. Re:Broadcast yourself? by Shadoefax · · Score: 1

      1. Make your own video.
      2. Post it on Youtube.
      3 ???? (Make it viral?)
      4. PROFIT!!!

      --
      All my signatures are stolen from other people. Including this one.
    7. Re:Broadcast yourself? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ya just have some puppets made of the other 2 in the debate and you have the puppets use text to speech to create the talking to avoid the fair use fight.

  19. Two Party System by Shagg · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Unfortunately, I'm not surprised. It's a two party system, and the game is rigged to keep it that way.

    How many parties were represented in the recent president/vice-president debates?

    --
    Unix is user friendly, it's just selective about who its friends are.
    1. Re:Two Party System by Anonymous+Psychopath · · Score: 2

      Unfortunately, I'm not surprised. It's a two party system, and the game is rigged to keep it that way.

      How many parties were represented in the recent president/vice-president debates?

      And the only time I've ever heard of a third-party candidate being included in a Presidential debate was Ross Perot. And what did he have that got him there? A shitload of money.

      --

      Eagles may soar, but weasels don't get sucked into jet engines.

    2. Re:Two Party System by afidel · · Score: 1

      The floor for the presidential/VP debates is 15% in a few national polls, if you can't reach that threshold by the time the debates roll around you have a 0% chance of winning a national election no matter which voting system is employed.

      --
      There are 4 boxes to use in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, ammo. Use in that order. Starting now.
    3. Re:Two Party System by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Technically, you could still win a national election, if the other candidates had some unbelievably shocking scandal. Like if both the Democratic and Republican candidates were revealed to be extraterrestrial aliens running on a platform of "destroy all humans". At the very least, they'd split the doomsday vote allowing the third-party candidate to win.

      Ballot access is another matter though, and the requirements vary from state to state (and some are difficult to meet or highly stacked towards existing parties). Usually one of the televised debate requirements is being on the ballot in states with enough electoral votes to theoretically win the election.

    4. Re:Two Party System by amicusNYCL · · Score: 1

      The floor for the presidential/VP debates is 15% in a few national polls, if you can't reach that threshold by the time the debates roll around you have a 0% chance of winning a national election

      Similarly, if you're excluded from debates and denied any TV coverage you have 0% of being recognized in national polls.

      --
      "Our two-party system is like a bowl of shit looking at itself in a mirror." - Lewis Black
    5. Re:Two Party System by mister_playboy · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The current rules for the Presidential debates came about as a response to Perot's success. You have do even better than he did to get your foot in the door. Even if someone managed it, they could just as easily up the requirements again...

      As we say around these parts... good luck with that.

      --
      Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law ::: Love is the law, love under will
  20. Ahh the American way.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its simple really, unless you get on the corporate bribe, I mean DONATION, bandwagon you cant get into politics.

    Imagine the chaos if corporations didn't rule government?

  21. Meh... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You have an insignificant or non-existent war-chest, and your polling numbers are virtually nil. It's no surprise that they would reserve their air time for serious candidates; that's why the rules are there, and have been there, almost certainly to your knowledge, for a very long time. You knew that you would be excluded before you even put your name in the hat... but there's no publicity like victimization, amirite?

  22. Great you're not taking corporate donations, but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    but that does not seem to be the issue. A "serious" candidate with support for US Congress in a populous state should be able to raise a low minimum $50k amount. You are excluded only for that reason, so shame on you for blaming it on something else.

    When your solo pity party is over, I wish you luck.

  23. That's so cute... by Ginger_Chris · · Score: 1

    ...that you actually thought democracy was about getting the best people with policies that would actually improve the country into the right roles. I'm only 27 and I realised that this whole democracy thing is a massive joke (especially in the UK where both parties are effectively exactly the same and the differences are superficial).

    Until the system is changed to promote policies based on long term improvement (which may be unpopular) rather than policies which produce short term boosts to popularity, there's very little point in having you're voice heard. (BTW I do vote, but usually for ideals such as the green party who'd I'd probably not want fully in power but would like to see some of their ideas incorporated into current policy more often)

  24. Hard to radically change the system from within... by macraig · · Score: 1

    ... when said system is so rigged that an outsider can barely manage to get on a ballot, but then also get equal time and wide enough exposure to actually get elected? Not likely.

    Let the revolution begin. Hopefully it's one that would make Ghandi proud, but that may not be possible.

  25. and? by dmitrygr · · Score: 1

    And you're surprised because .... ?

    --
    -------
    1. Enjoy your job
    2. Make lots of money
    3. Work within the law

    Choose any two.
    1. Re:and? by tobiah · · Score: 1

      nice

      --
      "The ability to delude yourself may be an important survival tool" - Jane Wagner -
  26. this doesnt make much sense. by nimbius · · Score: 4, Insightful

    you arent being kicked out for refusing corporate donations. you are being refused because you havent even raised 50K and are polling at less than 15%.
     
    hate to say it but if I were an ABC affiliate trying to configure the program schedule around the advertising revenue im supposed to be selling, id probably try to keep the forums brief and ensure key folks who pay me for ads get a seat. republicans and democrats will pay me for ad space, but they might not pay me much if i include 40 other no-name candidates willing to bother their candidates with actual debate.

    if you're a libertarian bitching about capitalism, you might not be running under the correct ticket.

    --
    Good people go to bed earlier.
    1. Re:this doesnt make much sense. by e3m4n · · Score: 2

      libertarian and constitutionalists often cross-over with their goals and ideas. its clearly obvious that the two assholes we have fighting for the seat right now dont give two shits about civil liberties or the constitution. I couldnt stand the patriot act, I cant stand PIPA and SOPA, I dont like the arming of every federal office and I sure as hell dont like the extrajudicial assasination of a 16yr old boy who was the english voice of al queda without so much as a trial. And as much as I dislike the president of Iran, mr ImANutJob, he does have a point about the USA being bullies... just look at the whole megaupload crap and how they acted without evidence, without due process, into another country. But I also cant stand spending money we dont have.. so there is some amount of fiscal conservatism to my belief.

      So does that make me a libertarian? a Constitutionalist? or an Isolationalist?

      Personally I couldn't give two shits about who marries who.. if same sex wants to marry, I could care less.. just don't expect me to buy something off the registry. If someone wants to have 10 abortions a year, again I dont give a shit as long as I am not forced to pay for it out of tax dollars. No tax dollars pays for my medication or for my LASIK surgery.. fucking insurance wont even pay for that and its a hell of a lot more medically necessary than someones third 'oops'. But if they have the money.. have at it. If they dont have the money.. do it 1 time and offer them $1500 to tie their tubes while they are already on the table.. i bet they'd jump at it.

      So I ask you.. what exactly does that make me ? :-)

    2. Re:this doesnt make much sense. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fiscally conservative, socially progressive. Yep, you're a Libertarian.

    3. Re:this doesnt make much sense. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, let's get real here.

      MOST Americans don't really understand the high-brow points on which the Libertarian platform rests. When people think of Libertarians, the MOST informed among them, might think about Ron Paul, and maybe recall being forced to read "Atlas Shrugged" as a teen. Maybe they got a kick out of Heinlein. But I think the biggest stain is the fact that Ron Paul published a little KKK newsletter back in the 1980's.

      THAT - and the fact that most Libertarians are pro-freedom-of-individual-choice. Except for Abortion. (as a philosophical point, this is a debatable fact, but the reality is, most American Libertarians involved in Politics, are against Abortion, because they view a fertilized egg as an individual human being, so those rights trump the mother's rights).

      On those two points - I think Most Americans have dismissed Libertarianism.
      If someone is rabidly anti-abortion, they are Republican. Period.
      If they are pro-freedom-of-choice (as in. . . fucking legalize-it. You know what I mean!), and an end to interventionist foreign policy. . . there is significant overlap with the feminist pro-abortion position. There are not many Americans with that set of beliefs who will identify with the current Libertarian party. Mostly - this is a Green Party platform. (until you start talking about gun rights and flat-tax).

      Ron Paul is also very wishy-washy about ending the drug war.

    4. Re:this doesnt make much sense. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FYI: since I paid for my LASIK with my Health Savings Account - that was otherwise taxable income, so yeah that was deducted. So - effectively, YOUR TAX DOLLARS did pay for MY LASIK. (and thanks! It's FUCKING AWSOME not to have to wear glasses anymore! I just wish I had had it that day a few years ago when a bunch of college girls decided to run down the beach with their tops off.)

      So I ask you.. what exactly does that make me ? :-)

      Shit out of luck, like most other Americans in this corrupt money-driven two-party fraudulent electoral-college system.

    5. Re:this doesnt make much sense. by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      hate to say it but if I were an ABC affiliate trying to configure the program schedule around the advertising revenue im supposed to be selling,

      Why isn't everyone trying to make this into a big conspiracy thing?
      Its simple, they have a limited amount of time for the debate. So they only want to have the debate among the people that appear to have a chance to win. This isn't about money or ad revenue or any other conspiracy. They want to give the top contenders enough time, in that limited time period to present their opinions. ABC has decided (whether right or not) serious contenders have more than %50K in contributions, and are polling at greater than 10%.
      If you are serious, show you are serious. Get out there and campaign. IF you are serious, and have a shot, those numbers should be easy to reach, even without corporate money.

    6. Re:this doesnt make much sense. by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

      Every highly political person says that "MOST Americans don't understand the high brow points". It all boils down to one word: Complex. Shit is complex. It can't be destilled into a talking point or internet post. Its not all of the things I think and none of the things you think. I don't have all the right answers, but I don't think you or anyone else does either. The best I can do is do all the research I can, draw conclusions from it, and yet remain open to the fact that it still might be wrong. Why? Because shit is complex. There is no best ideology, no more than there is a Grand Unified Theory of the fundemental forces. Use the stuff that works best, when its been proven to work best, where its been proven to work best, but keep measuring to make sure its still the best.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    7. Re:this doesnt make much sense. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A eugenicist?

  27. Bottom line by Lucas123 · · Score: 1

    Campaign finance reform should be at the top of every voter's decision list in voting for a candidate. Campaign finance laws currently allow all of the corruption we see above water in politics. If getting rid of corporate donations it's not on a politicians agenda, don't vote for them.

    1. Re:Bottom line by e3m4n · · Score: 1

      apparently England did it right in this regard.. every candidate gets the exact same amount of money to spend and thats the end of it. If they run out of money too early then they arent really good at managing things and you probably shouldnt vote for them anyway.

    2. Re:Bottom line by gumpish · · Score: 1

      And is their public policy actually crafted to serve the public interest as a result?

  28. Welcome to free enterprise by sugarbomb · · Score: 1

    ABC is a private company that can do what they want, practicing exactly the policy that the Libertarian party promotes. So I guess this candidate is afraid to practice what the party preaches?

    1. Re:Welcome to free enterprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ABC is a private company - but they could not operate their business without CONSTANT government welfare.

      Who regulates broadcast airwaves? The FCC. If they did not, ABC would need to compete, like any other business, against thousands or millions of other competitors (as happens on the internet). Such competition was not possible in the primitive broadcast-radio days, and the FCC was necessary for this medium and industry to exist AT ALL.

      (This is a perfect example of "YOU DID NOT BUILD THAT - MOTHERFUCKER" . . . and also, an example of "MONEY IS NOT FREE SPEECH")

  29. Moved a partisan crowd? by tomhath · · Score: 4, Informative

    The only thing I see to support your claim that you "moved a very partisan crowd in my favor" is a single sentence:

    Fishman, perhaps sensing that many in the room were swayed, told voters to consider him, despite his long odds.

    That said I wish you luck, it sounds like the other two candidates are both complete jerks: "Don't vote for him because he's a REPUBLICAN"..."Oh yea? Well don't vote for him because he's a DEMOCRAT". Yup, that's how I evaluate a candidate.

    Plus this is completely off topic and doesn't belong on slashdot in the first place.

    1. Re:Moved a partisan crowd? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      OHHHH sooooo right!!! I mean, on /. it's only "Stuff that Matters", - but I guess it doesn't matter to you? So, uhh, Thanks for your input! Cheers!

  30. Bad headline by Spy+Handler · · Score: 1, Informative

    he wasn't excluded from the debate for refusing corporate donations. He was excluded because he didn't have enough donation period. Which he could've easily remedied by taking personal donations from family, friends and other individual donors. And honestly, 50k is peanuts. If you don't have 50k in donations while running for US congress in this day and age, you are not a serious candidate.

    1. Re:Bad headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly. This is some candidate who has no chance of winning trying to act like he's being oppressed.

    2. Re:Bad headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, lets get back to letting the serious candidates that only have a chance for exposure due to large donations debate, they are the only ones capable of guiding us and are worthy of our ears.

    3. Re:Bad headline by Desler · · Score: 1

      If he can't get $50,000 for his campaign he's not gonna win regardless of being let into this 30 minute show.

    4. Re:Bad headline by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is a fallacy. So you think that the money raising issue means that he isn't electable? I'd agree with you based on the fact that most voters don't research at all and only go off of commercials and snippets that appeal to their emotions. He may very well appeal to a large swath of voters but they won't be allowed to hear him.

    5. Re:Bad headline by Nimey · · Score: 1

      It's not fallacy, it's realism. Realistically you're not going to reach potential voters unless you've got some advertising money.

      --
      Hail Eris, full of mischief...

      E pluribus sanguinem
    6. Re:Bad headline by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      That is a fallacy. So you think that the money raising issue means that he isn't electable?

      Yes. If you can't get 5,000 people passionate enough about your candidacy to give you $10 (hint: as passionate as they'd have to be about a six pack of decent beer) then you are not a serious candidate for US Congress.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    7. Re:Bad headline by steelfood · · Score: 1

      About a decade ago, I heard at least $1 million in donations was necessary to make a serious bid for congress. With inflation and all, that number cannot be lower today.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
  31. Check with the fcc, the laws may not allow it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is something called a equal time rule...

    1. Re:Check with the fcc, the laws may not allow it by Desler · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but it has no bearing on this. This is a roundtable debate that is part of a show that would easily fall under "bona fide news interview" exemption to that rule.

    2. Re:Check with the fcc, the laws may not allow it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man I really hope this is true. The Irony of a Libritarian candidate strong arming his way onto TV via an FCC regulations is almost as sweet as Obamma wearing his Nobel peace prize while ordering drone strikes.

  32. Re:I think we can help with one of these things... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're too pessimistic. Hell, I'm sure he'd hit at least 8%!

  33. I'm not sure what you're asking here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're a Libertarian, right? That means you believe that private corporations like ABC should have the right to do whatever they like. So.. so this is fine with you. So... what's the issue?

    Also, why did you refuse corporate campaign donations if you're a Libertarian? It would be un-Libertarian of you to think there's any problem with corporations making unlimited donations, or with candidates accepting them. So if you don't have a moral problem with it... what, were you just too lazy? Did you just not feel like it? Why did you even mention this?

    So you see, I'm not sure what you're asking here.

    1. Re:I'm not sure what you're asking here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ABC has obligations to the public as a licensee of the Federal Communications Commission. They do not have the right to do what they want.

    2. Re:I'm not sure what you're asking here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They are part of a government enforced monopoly, and should not have rights to do what they want.

    3. Re:I'm not sure what you're asking here... by PhilHibbs · · Score: 1

      You have to work within a system in order to change it. Unless you want to take up arrms against it of course.

  34. The two party system is so very wrong by Omnifarious · · Score: 2

    The media doesn't want to upset the applecart, especially by putting on one of those dirty 'libertarians'. Heck, even in this Slashdot article you have people erecting strawman arguments and then asking why you're upset.

    But really, what it is is that the media loves the advertising money from the candidates. It's in their best interests to promulgate the idea that advertising and money wins elections, because that money is spent on them. So they go out of their way to avoid providing free advertising to any candidate who hasn't paid them for enough paid advertising.

    And the two party system is a great source of the kind of fake controversy over irrelevant issues that is the bread and butter of mass media. So they don't really want that to go away either. Too much money tied up in keeping things just as they are.

  35. Huh? by Desler · · Score: 1

    You say there requirement is:

    *Campaign contributions of at least $50,000

    In what way does that say or imply you needed to take corporate donations? You seem to have invented that out of whole cloth. Also there other reasons aren't "trumped up". They can choose who they do or do not want in their debate and it seems perfectly reasonably to only give the limited time to candidates that have even a modicum of a chance of winning.

  36. Idealogical contradiction? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A Libertarian not accepting corporate donations? Why the hell not?

    1. Re:Idealogical contradiction? by green1 · · Score: 1

      Is it a contradiction for a Libertarian to do whatever he wants and to flout the existing "rules" of the game?
      I thought freedom of choice was something Libertarians prized, so his choice not to accept campaign contributions is perfectly acceptable.
      It could also be because of the strings that come with those contributions. Corporations tend to love stricter laws with heavier enforcement that removes more personal freedoms. Why align yourself with organizations so opposed to the libertarian view. (I doubt corporations would be happy if he worked to abolish all IP laws, stopped all corporate tax breaks, reduced government spending on pork projects, or any attacked any of the millions of laws on the books right now that benefit nobody but the owners of various corporations)

    2. Re:Idealogical contradiction? by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 1

      I'm not a libertarian, but I think it's worth noting one of the ironies of libertarianism: that the very class they think they are fighting on behalf of - job-creating entrepreneurs and the hard-working upper-middle class - has little interest in their ideas. Because they know that the status quo is already doing a good job of looking out for their interests.

      And to be fair, I know some libertarians who seem to truly believe that corporations as we know them are an evil sustained by the government, and with the shrinking of government, we'd somehow return to the simple, honest capitalism of a century ago. (I don't share their nostalgia for that time, on a range of levels, from the conditions of non-white Americans to the status of women, but there you go.) I think that belief is naive: the wealthy castes of the US will always be able to reconstruct the kind of government that they want.

  37. I'm a Libertarian and believe in the free market by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I understand that guidelines are put in place so that everybody that registers to run for office can't make a mockery of the system but only registering to disrupt the process negatively. Debates are not the domain of business, they are public events that are sponsored by private and public parties but they are not the domain of business. Frankly I'd be interested to see what the criteria was previous to this. Does anybody know? A shifting of the goal posts would show a definite attempt to suppress the candidate.

  38. Why bother? by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Unless you're a spoiler in this race, given your polling numbers, you're a no-op. Let the big boys who actually have a chance to win take the time to answer the moderator's questions in a sane (i.e., non-Libertarian) manner. All you'd do is waste time - sort of like a jester at the court.

    --
    That is all.
    1. Re:Why bother? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dont you see... the debate is incidental, what he really needs is for us to give him $50k. I belive the technical term is slashvertisement.

    2. Re:Why bother? by Hatta · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Nonsense. The differences between our two parties are so narrow, that it's a waste of time having a debate between them. The debates don't matter, hell the election itself doesn't even matter. Crony capitalists will win and civil libertarians will lose.

      Does a third party candidate have a chance to win? No, but he will raise important issues, and that's what really matters.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    3. Re:Why bother? by Hatta · · Score: 1

      While many libertarians do blather insanely (e.g. any of those gold standard loons), you're more likely to get a sane response from a libertarian than either major party when you ask about issues like:

      Warrantless wiretapping
      Transportation security
      Foreign wars
      Drug policy
      Intellectual property

      Glad I could help you with that.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    4. Re:Why bother? by chrismcb · · Score: 2

      ... sane (i.e., non-Libertarian) ....

      You are implying Libertarians are insane, yet implying democrats and republicans are sane? What rock have you been living under?

    5. Re:Why bother? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The differences between our two parties are so narrow, that it's a waste of time having a debate between them.

      I want gay marriage to be legal. I want defense spending to be cut. I want our military out of Afghanistan. I want rich people to pay more taxes. I want the government to try more stimulating the economy. The difference between the two parties on all of these issues is fucking night and day. Saying that they're the same is cowardice to the extreme.

    6. Re:Why bother? by retchdog · · Score: 2

      is there a serious libertarian politician who wants to curtail intellectual property law? everyone i've seen (i.e. all recent LP prez candidates and a few others) has been very pro-patent since it creates private property (which, to them, is freedom by definition) and helps business. or maybe it's because they have an authoritarian mindset and believe that IP puts more power in the hands of Effective Businessmen, who are good and virtuous by definition. whatever. is there one?

      sure, i've seen libertarian bloggers complain about patents, but even they often would want to keep it around for "practical" (read: selfish) reasons. and not the ayn rand kind of selfish either; this is the kind of selfish where they (think they) benefit from state-granted monopolies, so they conveniently want to keep it around.

      --
      "They were pure niggers." – Noam Chomsky
  39. Libertarians Personal Rights. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought Libertarians as opposed to Republicans means that property rights do not exceed personal rights. That all rights come out of the sovereignty of the individual. I think all the Libertarian haters are confusing Republicans with Libertarians to discredit Libertarians. Now a Republican would agree that his property rights can exceed your personal rights. Take big corporations banning smoking on the premisses for you own good or charging more for insurance due to a personal choice. That would go against a Libertarians personal rights to force a belief on someone on your property via coercion. A election is not a money making enterprise and all persons on the ballot should be in all debates. Other wise it is a sham as not all the people on the ballot get equal debate time. Cronyism runs so deep through the American psyche mind that most people cannot see the trees through the forest.

  40. Superheros for office by Time_Ngler · · Score: 3, Funny

    His 7% of the poll can be explained pretty easily. If I didn't know any of the candidates, and I saw "Fishman", I'd vote for him just on principle.

  41. Re:Well Boo hoo.. by ae1294 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Please go cry some where else. Requirements are there to be met, and you're not winning over any friends by crying corporate greed every time you don't get your way.

    Wow way to be a total dick. Someone should kick you squarely in the balls...

  42. Libertarian Question by AK+Marc · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Maybe you are actually reading this and can answer a question about Libertarians.

    I keep hearing "whoever initiates force is wrong" and the point of the government is to be a framework to resolve contract disputes, as well as step in after someone initiates force against someone else. Skipping the fact there is a large private industry around dispute resolution the Libertarians fail to address, I'm unclear who initiates force in a very large number of situations. I'll give one here, and hopefully you can explain it in a way that I can understand. Usually I get the answer that goes back to "the person owning the land you are standing on has rights, you have none at all" which conflicts with the "initiate force" rules.

    A Black man, Bob, is walking down the street. He sees a cafe named "Joe's Cafe" with a big "open" sign in the window and on the door. Feeling like a bite and feeling invited in, he walks in. The sign on the podium when he walks in says "please seat yourself". He walks to a booth and sits down. Joe, the owner, walks up and informs him that his type is not served there, and he must leave. Bob says "I'm not leaving until I get a meal." Joe calls the police and requests he be arrested for trespass.

    The Libertarian explanation is that force is initiated by Bob for not leaving when forced to by Joe. Logic indicates that Joe invited the public (including Bob) in, and throwing him out is the initiation of force. And the Libertarian stance always seems to come down to the owner of the land has rights, and nobody else on that land does. Though, when I word it that way, I get yelled at, but never corrected with anything that doesn't directly lead back to the same conclusion. Though one person did send me a link to a youtube video that explains that you can't have personal freedom without property, and it's the personal freedom that is the basis of property, but no explanation of why it works out that personal freedom on someone else's property is determined, in part, but the owner of that property. That circularly comes back to the freedom coming not from personal freedom, but from the property itself.

    I personally think of myself as a libertarian, but I've never met a Libertarian who was a libertarian, though most get offended when I say that.

    1. Re:Libertarian Question by Vaphell · · Score: 1

      but where is the problem exactly in your restaurant scenario?
      It's much better when racists and bigots are in the open, you have no problem with identifying them and not supporting them with your dollars. Wasn't there a huge stink recently in case of Chick-fil-A because the owner reportedly financed some antigay organization? Apparently boycotts can work.
      Would you prefer the restaurant owner to make the meal but also jizz on it in secret and to charge the unknowing customer for the privilege of consuming owner's bodily fluids?
      If you were black, would you prefer to know if the owner is a closet racist or not?

      There was a case recently where some bigoted state politician was refused service by the restaurant owner. Liberal leaning folks had absolutely no problem with that, which reeks of hypocrisy.
      Libertarians keep it simple: either you have a right to discriminate, or you don't and having that right is the only consistent and workable option.
      Everybody else: you have a right to discriminate, unless it's skin color, sex, religion, hair color, shoe size, pet name, you name it. The list is arbitrary which puts enormous power in the hands of the ones who get to decide.

    2. Re:Libertarian Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a reasonable argument under the situation that you describe (although one might argue that Bob's refusal to comply with Joe's request was the first use of force). However, the situation is not terribly realistic. Let's assume that your interpretation became the basis for the binding precedent. There's an easy enough fix from Joe's perspective. All Joe has to do is to post who is and is not allowed into his restaurant. Then if Bob enters the restaurant, his entry would be the first use of force.

      It's also worth thinking about other reasons why Joe might not like Bob. What if both were white where Bob's a Nazi and Joe is Jewish? How about if Bob slept with Joe's former wife (during the marriage)?

      One of the simplest systems is where Bob has to comply with Joe's request on Joe's property. If you assert that Bob has rights that trump Joe's rights on Joe's property, you are creating a more complicated system. There may be reasons to add that additional complexity (for example, Bob's right to live would trump Joe's freedom to shoot a gun at him), but in most situations, simpler is better.

    3. Re:Libertarian Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know for a black guy Joe sure is racist.

    4. Re:Libertarian Question by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      I don't consider myself libertarian, but I generally vote that way more often than not (and the last quiz I took claimed that the I sided with Johnson 86% of the time, and 50ish for the two big dogs)
      I would claim that Joe initiated force when he asked Bob to leave and called the cops.
      I would also claim you lose some "owner of land rights" when you open that land up to others. When you run a business you also give up some rights. The government does some work for you (they allow you to run a business) in return you agree to do business with everyone. It is in societies best interest to do so. And it is also in your best interest (although you don't realize it)
      I think there is a difference between private property and a business (a private property opened to the public)
      What is your side on the question? Are you saying Bob should have a right to eat there? Or Joe should have a right to throw him out?

    5. Re:Libertarian Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All logic is circular. In theory, freedom means you can do whatever the hell you want. In practice, my nose bleeds when you punch it. Thus the greatest freedoms leads to hell: war, famine, disease and exploitation.

      Forget about freedom. What kind of life do you want to live, and how can everyone accomplish that without hell?

    6. Re:Libertarian Question by JackPepper · · Score: 1

      What is your definition of 'a right?' What 'rights' of Bob's are being violated? Does Bob have the right to be served a meal by Joe?
       
      If Joe just told Bob that Bob wouldn't be served. At the end of the night, Bob refused to leave Joe's restaurant. What should Joe do?

      Another way: The open cafe is an open contract. Bob walking into the store is counter offering Joe's contract to buy a meal. Joe rejects the counter offer of Bob and tells Bob to take a hike. Bob insists that Joe accept his counter offer and refuses to leave. Joe then calls the police because Bob's counter offer has been rejected and Bob is now trespassing.

      If Bob were a christian, he might listen to that christ guy. "If anyone will not welcome you or listen to your words, well fuck'em." Matthew 10:14

    7. Re:Libertarian Question by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      What is your definition of 'a right?' What 'rights' of Bob's are being violated? Does Bob have the right to be served a meal by Joe?

      I didn't ask who had what rights, but who initiated force.

      If Joe just told Bob that Bob wouldn't be served. At the end of the night, Bob refused to leave Joe's restaurant. What should Joe do?

      So your answer is "your question is hard, libertarians don't know how their system would work in practice, just that it's the best out there, and I won't answer your question because it confuses me, so I'll ask another question to try to avoid the question you asked.

    8. Re:Libertarian Question by thoth · · Score: 0

      And the Libertarian stance always seems to come down to the owner of the land has rights, and nobody else on that land does.

      This is where I think libertarians are full of it. That land is in turn granted to the "owner" by the government. That's right, who records the deed showing Joe's ownership? Who would Joe expect to come defend his property against a roving band of criminals? Who is expected the intervene should there be a legal dispute over the ownership (Let's say Larry shows up and says Joe is full of crap, I own this land...).

      Since the government is ultimately granting property rights and recognition, there are some meta-laws Joe has to accept. After all, he can't run a child slavery ring or kill people on "his" land. One of those meta-laws is not discriminating. If Joe doesn't like those rules, fuck him for being a scumbag but in general, the correct thing Joe should do is either declare his independence and dare the government to come blow his ass up, or move the fuck away to some remote island or third-world shit hole where he can pay off rival warlords to guard his property.

    9. Re:Libertarian Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wasn't there a huge stink recently in case of Chick-fil-A because the owner reportedly financed some antigay organization? Apparently boycotts can work.

      Wha? Did you not see the lines wrap around your local Chick-fil-A's? The "boycott" was totally unsuccessful. Chick-fil-A stores had a boom in sales.

    10. Re:Libertarian Question by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      What is your side on the question? Are you saying Bob should have a right to eat there? Or Joe should have a right to throw him out?

      I think that democracy is such that laws can be passed that require someone opening their establishment to the general public may be required to treat them all fairly. Libertarians agree, so long as "fairly" is limited to "not lying to them". I just think that everyone agrees on the principle, but that there are disagreements on "fairly" that are blown way out of proportion.

    11. Re:Libertarian Question by JackPepper · · Score: 1

      I keep hearing "whoever initiates force is wrong" and the point of the government is to be a framework to resolve contract disputes, as well as step in after someone initiates force against someone else.

      Joe calls the police and requests he [Bob] be arrested for trespass.

      Logic indicates that Joe invited the public (including Bob) in, and throwing him [Bob] out is the initiation of force.

      I am trying to answer your question, but you have Joe doing two different things in your story.

      If Joe throws Bob out of the cafe, Joe initiated force. And without a context of rights or laws, we do not know if Joe can do this with in the framework of government.

      If Joe calls the government (the police) to settle a contract dispute, the government will determine the outcome. If the law dictates Joe must serve Bob, then the government has initiated the force to make Joe cook Bob a meal. If the law dictates that Bob must leave the cafe, then the government has initiated the force to throw Bob out of Joe's cafe. In this case, I assume there's some sort of law the government decide upon and the outcomes are reasonable.

      Libertarians holding to the "whoever initiates force is wrong" is a bit silly because the context of the initiation in the framework of the standing government is important. Murdering some one with your car because the person jumped out in front of your car is different than planning to murder and murdering some one because you think the person sneezes too loudly. The intentions of the murderer are paramount to the sentence.

      Though one person did send me a link to a youtube video that explains that you can't have personal freedom without property, and it's the personal freedom that is the basis of property, but no explanation of why it works out that personal freedom on someone else's property is determined, in part, but the owner of that property. That circularly comes back to the freedom coming not from personal freedom, but from the property itself.

      The act of owning the property is key. If you hop on top of my car while I am in it. I would ask you to get off my car because you are on my property. Your personal freedom is determined by the owner because you do not own the car. I have spent my labor earnings on said car, you have not. We have not entered into a contract verbal or written which states that you may hop on my car.

      BTW: There is no true "Libertarian," just like there is no true "Scotsman."

    12. Re:Libertarian Question by JackPepper · · Score: 1

      This is where I think libertarians are full of it. That land is in turn granted to the "owner" by the government. That's right, who records the deed showing Joe's ownership? Who would Joe expect to come defend his property against a roving band of criminals? Who is expected the intervene should there be a legal dispute over the ownership (Let's say Larry shows up and says Joe is full of crap, I own this land...).

      Libertarians are not anarchists. Most libertarians believe in limited government not the absence of government. Libertarians start the framework of government at the individual's level because without individuals there is no government. Most likely the government would record the Joe's ownership of the land. I assume Joe pays taxes because he called the police. Again assume Joe payed his taxes, the government would intervene. Ownership is nine tenths of the law.

      Since the government is ultimately granting property rights and recognition, there are some meta-laws Joe has to accept. After all, he can't run a child slavery ring or kill people on "his" land. One of those meta-laws is not discriminating. If Joe doesn't like those rules, fuck him for being a scumbag but in general, the correct thing Joe should do is either declare his independence and dare the government to come blow his ass up, or move the fuck away to some remote island or third-world shit hole where he can pay off rival warlords to guard his property.

      Either there are laws or there are not laws, there is no meta-law. If it were within the legal framework of the government, Joe could run a child slavery ring. I'm pretty sure flat out killing is outlawed in most countries. The correct thing for Joe to do is quit being an idiot. Regardless of the color of your skin, US money all spends the same.

    13. Re:Libertarian Question by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      If Joe calls the government (the police) to settle a contract dispute, the government will determine the outcome. If the law dictates Joe must serve Bob, then the government has initiated the force to make Joe cook Bob a meal. If the law dictates that Bob must leave the cafe, then the government has initiated the force to throw Bob out of Joe's cafe. In this case, I assume there's some sort of law the government decide upon and the outcomes are reasonable.

      Ah, so no matter what happens, the police are the ones initiating force, even if specifically requested by someone else. That's a convenient excuse, but they only act on the request of someone else, so I'd personally think the person pulling the trigger is responsible, not the bullet. As I would think the caller of the police more responsible for the initiation of violence than the police, even if the police are the actual actors, they are constrained in their choices and abilities.

      Your personal freedom is determined by the owner because you do not own the car. I have spent my labor earnings on said car, you have not

      That's how it is almost always described to me, but when I restate that as "rich have more rights" I get complaints and objections.

    14. Re:Libertarian Question by JackPepper · · Score: 1

      Ah, so no matter what happens, the police are the ones initiating force, even if specifically requested by someone else. That's a convenient excuse, but they only act on the request of someone else, so I'd personally think the person pulling the trigger is responsible, not the bullet. As I would think the caller of the police more responsible for the initiation of violence than the police, even if the police are the actual actors, they are constrained in their choices and abilities.

      If you consider calling the government to settle a contract dispute, yes Joe is the initiator of force. By your words, if Bob had called the government settle an anti-discrimination law dispute, then Bob would have been the initiator of force.

      That's how it is almost always described to me, but when I restate that as "rich have more rights" I get complaints and objections.

      "The rich have more rights" highly depends on what you think 'rights' are and how 'rights' work. This mis communication of 'rights' between you and others is probably where most of the complaints and objections arise.

      There is a whole spectrum of libertarian ideas out there, not just 'initiators of force people.' You may enjoy these folks here: http://bleedingheartlibertarians.com/

    15. Re:Libertarian Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A Black man, Bob, is walking down the street. He sees a cafe named "Joe's Cafe" with a big "open" sign in the window and on the door. Feeling like a bite and feeling invited in, he walks in. The sign on the podium when he walks in says "please seat yourself". He walks to a booth and sits down. Joe, the owner, walks up and informs him that his type is not served there, and he must leave. Bob says "I'm not leaving until I get a meal." Joe calls the police and requests he be arrested for trespass.

      The Libertarian explanation is that force is initiated by Bob for not leaving when forced to by Joe.

      False generalization at best. First, trespass is not always "initiating the use of force". Second, trespass is often a misdemeanor-level offense and the remedy might be limited to removal. That said, the "initiation of force" is likely prior to opening "Joe's Cafe" if there was any limitation on who can open a cafe or what BS hurdles they must jump to do business.

      Logic indicates that Joe invited the public (including Bob) in, and throwing him out is the initiation of force.

      It is not uncommon to reserve a right to "refuse to serve". That said, you have a good point as to how this is potentially a civil conflict and not a criminal one.

      And the Libertarian stance always seems to come down to the owner of the land has rights, and nobody else on that land does.

      You seem to be a bold-faced liar. Both parties have rights. Both parties have property rights (over their person, if nothing else). Joe has some additional rights which he may have limited via contract (implied by signage as you suggest or by local ordinance to get a restaurant license). The black man has rights as a patron of Joe. Had Joe not wanted his business, it would have behooved him to not be "open to the public".

      You took a complex issue and boiled down the other side to false generalizations. Why? Also, if you were "libertarian", you would not have such basic problems and misunderstandings. "Non-initiation of force" is as good a statement as can be made in so few words. There is no reason to believe that is the whole of it for most or all libertarians/Libertarians/Objectivists/anarcho-capitalists/constitutionalists or whomever else you wish to lie about next.

    16. Re:Libertarian Question by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Also, if you were "libertarian", you would not have such basic problems and misunderstandings.

      I'm not a Libertarian. I'm a democratic-libertarian (with a long term view) in that I believe the government should have the least direct influence possible to enact the will of the people. Most libertarians I talk to are anti-democracy. They want a dictatorship by someone that agrees with them, so that three sheep and a wolf don't vote on dinner. The poor wolf has to eat cabbage every day for the rest of his life.

      But I can't be libertarian because the libertarians are anarcho-capitalists, as you put it, who hate the free market.

    17. Re:Libertarian Question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also, if you were "libertarian", you would not have such basic problems and misunderstandings.

      I'm not a Libertarian. I'm a democratic-libertarian (with a long term view) in that I believe the government should have the least direct influence possible to enact the will of the people. Most libertarians I talk to are anti-democracy. They want a dictatorship by someone that agrees with them, so that three sheep and a wolf don't vote on dinner. The poor wolf has to eat cabbage every day for the rest of his life.

      But I can't be libertarian because the libertarians are anarcho-capitalists, as you put it, who hate the free market.

      First, it does not follow from being "anti-democracy" to "they want a dictatorship". At best, you will find some who think that a benevelent dictatorship is less harmful than mob rule. Most in the libertarian/anarcho-capitalist camp want the government to have less power. I guess if it were a "dictatorship" it would be a "tin pot dictatorship".

      As regards to what you are, you are someone who uses the term "libertarian" in a non standard fashion. A libertarian is described by wanting freedom not to enact the will of the people.

    18. Re:Libertarian Question by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      A libertarian is described by wanting freedom not to enact the will of the people.

      That's why I said "democratic-libertarian" Or did you not bother to read what I wrote? And from what I can tell, most Libertarians don't want "freedom" or "smallest possible government" but again, want what everyone else wants. A government that does what they want, and no more. They just wrap up their mediocrity in a different word and claim to be better than everyone else.

  43. Corporate Money by thewiz · · Score: 2

    Here's an idea:
    1. Take the money from the companies
    2. Deposit it in a bank
    3. Take out money to donate (anonymously) to people and groups that are fighting against the companies that are trying to grease your hand
    4. Feel good about yourself and keep on sticking it to the companies

    --
    If "disco" means "I learn" in Latin, does "discothèque" mean "I learn technology"?
  44. Fairness Doctorine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    died in 1987 during the Reagan administration.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairness_Doctrine

  45. They should pass a law by myth24601 · · Score: 5, Funny

    They should pass a law that mandates that anyone who broadcasts a debate must include Libertarians.

    --
    No matter where you go, there you are.
    1. Re:They should pass a law by tomhath · · Score: 1

      I am intrigued by your comment and would like to subscribe to your newsletter. Well played.

  46. annoyed, supportive by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's kinda weird that you're posting on Slashdot, which is, like, a technology forum, and your beef is about...politics? And your post reads as a bit whine-y. I'm also somewhat surprised that Slashdot would publish your post. That said, I'm libertarian-leaning and live and vote in Massachusetts. If you were on my ballot, I'd probably vote for you anyway.

  47. Re:Why? by interkin3tic · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Out of curiosity, what made you run third party rather than trying to fix things from within? There are obstacles either way of course, was there something that made you convinced whichever party you were closer to ideologically was irreparably damaged? Did you consider, or did you run in a republican or democratic party?

  48. That's simply misleading by argStyopa · · Score: 1

    Hey, I enjoy 3rd party candidates as much as the next guy, and enjoy seeing them succeed.

    However, the REASONABLE standard of requiring $50k in donations to prove you're a credible candidate makes sense.

    This is NOT that "they refused me because I refused corporate donations". This is "I'm too small a candidate to be considered serious by their metric".

    (I'd say if you polled 7%, you should be included somehow, but honestly, their standard is MORE fair than poll numbers; as you say, you and presumably other minor candidates weren't even included in some of the polling, so the cash-metric is much more universal.)

    --
    -Styopa
    1. Re:That's simply misleading by Vaphell · · Score: 1

      there are better measuring sticks, like being registered in X% of the states, period. Logistics required to pull it off is enough to weed out the jokers. Keep it simple stupid.
      How many candidates are there? 4 (red, blue, green and libertarian)? what, you don't have enough time to present all candidates for the arguably most important position on the planet?

  49. Misleading summary by davidwr · · Score: 1

    He wasn't excluded for refusing corporate donations, he was excluded for not getting $50K in donations.

    Now, is that fair? Maybe not. But unless it's a practical impossibility to get $50,000 in non-corporate donations (it's not) then the article title is misleading at best.

    A better title would be:

    Libertarian Candidate Who Refused Corporate Money Excluded From Debate For Not Raising Enough Donations

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  50. Re:Why? by NatasRevol · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Uh, he's on the ballot. That kind of makes it not the voting system's fault.

    --
    There are two types of people in the world: Those who crave closure
  51. Try local NBC, CBS, and FOX affiliates by Culture20 · · Score: 2

    I'm sure they'd love to report on this. Also local newspapers and radio.

  52. Contributions Pay the Media by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Campaign contributions are spent on television advertising. So, it makes sense that any media company, in this case ABC (Disney), would want to know you are feeding their bank accounts. This is another "green over palms" test (for USA money anyway).

  53. I am not seeing a question by alexander_686 · · Score: 1

    I find your statement a disingenuous. The issue is not that you refuse corporate donations it that you lack identifiable support. Now, perhaps, the method of identifying support is piss poor.

    So what would be a good measure if not cash? We want something simple and hard to fake. We want to exclude the crazies and non-viable candidates. Also, first past the post naturally gravitates to a 2 party system but we don’t want to be locked in.

    Almost everything I come up with requires some type of editorial qualitive decision by the network.

  54. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    He is excluded because he couldn't raise a piddling $50,000. THERE IS NO REQUIREMENT THAT THE $50,000 COME FROM CORPORATE DONORS! The pathetic liar (a trait that is disgustingly common in right-wing candidates this year) couldn't get $50,000 and chose to blame corporations, a bizarre statement to hear from a Libertarian to say the least.

  55. So Basically by Kreegalor · · Score: 1

    Their requirements are really fair and meant to keep out fringe candidates. Contrary to how you feel, you ARE a fringe candidate. You haven't raised $50k. If you swayed the crowds like you said you have, $50k is a drop in a bucket just from the people you had talked too. Hell, you should have been able to get than from the National Libertarian party.The fact you haven't raised that much means you aren't as popular as you seem to think you are. A daily schedule means more than 2 events a week. You lost all credibility in your post about the email about urging people to blow up the story on Slashdot and Reddit. It is plain and simple attention whoring you are doing. You aren't a serious candidate and are looking to cause a ruckus because you think you should be doing better than you really are.

    1. Re:So Basically by Vaphell · · Score: 1

      why not set threshold on X% of states where the candidate is eligible for voting? Wouldn't that be enough to showcase the support on the ground? Logistics are not trivial and Joe Nobody would ever manage to pull it off.
      Focusing on trivia like money is kind of micromanaging and pidgeonholing. Hypotethical campaign done exclusively by volunteers donating their time, judged by these rules would never be seen as legitimate, while.

  56. Re:Legal? by larry+bagina · · Score: 1

    That's a state issue, not a federal issue.

    --
    Do you even lift?

    These aren't the 'roids you're looking for.

  57. Re:Legal? by green1 · · Score: 1

    Sure, you can do all of that no problem. However if you manage to crash said car while you do that, and it happens to damage someone else's person or property, or the pellets from that 12 gague happen to do damage to someone else's person or property where they strike, then you'd be in huge trouble...
    Libertarians don't agree with Anarchists that you can do anything at all that you want. Libertarians believe that you should be allowed to do anything you want as long as it doesn't interfere with other people. Libertarians even see a need for government, and the police and military, to strictly enforce the few relevant laws preventing you from harming others.
    A libertarian government would have no law against alcohol, tobacco, drugs, specific medical procedures (abortion, assisted suicide, etc), or who you can or can't marry, or many of the things that government currently spends your hard earned money on. But the remaining laws (against things like murder, assault, theft, tresspass, vandalism) would be strictly enforced.

  58. Typical by CyprusBlue113 · · Score: 1

    Libretarian complaining about how corporation treats little guy when they're the little guy...

    --
    a handful of selfish greedy people are no match for millions of selfish, greedy people -u4ya
  59. Don't listen to the hate, fight the good fight by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, I definitely should have stuck to filtering at 1. A whole lot of "screw you, you are not like me, Ayn Rand is evil, serves you right" responses.

    Have you spoken with ABC to see if those are hard limits? If there is any play in the standards for fundraising, have you offered to fund a second poll to see if the number exceeds their 10%? Have you considered accepting personal donations from out of state libertarians? I am down for a small amount if so. Keep in mind Inman raised millions for a Tesla museum in days, there are certainly 5000 like minded folks with a Hamilton ($10) to spare, I am one.

    If ABC won't let you play in their sandbox, spend money on local ads (print, radio, online, blogs, put out some position videos on youtube) in the six major cities shown on the congressional district map (not from there, don't know the area). Offer to meet with groups who want to hear your message. As lame as it may sound use community TV stations to get your message out. I am certain there are a lot of D's pissed at Tierney who would never vote R for fear of excommunication, but may vote for you. Shock ABC by pulling big numbers in the election, then let them wonder why it's hard to get an interview or a question answered.

    I am a little "l" libertarian. Keep your hands out of my personal life and my wallet, but think many government agencies are useful and should be preserved (NWS, NOAA, CDC, NIH, Parks Service, several others), and I don't mind my current level of taxation to support the services we all use (especially the schools even though I will never have children). There are just as many agencies that need to brought in to check (Interior, BLM, FEMA, inJustice), and others that need to be shown the door completely (DHS).

  60. And your point is? by supercrisp · · Score: 1

    Your poll numbers are nonexistent. Your donations don't meet the minimum. Sure, I'd like to hear you. But they have rules because they need to keep their little sideshow confined to a reasonable number of contestants. If they accede to your demand to be included, they'll also have to include Mr. Spock and Pope Moonbat. Which, let's be honest, is the crowd they think you're in if you're not at the trough like the rest of them. ----- And to those who kvetch about the appropriateness of this topic to Slashdot: let me remind you that libertarianism is the preferred political philosophy of Slashdot. No other set of political theories has the magical combination of marijuana legalization, appeals to uncomplicated meritocracy, and pugnacious antiauthoritarian individualism that libertarianism brings neckbeards nation-wide. (Granted, gimme-gimme, info-wants-to-sleep-with-me anarchism runs a close second.)

  61. How to meet the $50,000 requirement by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1. Have a wealthy family member or someone donate the required funds to your campaign.
    2. Show ABC that you have enough money to meet their requirements.
    3. Refund the money???? OR
    4. Profit.

  62. 2 party system by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The real reason you were not allowed on stage is it would confuse the American public to see more than 2 people in a debate. Either that, or they just didn't have enough podiums...

  63. Get this on reddit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You need to get your story on reddit. They'll generate enough hate mail towards ABC that it might sway their decision.

  64. Important Questions by archatheist · · Score: 1

    So he's a slashdotter who might end up in Congress. Fine. What I want to know is does he run Linux???

    --
    "No sane man will dance." -- Marcus Tullius Cicero
  65. VAN DUN ON FREEDOM AND PROPERTY: A CRITIQUE by unlocked · · Score: 1

    Interesting read about property rights vs Individual freedom. Compare this to what a Republican or Democrat thinks.

    http://www.walterblock.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/06/VAN-DUN-ON-FREEDOM-AND-PROPERTY.-A-CRITIQUE.pdf

  66. Re:Why? by ubergeek65536 · · Score: 0

    Why should he have to accept bribes campaign donations in order to be a legitimate candidate?

  67. Copyright / Patent Law / 6S / Surveillance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, you want donations? Start by being vocal about Copyright: where it should apply and where it should not, what term would be reasonable, how about all that Patent craziness Apple vs. Samsung vs. Motorola vs. Google etc. How about the Six Strike "voluntary" scheme? What about ubiquitous surveillance, face recognition everywhere, everything linked together?

    You pledge you are going to take on these issues, and challenge others ("Why do you want Happy Birthday to be copyrighted, sir? Don't you think this now belongs to all of us instead of a Corporation?!") and remain vocal about it, you can get lots of donations.

  68. Spoiler Candidates in MA by ScottCooperDotNet · · Score: 0

    Massachusetts has had a recent history of spoiler candidates (think Ross Perot in '92 nationally), with several Republicans losing because 3rd party candidates siphoned away votes. Deval Patrick has won election to the governorship twice thanks to both Christy Mihos and Tim Cahill appealing to voters who would otherwise potentially go Republican. With so many other Democratically-held positions going unchallenged, why are you running in one of the few races where a moderate Republican can win?

  69. Re:Why? by erroneus · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Ask Obama.

    I still believe Obama actually wanted to fix a lot of things. I think he quickly found out a few reasons why he can't make any serious change... dark secret reasons. Yeah, I know "conspiracy theory -- ignore the nut bag." I didn't vote for Obama... I voted Libertarian. But the change in Obama was remarkable and I don't think it's because 'he's just crooked like the rest of them.' I think Kennedy was the last rebel from the backstage establishment and we know how that ended up.

    There's still lots of hope though. The problem is this internet thing. The establishment pretty much controls the media and all the usual stuff. But this internet thing... no one has figured out how to control it yet and it's too late to try to take it away. (Seriously, if they were forward thinking enough, they would have created an internet competitor that was 'fun, addicting and *SAFE(tm)* for public use' long ago... but now it's kind of too late. Only Steve Jobs could have pulled off a stunt like that and he's gone.

    This internet thing... it may free the people yet.

  70. Re:Why? by jalefkowit · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Campaign contributions are a useful proxy for "does anyone care that this guy/gal is running." If nobody cares enough about your candidacy to throw you a couple bucks, the odds are very high that you're a marginal/crank candidate rather than a serious one, and candidates with no support shouldn't waste valuable time in a debate. There are other systems you could devise to filter out cranks from a political debate, but they're just as likely to be complained about by the cranks as this one.

  71. Re:Why? by omfgnosis · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The voting system has more features than who appears on a ballot. Appearing on a ballot doesn't overcome the spoiler effect: less established parties are recursively seen as not viable and then can't establish viability. It's a predictable effect of "first past the post" voting systems.

  72. For perspective by Pretzalzz · · Score: 2

    For perspective of how low a bar $50,000 is, open secrets has the FEC data for the race. Both of the top 2 candidates have raised over $1.4 million dollars as of 2 months ago, and have likely raised a bunch more since. Even excluding PAC/other money they have raised $866k/$1.22m.

  73. Re:Why? by PetiePooo · · Score: 1

    Out of curiosity, what made you run third party rather than trying to fix things from within?

    Fix things from within what? There are some people who identify with neither conservative nor liberal speaking points. The moderate viewpoint is entirely ignored in the two-party system, except when an extremist candidate from one of the two parties is trying to court moderate votes.

    Associating yourself with either party implicitly indicates to the rest of that party that you agree with at least most of their views. It's easy, then, to label a true moderate (or libertarian) vote as outside the party lines, leading those who believed the implicit ideological alignment based on party affiliation to label the voter a turncoat.

    I'd love to see an alternative voting system in place that encourages votes for parties other than the big two. It will never happen, of course, while they're in control of congress...

    While we're dreaming, let's get rid of gerrymandering too.

  74. Re:I think we can help with one of these things... by fishdan · · Score: 0

    That is genius! yes please!

    --
    Nothing great was ever achieved without enthusiasm
  75. Stunning? by fredgiblet · · Score: 1

    If you find this stunning I'm not certain I want you in government.

  76. Re:Why? by Mike_Theory · · Score: 1

    Libertarians are 'Right-wing?' Last time i checked, libertarians and republicans (Right wing, right?) are two completely different parties

    --
    /endrant
  77. Re:Why? by SuricouRaven · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I suspect actually lots of mini-conspiracies.

    Obama: I want to close Gitmo, and get the prisoners tried in a civilian court.
    CIA Director: Yeah... look, that's not going to happen. We've a few skeletons in the closet there. If you did that, it'd be embarassing when they got out. I'm afraid that even if you ordered it, we'd have to stall for months. It's just reflect badly on you.
    Democratic congressmen: A nice idea, but the republicans would tear us up on national security if we supported that. We've got elections in two years. Sorry, but we'd have to vote against any bill to do so.
    Obama: Oh.

  78. Re:Why? by robot5x · · Score: 1

    so how do 'marginal' candidates, who do not want to receive corporate donations, become 'mainstream' or 'credible'?

    --
    Hej! Nasi tu byli!
  79. Re:Why? by Vaphell · · Score: 1

    He's not in the debates because of that 15% rule that makes sure the game is only played by team Red and team Blue. You are not in debates = you don't exist. Some say the rule was introduced because of the mess caused by Ross Perrot. Both parties want to make sure no party pooper happens ever again - they agreed on artificial bareers of entry so they can duke it out inside their exclusive club.

  80. Good lord Slashdot by OverkillTASF · · Score: 1

    I've never seen so many people miss the point... Libertarianism isn't the idea that no one can ever do you wrong or that everything corporations due is right. It's more about people using their actual individual power to do something about it. In this case, he's not appealing to government action... He's informing the public about something that strikes him as unfair or wrong. Informing people is the first step to empowering them.

    If you don't see a problem with ABC excluding him, fine. But don't assume that being a libertarian means you have a "Oh well, nothing I can/should do!" attitude. It just means your first reaction isn't "THERE SHOULD BE A LAW!!!!!" when it comes to cases like this.

    1. Re:Good lord Slashdot by chrismcb · · Score: 1

      If you don't see a problem with ABC excluding him, fine.

      My problem is this guy claims to be a serious candidate, yet HE finds it "stunning" that ABC rejected him, and implies there is a conspiracy theory. He event went so far as to LIE about the reason. And the reason for ABC excluding him makes perfect sense. But "lets ignore common sense, and find a conspiracy."

  81. Re:Why? by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

    It's a useful proxy for 'does anyone with money care' - an indirect plutocracy. Then you end up with people on Slashdot complaining that any company with enough money is able to openly buy whatever legislation they want, regardless of the public's view on the matter.

  82. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Ah yes, the rule of the bank(note)s. No one will even bother considering your political views, unless you accept the green communion and gently take it up the... wallet.

    Seriously, this system has to fall...

  83. Re:Why? by FutureDomain · · Score: 0

    Ron Paul tried that very technique, but he got stonewalled by the party establishment and had the rules changed at the last minute to exclude him. People are beginning to realize that changing the parties from the inside out doesn't work as long as there are power hungry people controlling the rules and making decisions for the party.

    But this only works if you try and work within the party. Once Tea Party Republicans realize that they can't beat the powerful and corrupt using their rules, than we'll see a mass exodus followed by a party collapse rivaling the Whig party.

    --
    Hydraulic pizza oven!! Guided missile! Herring sandwich! Styrofoam! Jayne Mansfield! Aluminum siding! Borax!
  84. Non-Player by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 1

    This isn't actually about money at all

    You're right, it's not. It's about the fact that he isn't a "viable" candidate, and in general will have exactly zero impact on the outcome of the election. With slightly larger numbers, he could be a "spoiler" like Ralph Nader, but seriously, at 7% in a Public Radio poll, he's a non-player.

    --
    If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
    1. Re:Non-Player by Seumas · · Score: 1

      You can't be part of the system unless you're a viable candidate, which you can't be until you're a part of the system, which you can't be unless you're a viable candidate.

      The system locks out anything that isn't the status-quo and then entertains those dumb enough to think that the status-quo is different if it's wearing a blue or a red shirt, when it's the same thing.

    2. Re:Non-Player by jedwidz · · Score: 1

      You're right, it's not. It's about the fact that he isn't a "viable" candidate, and in general will have exactly zero impact on the outcome of this election.

      FTFY

      It's not game over when the results come in. The road to the top is long and winding.

  85. Elections? where? by Paracelcus · · Score: 1

    Single party states that want to appear as if they are democratic are not an entirely new phenomenon, the USofA's 1.125 party system is NO exception!
    Every four years the meaningless dance takes place and things just keep getting worse for most of us!
    Under the Repubs, we got "pre-emptive" war, suspended Habeas and Guantanamo Bay.
    Under the Dems, we got "indefinite" detention and nine trillion dollars given away, plus other outrages.

    IMHO, it's all a SHAM, a BULLSHIT shell game to quiet the unwashed masses!

    --
    I killed da wabbit -Elmer Fudd
  86. Re:Why? by shentino · · Score: 1

    It is if stunts like this keep good people off the menu.

    This incident just proves what I already knew, that corporate america has our political system by teh balls and won't let go.

  87. Of course 0% chance of winning... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    With a 0% chance of winning, basically you would be wasting people's time.

    There are so many comments on this article already that seem to demand this response, but yours is the lucky one that gets it.

    "0% chance of winning" is 100% the wrong reason for excluding a candidate from a widely publicized debate in a broken 2-party system like the one in place in the USA. He does indeed have 0% chance of winning, for a variety of reasons such as the electoral college and whatnot, but a big part of why he has 0% chance of winning is that *the vast majority of Americans, whether they vote or not, are completely unaware of there being any choice other than the Rep/Dem candidates.*

    In my mind, that in itself is exactly the reason non-Rep/Dem candidates *must* (for the sake of the country and democracy, not because of legal obligation) be included in widely publicized debates. As long as no air time is given to non-Rep/Dem candidates, and as long as no one (e.g. ABC) affords them an air of legitimacy, they will never have any chance of winning. Doesn't that seem like something that should change?

  88. Third parties should pursue voting reform by forgoodmeasure · · Score: 1

    When you have a winner-take-all system of voting, third parties tend to siphon support from those who are ideologically closest to them. That's not a good way of choosing representatives of the public.

    Libertarians, greens, tea partiers and progressives should join hands and support Instant Runoff Voting, Approval Voting or any number of more rational election schemes. Until they do, it's appropriate to dismiss minor parties as spoilers. Absent such reforms, I support the decision of ABC. Otherwise, I would say that there should be one debate for those polling above 2% and another debate for those polling above 20%.

  89. He's on the ballot - should be enough by gr8_phk · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And really, I'd bet it's more of a "If you don't have $50k, you don't actually have a serious campaign" type of requirement, in their opinion. I don't think it's a conspiracy to make sure you have corporate overlords, it's to make sure they don't have 500 whackjobs on stage preaching about all manner of insanity.

    I'm sure there are not 500 whackjobs on the ballot. This criteria along should get someone in the debate until the number of people on the ballot really does make that impractical. There is no excuse for the media not to include a local candidate for representative that is on the ballot. No reason other than blatant partisanship.

    1. Re:He's on the ballot - should be enough by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Welcome to the real world. No money to buy advertising (as he stated) means "we have no time for you on our programming."

      Recall if you will the First Amendment and its' celebrated Freedom of the Press.

      That means: the Press doesn't _have_ to tell you ANYTHING

    2. Re:He's on the ballot - should be enough by Chelloveck · · Score: 1

      Except that "informing the people" isn't really the mission of the broadcaster. "Making money" is. And in order to make money, they need to get ratings. In order to get ratings they need to air programming that people will watch. You've got two big names that everyone recognizes, and half a dozen unknowns. What will more people watch? A reasoned debate of complex issues among a lot of (mostly unknown) people? Or a two-way pissing match that encourages people to cheer for their guy and boo the other guy?

      --
      Chelloveck
      I give up on debugging. From now on, SIGSEGV is a feature.
  90. and nothing of value was lost by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    30

  91. Re:Why? by BasilBrush · · Score: 5, Funny

    Surely as a Libertarian, he should support the network's freedom to make up or accept any rules they like and have any speakers they want in the debates.

  92. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The network doesn't have freedom when it comes to political debates.

    Something about the FCC...

  93. Wait... What? by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 0

    He's a libertarian candidate whining about what a private tv company chooses to do with its own resources. Why the hell should a libertarian complain aobut it? Shouldn't he be applauding them for doing whatever the hell they want with their stuff? Who should step in and "Fix" the problem? An agry mob?

    He's more than free to find a different tv station to host the debates. The beauty of the free market.

    --
    Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
  94. Re:Why? by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

    Fix things from within what? There are some people who identify with neither conservative nor liberal speaking points.

    From his website, first link, he basically says he ran because he thinks both parties are too partisan

    The Republicans and Democrats have willfully polarized the country for political gain. The party leaders are actively conspiring against compromise. The worst thing you can be called within your party is "moderate.

    Nothing about his views being too far from either to be shoehorned into one, so that doesn't seem to be his concern.

    The moderate viewpoint is entirely ignored in the two-party system, except when an extremist candidate from one of the two parties is trying to court moderate votes.

    From most third party proponents, I hear the opposite: that both parties are identical and there's no real choice.

    I'd love to see an alternative voting system in place that encourages votes for parties other than the big two. It will never happen, of course, while they're in control of congress...

    I agree, specifically because in order to get a parlimentary system or some other system that's compatible with multiparty systems, the constitution would need to be changed. And I don't personally see much point: coalitions are formed before the general election here, they're formed after the election in parlimentary systems. You'd still get the religious fundamentalists and the people who don't think rich people should have to pay taxes teaming up for a majority, same as you do now.

  95. Libertarians are whiny pussies by Rogerborg · · Score: 1

    Now, what's this story about?

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  96. Does ABC accept Bitcoins donations? by retroworks · · Score: 1

    We may be able to help you out, these would not be from a corporate source.

    --
    Gently reply
  97. Of course not by publiclurker · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Libertarians only support their freedom to screw over everyone else. they cry like spoiled children if things don't go their way.

    1. Re:Of course not by SteveFoerster · · Score: 2

      In other words, you don't agree with us, so you say ridiculous things about us and hope that no one will point out how vacuous they are.

      --
      Space game using normal deck of cards: http://BattleCards.org
    2. Re:Of course not by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 1

      I'm not a libertarian, and I'm wondering who voted up this bullshit flamebait comment.

    3. Re:Of course not by LF11 · · Score: 1

      The reddit.com/r/ronpaul community has been dealing with this bullshit for a while. It smells the same as what they're dealing with. If it is the same, it's a troll attack, purely for the sake of causing trouble. Source seems to be from a group of folks surrounding an EnoughPaulSpam meme.

    4. Re:Of course not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I mostly just ignore you like the rest of the world. This fucking pleb can't even raise $50,000. He's not qualified to be the "President" of the local taco stand.

    5. Re:Of course not by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      People who saw it was insightful.

    6. Re:Of course not by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      But it's not a ridiculous thing. It's exactly what's happening here.

    7. Re:Of course not by SteveFoerster · · Score: 1

      Let's assume that's actually an accurate description of the guy who submitted the article. It's still completely ridiculousto take what he does, and extrapolate that out to all members of the entire group. It would be like me saying that all people who aren't libertarian are puerile and illogical just because publiclurker is, when that's obviously not the case.

      --
      Space game using normal deck of cards: http://BattleCards.org
    8. Re:Of course not by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      I guess this isn't his only experience of Libertarians.

  98. Not quite by gr8_phk · · Score: 1

    They should pass a law that mandates that anyone who broadcasts a debate must include Libertarians.

    Not sure I agree, but the criteria in that case should be "everyone on the ballot".

    1. Re:Not quite by GrumpySteen · · Score: 1

      I think you nay have missed the joke. Don't feel bad. Subtlety is kinda rare around these parts.

  99. Re:Why? by BasilBrush · · Score: 2, Funny

    First step: don't be Libertarian.

  100. Because by publiclurker · · Score: 1

    if he can't come up with that much support he's no more legitimate than the crazy cat lady who lives in the cardboard box by the bus station. We have to have some sort of filter or every debate, etc. will be filled with dozens of idiots looking for nothing but self-aggrandizing attention.

    1. Re:Because by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if he can't come up with that much support he's no more legitimate than the crazy cat lady who lives in the cardboard box by the bus station. We have to have some sort of filter or every debate, etc. will be filled with dozens of idiots looking for nothing but self-aggrandizing attention.

      How about just signatures and polls, like most other countries?

  101. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    If nobody cares enough about your candidacy to throw you a couple bucks, the odds are very high that you're a marginal/crank candidate rather than a serious one, and candidates with no support shouldn't waste valuable time in a debate

    With this, you show what is fundamentally wrong with America today.

    Complete and utter idiocy.

  102. Get non-corporate donations by publiclurker · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Is it really that hard to figure out?

  103. Re:Why? by jalefkowit · · Score: 1

    If he could convince 5,000 people to give him $10 each, he'd have $50,000.

    More than 600,000 people live in his district. 5,000 people is 7/10ths of 1 percent of that population.

    If you can't convince a fraction of 1% of the people you want to represent to throw you ten freaking dollars, it is very unlikely that you will be able to convince 50%-plus-one of them to vote for you.

    And ten dollar contributions aren't "anyone with money" or "indirect plutocracy." It's a few bucks so you can buy yard signs for your supporters and coffee for your volunteers. People pay more than that for a ticket to a crappy 3D movie.

  104. No. by publiclurker · · Score: 0

    It's an indication of support. If you can't find enough people willing to even chip in a buck or two, you don't have any support other than your own ego.

    1. Re:No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's an indication of support. If you can't find enough people willing to even chip in a buck or two, you don't have any support other than your own ego.

      Agreed. I want the best government money can buy.

  105. I'd criticize, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...I find it hard to understand why the station should have any criteria beyond, "Has the candidate qualified to actually be on the ballot?" IMVHO, anybody who actually makes it on the ballot (as opposed to a write in) should be allowed to debate their views with the big boys. Anything further should be for write ins with serious chances of winning.

    Not that I particularly care.

  106. Not so fast by gr8_phk · · Score: 1

    This is NOT that "they refused me because I refused corporate donations". This is "I'm too small a candidate to be considered serious by their metric".

    It may be that the other candidates didn't get 50K in non-corporate donations either. If he's refusing those donations on principal then he's being excluded because of what he stands for (assuming he really did reject that amount). Besides, who's to say they wouldn't raise the bar to 250 if he took the 50?

  107. Re:Why? by interkin3tic · · Score: 1

    That and also HE DIDN'T WIN THE PRIMARIES. He didn't even come in second to Romney. Santorum and Gingrich BOTH got more votes in the primary than he did.

    There is no voting system under which Ron Paul would have had a decent shot: most voters were not interested. I was going to register as a republican specifically to vote for him, but a move in the middle of the primary season precluded that. I like the guy. But let's not act like his message is so good that every dumb voter out there would have seen the light and voted for him were it not for a conspiracy of shadowy figures who silenced him. He lost. There were some shenanigans, yes, but I don't think that changed the outcome.

  108. Funny by publiclurker · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I though it was called having a temper-tantrum to get attention.

  109. Would you like? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Would you like some cheese and crackers to go with that whine? They have limits for a reason. If they didn't set limits, you could end up with 40 people up there trying to be heard over each other making it impossible to hear any one of them. You apparently do not meet their minimum qualifications to be a viable candidate for this election. I can understand your frustration to an extent, but there isn't much you can do about it. Cry and whine and hope they make an exception, which will make you look pretty bad to the voters. But hey, that's your call.

  110. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bullshit. Just because he's on the ballot, doesn't mean the cards aren't stacked against him.

    A plurality voting system strongly encourages candidates to consolidate into two parties. If they didn't, the two that were more ideologically similar would be cannibalizing each others base. The third could then win even if they were the least favorite of the majority of people.

    People realize this; that's why people talk about third-party votes being "wasted" and the third party candidate getting votes only helps the opposition. Just imagine if there were Democratic, Republican, and Tea Party candidates for president this year. The Tea Party candidate would get enough of the "not Democratic" vote that it wouldn't even be a close race. In the current race, the Libertarian candidate would probably be getting more votes if people weren't trying to avoid helping the "other guy" win.

    We desperately need to move to using some other voting system. There is a lot of debate on which ones are the best (personally, I like the looks of STV/IRV), but it's pretty obvious that plurality voting is nowhere near the top of the list. Even if we changed to a different system that had its own issues, they wouldn't be as severe as what we have now.

  111. since he doesn't have the 50K by publiclurker · · Score: 1

    I doubt many of the 7% have given him any donations either.

  112. There's nothing in the letter requiring that... by John+Hasler · · Score: 2

    ...the $50,000 come from "corporations". A thousand $50 contributions would suffice. Don't you take donations at all? Where do you get your funds?

    --
    Warning: this article may contain humor, sarcasm, parody, and perhaps even irony. Read at your own risk.
  113. Re:Why? by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

    Obama's still a politician, the elections are a circus for politicians to strut their stuff, lots of stuff sounds good in words & on paper, putting it into action is another story. And yes, it's publicly known that there's other entities in play apart from the president that vote on those things, like... the senate.

    The internet has freed people, Egypt being a decent example, it's keeping it at that level of freedom that's become the hard part.

  114. Re:Why? by epyT-R · · Score: 1

    why? how can you really support the first two at this point?

  115. Re:I think we can help with one of these things... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, I can't garuntee that you won't lose to Natalie Portman, Cowboy Neil, or Crazy Ernie*. Slashdot could also end up using your name in some kind of hiddeous troll effort that will destroy your google ranking ala Sanatorium. Are you really sure you want your name on this site? Do you really think it will help your cause?

    I'd vote for you in the slashdot poll, but you know crazy Ernie's has those seals that need saving.

  116. Re:Why? by epyT-R · · Score: 2

    wait what? voting IS the way to fix things from within, right? why is voting for third, fourth, fifth, or sixth parties not fixing from within? You know, the solutions to the problems we face cannot be flattened into democrat and/or republican ideology.

  117. Re:Why? by Mike+Buddha · · Score: 2

    He is excluded because he couldn't raise a piddling $50,000. THERE IS NO REQUIREMENT THAT THE $50,000 COME FROM CORPORATE DONORS! The pathetic liar (a trait that is disgustingly common in right-wing candidates this year) couldn't get $50,000 and chose to blame corporations, a bizarre statement to hear from a Libertarian to say the least.

    The HELL you say! A politician bending the truth to fit his own narrative?! Not in this man's America, no siree Bob!

    --
    by Mike Buddha -- Someday the mountain might get him, but the law never will.
  118. Re:Why? by BeansBaxter · · Score: 1

    You honestly believe a Libertarian candidate once supported Obama? Can you point me to any part of the libertarian platform that Obama supported?

  119. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Couldn't have said it better myself. Except I think things were more along the lines of:

    Obama:"I am going to change X".
    "Advisor:"Mr. President, that is not within your control and these people back here behind the curtain control those things.
    Obama:"What? Malarkey, I am going to make a difference and we are gonna fix this place."
    "Advisor": "Remember Kennedy? What about Jackson? Lincoln? ...click..."

    Kennedy was the last hope we had. No one is willing to die for it. By the time they get to President they are already rich. Who wants to go out like that?

  120. More than two parties, less pre-scripting. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I personally want to see the FIVE parties polling the highest at the debates.

    I want to see any candidate that is on half the ballets (thus, theoretically eligible to win) at the debates.

    Is this so unreasonable?

    Why do we have to worry about time limits for debates, let people talk as long as they want and publish it on the web. No need to restrict it to television.

    Better yet, have live fact-checking during the debates, with the results displayed real-time.

  121. Sit tight man, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the waambulance is on the way!

    the fact is you shouldn't want to be there. to debate them is to acknowledge they might have valid points of view, when you should be campaigning on the premiss that the voters should not consider any of the D/R party backed candidates because they are backed by the Demopublicans or Republocrats, (depending on which half of the party, the "dem's" or "repub's" has the upper hand at a given time). Until you divorce the electorate from their closely held belief that a vote for someone other than candidate D is a vote defacto for candidate R, and vice-versa, no candidate who isn't supported by the machine is going to have a chance of being elected, which means, conversely, we the people will have no chance at a fair, freely elected government, no matter how long this supposed-democracy keeps going.

    until we, each of us individually, realize that the support (the nomination) of either of the two halves of America's single, double-headed political party, is an absolute disqualifier for holding office, we will continue to have the sort of government we have seen here. The sort that pay themselves vast quantities of money stolen from us, who disregard the ridiculous rules they make which we all are compelled to obey but which don't, of course, apply to them, and then get paid under the table to sell-out the people who voted for them to increase their personal fortunes.

    until we do this, this is what we'll get. enjoy.

  122. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Amazing. Where I come from (Norway), excluding a politician with 15% support would be unthinkable. We regularly include people from parties with 2-4% support in television debates here. And the amount of dontations is certainly not an issue - it isn't common to donate to political parties at all, and shouldn't be either. Otherwise, it will be easier to represent the rich than the poor, and democracy is supposed to be one person - one vote, not one dollar, one vote.

    I definitely think it is a problem that the original poster is being excluded for lack of donations. Not only shouldn't he need any, he also says he has been actively refusing to accept donations, so how does him not having any give any indication of his popularity? While I strongly disagree with libertarianism, I think it is very respectable of him not to play into the corrupt donation- and advertisement-heavy campaign system in the USA.

  123. Re:Why? by NemosomeN · · Score: 1, Troll

    In a voting system where the second place and third place get a voice, Ron Paul would get a lot more votes. A vote for Ron Paul is a vote for nobody. In a parliamentary system, Ron Paul's followers would have a real reason to vote for him. In first past the post, there is no such incentive. Also, Ron Paul is insane.

    --
    I hate grammar Nazi's.
  124. Re:Why? by Vaphell · · Score: 2

    no shit he did not. Maybe he wouldn't win with fair treatment but the biggest problem is everybody and their dog tried their best to marginalize him and show him as a non viable candidate despite double digit support. You need a strong start in primary season if you want to get to the finish line but all the pundits did right from the start was downplaying RP's importance and tirelessly pointing to Mittens as the chosen one.
    The list of mysterious errors in MSM underestimating his score or outright omissions even in the early stage, where everybody else was covered, is very long. Even Jon Stewart mocked that in one of his shows.

  125. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Indeed, and even if he's the only minor candidate and isn't a crank, you can be pretty sure that if he gets airtime, next election all the true cranks will come out of the woodwork.

  126. Re:Why? by J'raxis · · Score: 2

    Indeed. In New Hampshire, we haven't had a Libertarian in a state-level or higher office since the 1990s. However, we have about forty outright-pro-liberty Republicans in the 400-member State House right now (a dozen of which are the so-called freestaters). We've had one pro-liberty Democrat get elected, too (Rep. Joel Winters, 2006-2010), and a handful of other liberty activists have run as Democrats, too.

    What we've learned from New Hampshire politics: Both the major parties have pro-liberty elements; with Republicans it's taxes, spending, and firearms, with Democrats it's social freedom issues, privacy, and civil rights.* If you actually want to get elected (as opposed to just making a point by running, running as a "protest" candidate, or the like), pick a party depending on which issues you care more about. If you make it through the primary, you're guaranteed about 30% of the people will vote for you in the general just because of the party label, then you only have to worry about getting that additional 20%+1 to win. Running as a third party, you have to work for every single vote to make the full 50%+1, and first you have to waste your time petitioning just to get on the ballot. I've known a couple Libertarians who worked their asses off---visiting every single registered voter household in their district (one of which was 9,000 people)---only to get less than 4% of the vote.

    * That's the breakdown on the state level here; YMMV in other states of course.

  127. Gitmo North by DeadCatX2 · · Score: 2

    I think your first line there is a little bit off. Allow me to fix that for ya.

    Obama: I want to close Gitmo, and transfer all of Gitmo's defining human rights violations to a new facility in Illinois.

    http://www.aclu.org/national-security/creating-gitmo-north-alarming-step-says-aclu

    some detainees might be held for military commission proceedings in Illinois while others might be held at Thomson [Correctional Center in Illinois] indefinitely without charge or trial.

    --
    :(){ :|:& };:
    1. Re:Gitmo North by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Test

  128. Trendy trends are trendy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This TV thing is a passing fad, already a dinosaur headed for extinction.

    1. Re:Trendy trends are trendy by Skapare · · Score: 1

      And then there's the 'D' word. The first thing I would NOT do if I ran for any political office is do a debate. I especially would not do one on TV. And, oh, BTW, I've worked in TV studios and master control before. I'm not afraid of TV studios. I've been on the air in a couple of community shows on regular broadcast TV stations, too (not the ones I worked at). The issue is that debates themselves are a horrible medium to get the message out through. People are focusing on who can out-talk the other guy. It's like the people that tune in to a car race to see the crashes instead of who wins.

      The political race should be about whose position is agreed on by most people, not who came up with the best one liner. This is why I'm NOT watching ANY of the debates. I can find out from the news the next day who "won" the debate. But that doesn't really mean anything.

      Oh, if you are wanting to know who I will vote for, for President ... it's the Irish guy.

      --
      now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
  129. Bogus by Chuckstar · · Score: 1

    Isn't the claim of having pointedly and publicly refused corporate donations completely bogus? I thought corporate donations directly to campaigns was still illegal. The Citizens United stuff is all about corporations spending money independently of the campaigns.

  130. Re:Why? by Chuckstar · · Score: 1

    Worse than that. IIRC, it's actually illegal for a campaign to accept corporate donations. So this is a completely bogus complaint.

  131. Re:Why? by peragrin · · Score: 2

    ;the only reason why Obama can't actually change things is the same reason why people who enter the presidential office looking young come out looking haggard withdrawn and spent.

    The President of the USA is the least powerful, least useful position of the USA. you get all the blame, all the responsibility yet you can't actually change anything without congress's approval.

    seriously sure Obama was able to push and prode enough congresscritters to get the republican designed health care passed. look at what else he was able to do beyond that.

    Fix the economy. nope everyone wants it to sit just like it as because if it breaks while their touching it it is their fault.

    get us out of forgien wars. nope because the right wing wants to stick their noses in everyone else's business. (look at the right wing trying to undo liberties)

    Close down gizmo, nope because no one wants to take responsibility for the prisoners .

    Of course he is more than willing to pander to the democrats corporations(hollywood, DMCA, etc)

    Pick which set of civil liberties you want taken. the R's are going after one group, the D's another.

    --
    i thought once I was found, but it was only a dream.
  132. Re:Well Boo hoo.. by Rockoon · · Score: 1

    Please go cry some where else. Requirements are there to be met

    In this case, the requirements are there as a barrier to entry, and seem to be used as a tool for exactly that. Given the arbitrary nature of the requirements, its pretty clear that if he had $50K in donations, the requirement would quickly be adjusted to $100K.

    --
    "His name was James Damore."
  133. Re:Why? by Lendrick · · Score: 1

    I think a lot of libertarians consider themselves to be the "true scotsmen" of the right wing. Theoretically they're to the right on economic issues and to the left on social issues, and I know a lot of libertarians who are like that. There are also plenty of republicans and some democrats who like to *call* themselves libertarian in order to sound cool, but really aren't.

  134. Let us not forget by Son+of+Byrne · · Score: 1

    ...That a libertarian is *never* allowed to complain about how they are treated

    Let us also deride this person gratuitously for his lack of campaign funds and perpetuate the problem with politics in the US

    Let us all not forget this when we get we deserve in government.

    --
    I'd happily pay you Tuesday for a biopsy today!
    1. Re:Let us not forget by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 1

      Progressive out of one side of their mouth:
      "Let's get money out of politics!"
      Out of the other:
      "Donation amount shows how much people are serious about you want want you elected!"

  135. WHAT IS YOUR *NAME*? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Who the Fuck are you?

    Would it kill you to give your name once in the title?

    Lets see.... One article doesnt mention your name...

    I guess Im supposed to just write in "The Masked Politician" and hope the ballot counters get the joke?

  136. And this Fishman guy locks ME out of ... by Skapare · · Score: 3, Informative

    ,,, his web site commentary just because I don't want to give out my identity to some third party web site?

    --
    now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
    1. Re:And this Fishman guy locks ME out of ... by tobiah · · Score: 1

      Well, you don't have to give out *your* identity.

      --
      "The ability to delude yourself may be an important survival tool" - Jane Wagner -
  137. Re:Why? by magarity · · Score: 1

    The President of the USA is the least powerful, least useful position of the USA. you get all the blame, all the responsibility yet you can't actually change anything without congress's approval.

    No, sorry, the President is in charge of the executive regulatory agencies. He can make sweeping changes via these and the only thing Congress can do about it is cut whichever agency's budget in the following year.

  138. It's not that much.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    $50k is less than I have in my checking account. And I work on the assembly line in a factory that doesn't have A/C.

    Sure, I'm an outlier. Probably a rather extreme one. But a politician who can't get $50k worth of support probably isn't going to get many votes anyhow.

    And yes, there's a chicken/egg problem here, but you've got the internet. You can raise money from people all around the world, not just your district. If you can't get enough attention to get $50k, you're not going very far in politics. Sorry.

  139. Re:Why? by slashdottedjoe · · Score: 2

    I am running for US Senate in Wisconsin as a Libertarian and have the same problems. They want 500k in contributions and 10% in polls I will never be in. It is quite frustrating.

  140. Re:Why? by slashdottedjoe · · Score: 1

    Both the major parties are irreparably damaged to a Libertarian. We do not endorse handouts to the public or to businesses, we reject the wars and we want true limited government. Which of the Republicans or Democrats believe in that?

  141. Re:Why? by interkin3tic · · Score: 0

    He finished fourth after two guys who dropped out halfway through. You're suggesting that's because he was marginalized as a non-viable candidate, I think the simpler answer is that he a non-viable candidate, which is why he was ignored.

  142. Re:Why? by MindlessAutomata · · Score: 2

    So I'm guessing you think every anti-religion atheist also thinks building churches should be illegal? That's the same line of logic your assuming there. I'm not a libertarian but I'm amazed at how intellectually dishonest people are in politics, and people gang up on libertarians in particular because I think libertarians just make them really, really angry--the permissiveness of libertarians combined with the lack of economic control liberals want seems to inflame everybody.

  143. Re:Why? by erroneus · · Score: 2

    Where did you read that ridiculous idea? Really. Where?

  144. wait a minute by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    isn't this exactly the kind of stuff libertarians want? cold hard cash deciding everything? looks like you got hoisted on your petard, bro. deal with it.

  145. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice strawman. Libertarians do, in fact, (at least pretend to) advocate extreme freedom of association. You should be able to refuse dealing with anyone for any reason no matter what kind of private organization you might be. So yes, everyone who is to call themselves Libertarian (in the American sense) should support this as much as they support a restaurant owner's rights to kick out blacks (which they do).

  146. Re:Why? by fredprado · · Score: 2

    Or a single corporation, which is considerably easier, thus the point of the GP. Money is not an indicative of the number of people interested in you. It is an indicative of the capital interested in you.

  147. Re:Why? by cas2000 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Under the current rules, third parties can never win or achieve anything in the US.

    What you yanks need is electoral form, including:

    1. Compulsory voting. It tends to suppress the loony extremes (of all sides) and makes politicians start pandering to the politically apathetic majority rather than extremist nut-cases. If you ever take the time to look at the american political system from the outside you'll realise what an amazingly good thing this would be. Your politicians are scary...they're completely insane. It's terrifying that these lunatics could be elected to positions of power in the world's one remaining superpower....it's even more terrifying that these people could have that power at a time when the america empire is collapsing - your influence and global political relevance are dwindling.

    I know many of you yanks think compulsory voting is immoral or something, that if someone's apathetic then they don't deserve the vote....but a) being politically apathetic means they just want to be left alone, they're not volunteering to be shat on, and b) they're most likely apathetic because (under the current system) it makes no difference whether they vote or not.

    2. Some form of preferential voting so that voting for third-party or independent candidates is not a complete waste of a vote....You can vote for your favoured third-party candidate knowing that if he/she doesn't win, you vote will pass to your 2nd choice (and then to your third then fourth, etc choices).

    The Condorcet method is good but probably beyond what the average vote can understand, Alternative Ballot is also good and easy enough for the average voter to understand.

    3. State-level reform of your electoral college system - specifically eliminate winner-takes-all as an option. if 51% of the voters in a state prefer candidate A as president then that candidate should get 51% of that state's presidential votes, not 100%.

    4. Paper ballots.

    5. Make it harder (if not impossible) to disenfranchise people from their vote. Dropping people from electoral rolls should only be done *individually* never in bulk, with hand-signed (not automated) notification from the State's top electoral official at least six months before it affects a person's voting rights (if there's an election before then, they're still entitled to vote). Notification must include the cause, and legal causes must be strictly limited. *ANY* objection by the individual should immediately re-instate their voting rights until and unless the state can show cause in court why that individual should be disenfranchised.

    6. Even felons should have voting rights, even while serving their sentences - but certainly once they've done their time. This is especially important when you consider that many felonies are victimless crimes like drug use....if a law is wrong then those convicted of it need to be able to vote to get that law changed.

    You also need massive campaign finance reform (in short: ban all campaign contributions above, say $50 per person per year. complete ban on contributions from non-natural persons - corporations, lobby groups, religious organisations, etc).

    Finally, you've got thousands of nukes. You can afford to drop a few on FOX news' HQ. Try it, you'll be glad you did.

  148. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why does a contribution have to be a bribe?

  149. Re:Why? by jodido · · Score: 0

    So, in whatever country you live in, or whatever country follows these 6 rules, the government is "better"?--more representative of ordinary people? Perhaps you could tell us where this paradise is. The UK? Spain? Greece?

  150. Re:Why? by Compaqt · · Score: 1

    Why do you say he is insane? Some would say he's the only sane person in the room. The others are just doing the same things and expecting different results.

    Secondly, he recognizes that many people have come to depend on government help, and he doesn't want to throw them on the street. He just wants to enable young people to invest their Social Security money because there isn't going to be any SS around for them.

    --
    I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
  151. ABC needs advertising revenue, you have no $$$ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ABC [and other media] rely very heavily on campaign spending, so naturally it is in their interest to encourage the candidates to raise and spend as much as possible. It is NOT in their commercial interest to give candidates like YOU access to the airwaves.

  152. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Australia (posting anon so I don't undo mod points).

  153. They're a private company, right? by nedlohs · · Score: 2

    So the libertarian way would be that they're allowed to include or exclude whomever they want, surely?

  154. Wait, wait, wait. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ABC is allowed to bar him if he doesn't meet their requirements. He should support it because that's exactly what he's supporting as a Libertarian.

    I can understand Anarchists, Socialists and other leftists complaining, but paleolibertarians are supporting this concept so they should stop whining.

  155. Re:Poor baby by Toonol · · Score: 1

    You honestly think you're behaving like a grown-up?

  156. So you are by Anarchduke · · Score: 1

    polling at 7% and haven't raised 50K in campaign contributions. I'd dearly love to see the two party system broken but you haven't got a chance in hell. Sorry to be the bearer of bad news.

    --
    who prays for Satan? Who in 18 centuries has had the humanity to pray for the 1 sinner that needed it most? ~Mark Twain
  157. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Money is what is corrupting the political system. Anybody who thinks the problem is going to be solved by throwing more money into it is either corrupt or insane.

  158. Re:Why? by RyuuzakiTetsuya · · Score: 0

    Given how hand in hand the aims of libertarianism and corporatism are I'm shocked he doesn't take the money and run with it.

    --
    Non impediti ratione cogitationus.
  159. Re:Hard to radically change the system from within by tobiah · · Score: 1

    Gorbachev was a huge Communist Party insider, and it took him to dismantle the Soviet Union.

    --
    "The ability to delude yourself may be an important survival tool" - Jane Wagner -
  160. Re:Why? by The+Master+Control+P · · Score: 1

    I refer you to GGP poster's bolded allcaps which you somehow missed: THERE IS NO REQUIREMENT THAT THE $50,000 COME FROM CORPORATE DONORS

  161. Tithe by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can understand if you don't go to church, but missions are generally funded by the people in the congregation that give a full Tithe. That, generally, is ten percent of their entire earnings. You don't even need half a dozen of them to sign off and you are living like a king in a third world country in no time.

    50 grand for a mission is easy to get. It's God's Will after all.

  162. look to your own ideology for an answer by ffflala · · Score: 1

    What would the libertarian approach to a private company making their own, legal, decision be, even if you found it unfair or even perhaps detrimental to society overall? Would it involve attempting to mandate a different decision by force of law? Or to force a private company to act in a certain way based solely on public outcry?

    Hey maybe next time you could try riding a different, more effective, polittical ideology into power, THEN trying to force a your own "real", different ideology onto others.

    And seriously: if you can't generate $50k, why is it exactly you believe you're qualified to be in a position to steer the direction of multiples of that amount?

  163. Re:Why? by tobiah · · Score: 1

    Fantastic list, I'm filing it away for future use.

    --
    "The ability to delude yourself may be an important survival tool" - Jane Wagner -
  164. Re:Hard to radically change the system from within by macraig · · Score: 1

    It might have been luck rather than sheer skill or persistence. How many Politburo insiders tried before him? How many party system insiders have tried and failed here? How long will we have to wait for our own Gorbachev?

  165. Do you honestly think by publiclurker · · Score: 0

    such self-important whiners deserve to be treated as adults?

  166. do not abuse by kdemetter · · Score: 1

    I understand that you are angry and looking for revenge.

    However, I don't like your suggestion to 'blow it up' through slashdot , because I don't like being used for political means, and I doubt many others are willing either.

    If you truly care about the people, you need to understand that we are not tools for you to wield, nor weapons to ensure your victory.
    We are human beings, with general and specific concerns.

    You are not the first politician to make this mistake, but you seem to be willing, so here goes nothing :

    - Present yourself , show your ideas to the public ( through your blog, whatever ) and engage in debate with the public.
    - Listen openly to people, without judging them
    - Always follow your heart : don't change your views because some people don't like them. There will always be people who dislike them.

    It may not help you get elected, but if you do go elected, you will be able to truly help the people, because you will know what they need.

    The best action towards ABC would have been to simply not care about them, maybe even to thank them, and then find another medium.
    If you become popular through other means, they will begin to wonder why they didn't include you then. And since the relationship wasn't broken, they would probably invite you then.

  167. Re:Why? by trevelyon · · Score: 1

    I'm sorry this is just too funny for me. I can't be the only one that sees corruption, lack of trust in elected officials and "campaign finance reform" as being huge on-going issues. It just seems facepalm obvious that requiring politicians to have a "minimum amount of donations" is like requiring a rehab councillor to have "sampled the wares a bit". If someone has 10% of the polled vote in their favor in a race between at least 3 people doesn't this qualify them as a serious enough candidate or are we just admitting that only the top 2 get to go on to the debates?

  168. Re:Why? by alanshot · · Score: 2

    .... You are not in debates = you don't exist....

    Case in point: Two days after attending a Gary Johnson rally and subsequently planting one of his signs in my yard that night, my extended family came over for an event. As I am helping Mom carry stuff in (past the sign) This exchange occurs:
    "Gary Johnson? Who's that?"
    "The Libertarian candidate for President, mom."
    "Never heard of him."
    /CSB

    The 15% is a self fulfilling prophecy of sorts. How can you get 15% if you dont debate? If you dont have 15% you cant debate. o_O

    /that is unless you accept corp donations that tie your hands and create obligations to special interests, etc.
    //oh, wait, thats how our corrupt system works. Silly me.

  169. Re:Why? by Raenex · · Score: 2

    you yanks

    Gee, thanks.

    1. Compulsory voting.

    Disagree. If you can't be bothered to vote, then your voice doesn't count. Seems fair to me. Also, if you aren't going to educate yourself on the choices, I'd rather you didn't vote.

    a) being politically apathetic means they just want to be left alone, they're not volunteering to be shat on

    That's your own political spin.

    b) they're most likely apathetic because (under the current system) it makes no difference whether they vote or not.

    Your argument is if all those apathetic people voted, then they would make a difference. So it's their fault for not voting, as they are part of the problem.

    Your politicians are scary...they're completely insane.

    Uh huh. And I'm sure your politicians are completely rational people who never engage in polemics.

    2. Some form of preferential voting so that voting for third-party or independent candidates is not a complete waste of a vote....

    Agree.

    3. State-level reform of your electoral college system

    Agree.

    4. Paper ballots.

    Maybe require a paper trail, but I don't think electronic voting is unfixable. Back in 2000 in Bush vs. Gore, paper ballots took center stage at the controversy and prompted the move to electronic.

    5. Make it harder (if not impossible) to disenfranchise people from their vote.

    Agree in principle, although I'm iffy on your implementation.

    6. Even felons should have voting rights, even while serving their sentences - but certainly once they've done their time.

    Agree.

    ban all campaign contributions above, say $50 per person per year. complete ban on contributions from non-natural persons - corporations, lobby groups, religious organisations, etc

    Disagree. I have a libertarian bent, and freedom to associate and spend money on a common political cause fits in with that.

    Finally, you've got thousands of nukes. You can afford to drop a few on FOX news' HQ.

    Wow, fuck off. I'm not a fan of Fox News, but I'm not a fan of MSNBC either, and freedom of speech and the press is paramount.

  170. Mod up funny by shiftless · · Score: 0

    Out of curiosity, what made you run third party rather than trying to fix things from within? There are obstacles either way of course, was there something that made you convinced whichever party you were closer to ideologically was irreparably damaged?

    LOL!

    Wait.......you're serious?

  171. Mods, what the fuck? by shiftless · · Score: 0

    How is this a troll?

  172. Principles not Personalities + Set Theory by hughbar · · Score: 1

    Sorry about the heading, some of you will know the quote though. I've argued about the UK and Europe because I'm a Brit.

    But most people want policies or sets of policies rather than particular people. Some of that is driven by idealism, some by self-interest and more usually by mixtures of the two.

    However the candidates don't usually map to the policies and so, in the centre, quite justifiably, one wants a slice of both candidates. Also, of course, in this scenario, some policies are interlocking. Public healthcare will require taxation to support it, for example, it can't just be conjured. So some set sets of policies are desirable but self-contradictory [although less so than the system would have it, there should be no 'deep' poverty in the UK, for example, it's not third-world].

    Finally, politicians often don't deliver their policies because of a) outside constraints, I'm sure the current UK government would prefer to spend more currently, for example b) public servants who pursue their own agendas and block anything that requires effort [think Sir Humphrey but real-life, I worked for the EEC for quite a while] c) influential lobbying, this is something that we probably can start to make more transparent and eliminate, but to get back to OP, it means removing a lot of the money-focus from modern electoral systems.

    So [my opinion] there's not just one problem and the amalgam makes a wicked problem: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wicked_problem

    --
    On y va, qui mal y pense!
  173. Karl Rove Cares by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.dailykos.com/story/2011/08/27/1010778/-BREAKING-Leaked-Rove-email-singles-out-Daily-Kos

    ""Anonymous" has struck again, this time leaking a confidential internal directive from Karl Rove's shadowy, billionaire-funded American Crossroads GPS outfit."

    http://web.archive.org/web/20110622211824/http://advantageconsultants.org/
    Advantage Consultants care, they're a paid for turfing group exactly for websites like slashsot.

    You should care too. Indeed we've had a lot of accounts lately that are all single issue, with filler comments.

    The conditions for debate requires he be a corporate hoe, that's unacceptable, we don't want corporate hoes in power, yet ABC set conditions designed to eliminate him.

    "On the day of the debate - run your own commentary - in real time, as the debate goes on."
    It's an interesting idea, but I don't think it would work, they can't listen and condense two things at the same time. IMHO he should kick up a stink (exactly what he's starting now), and carefully draft what he would have countered to each of their talking points. So that in one short article he gets the concept over that ABC blocked him, because he's coherent and third party.

  174. Re:Why? by drsmithy · · Score: 1

    You also need massive campaign finance reform (in short: ban all campaign contributions above, say $50 per person per year. complete ban on contributions from non-natural persons - corporations, lobby groups, religious organisations, etc).

    The best tradeoff for political donations, I believe, is to a) accept donations from natural persons only, and b) to a per-person amount no higher than 4 weeks (or 2 if you're in a country where you only get 2 weeks annual leave per year) worth of full-time, minimum wage work.

  175. This is a shock? Corporations run the USA by Nyder · · Score: 1

    It doesn't matter if you are republican or democrat, or a liberal, or a tea party, or Satan himself.

    Who wins elections? Corporations.

    If you aren't taking any corporation funds for your campaign, they don't want you playing. You are NOT furthering their goals at all.

    People think it's about Democrats and repubs, but it's not. It's about corporate control, and if this doesn't prove it to ya, then hang out for the ride, it's going to get bumpy for the next few decades.

    --
    Be seeing you...
  176. I am a Libertarian candidate... by EWAdams · · Score: 1

    Well, there's your problem.

    --
    I piss off bigots.
  177. Re:Why? by Kijori · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Getting $50,000 in contributions may not show that lots of people support you, but not being able to get $50,000 in contributions is a pretty good sign that no-one supports you, for the reasons above.
    The submitter says he's polling 7%; he's not, he's polling 7% in a poll of 401 people with a stated error margin almost as big as that 7%. The fact that he can't raise $50,000 suggests that he's probably close to the bottom of that error bound.

  178. Lying Politician is a Liar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So you weren't excluded for refusing corporate donations, you were refused for being a candidate with less than $50,000 in contributions.

  179. It's enough that you're a libertarian by WOOFYGOOFY · · Score: 0
    I don't know what you're complaining about. The market has spoken.

    ABC is a privately owned corporation . They can do whatever they want for whatever reason they want. Your whining to us or the government of whoever about the "unfair" actions of a private corporation sounds like socialism to me.

    If you don't like ABC's decision, then you can start your own television station and have your own debate.

    Problem solved- the Libertarian way!

  180. Re:Why? by Dr.+Hok · · Score: 1

    1. Compulsory voting.

    Disagree. If you can't be bothered to vote, then your voice doesn't count. Seems fair to me. Also, if you aren't going to educate yourself on the choices, I'd rather you didn't vote.

    I agree that compulsory voting is problematic. But at least there shouldn't be obstacles to voting. It strikes me as odd that you must register to vote, and in the process you are required to say which party you support (correct me if I'm wrong). This is hardly a secret ballot. In most civilized countries everybody registered citzen above 18 is automagically registered to vote and IMHO this is how it should be.

    4. Paper ballots.

    Back in 2000 in Bush vs. Gore, paper ballots took center stage at the controversy and prompted the move to electronic.

    Not quite. Voting machines were the problem, which were unable to count votes due to hanging chads.

    A simple cross on a paper ballot counted by people is much less error-prone. Humans make errors, too, but are better at correcting them.

    Disagree. I have a libertarian bent, and freedom to associate and spend money on a common political cause fits in with that.

    I have the impression that money is more important than votes in the US electoral system. This doesn't seem right. My spider sense tingles when I read that the quality of a candidate is measured by the amount of donations he receives. This is obvious bribery.

    Wow, fuck off. I'm not a fan of Fox News, but I'm not a fan of MSNBC either, and freedom of speech and the press is paramount.

    IMHO feedom of speech should come with responsibility. It is hard to ignore that Fox (ab)uses their power to support a certain political direction. A news channel should try to be unbiased.

    --
    Say out loud: I'm an Aspie and I'm somewhat proud, I guess. Uh. Can I write an email in all caps instead? Hm...
  181. Instructive, no? by Rambo+Tribble · · Score: 1

    A good deal of what is lacking in the Libertarian manifesto involves a failure to properly appreciate the finer qualities of applied cynicism. Here, you have an object lesson.

  182. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If you can't convince a fraction of 1% of the people you want to represent to throw you ten freaking dollars, it is very unlikely that you will be able to convince 50%-plus-one of them to vote for you.

    The fact that anyone would think this is a valid argument in a democracy shows how successful the corporations have been in brainwashing the public.

  183. Re:Why? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

    Obama did a lot for your economy with those stimulus packages. In the UK we are about half way through our lost decade thanks to the government's inaction. It could have been much worse for America too.

    --
    const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
    SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
  184. Re:Why? by Raenex · · Score: 1

    It strikes me as odd that you must register to vote

    It's probably due to people moving around and weak ID laws, and some discrimination too. I agree there's room for improvement.

    and in the process you are required to say which party you support (correct me if I'm wrong)

    That's only if you want to vote in the primaries (party elections).

    A simple cross on a paper ballot counted by people is much less error-prone.

    Maybe, but then it's slower to count, and recounts are dubious.

    IMHO feedom of speech should come with responsibility. It is hard to ignore that Fox (ab)uses their power to support a certain political direction. A news channel should try to be unbiased.

    Should it? I would prefer it, but then the market wants biased news, which is why you have the opposite of Fox News in MSNBC. The conservative right charges that the mainstream media is biased to the left, and I tend to agree with them. This isn't something I want to see regulated.

  185. Did I just notice? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Am I the first one who has noticed or...

    Libertarian + Anticopratism = ERR INCOMPATIBLE TERMS

  186. Re:Why? by Dr.+Hok · · Score: 1

    A simple cross on a paper ballot counted by people is much less error-prone.

    Maybe, but then it's slower to count, and recounts are dubious.

    Nah! German elections (1/4 of US population) use only paper ballots where you mark one (or more) circle(s) with a cross. Reliable projections are usually available less than 1 hour after the voting has closed; the official result takes around 6 hours. I wouldn't call that slow. But why do you find that the recount is dubious? Just have different people recount the same paper sheets (which is usually done anyway). But even if it were: If you use voting machines, even the *original* count is dubious.

    What I didn't understand in the 2000 US election is that Gore was urged to concede defeat quickly, even though it was such a close call. And I understand even less that he actually did. As if pride is more important than a fair election. And then they stopped counting the votes. Which IMHO was against the law and common sense.

    Here, the would-be loser would say "Let's wait until all votes are counted." And everyone would agree. It's an important election, so a few hours wait is acceptable.

    IMHO feedom of speech should come with responsibility. It is hard to ignore that Fox (ab)uses their power to support a certain political direction. A news channel should try to be unbiased.

    Should it? I would prefer it, but then the market wants biased news, which is why you have the opposite of Fox News in MSNBC. The conservative right charges that the mainstream media is biased to the left, and I tend to agree with them. This isn't something I want to see regulated.

    I admit that everyone is biased. But the general practice in Germany is that news channels provide only facts by default. Whenever someone expresses their opinion, it is usually marked as such. That's a self-imposed convention AFAICT. With American TV (especially Fox) I have the impression that the separation is not always that clear. It seems that the selection and presentation of news always serves an agenda. (But that could just be my biased POV.)

    --
    Say out loud: I'm an Aspie and I'm somewhat proud, I guess. Uh. Can I write an email in all caps instead? Hm...
  187. To Soulskill & the Editors by AbominousSalad · · Score: 1

    RTFA.
    Article title !== True.

    --
    Every trollism an AC posts is prefixed, in my mind, with "A. Coward whined, in a weak and cowardly voice:"
  188. Re:Why? by Raenex · · Score: 1

    German elections (1/4 of US population) use only paper ballots where you mark one (or more) circle(s) with a cross.

    If it works, then fine, I'm all for it.

    What I didn't understand in the 2000 US election is that Gore was urged to concede defeat quickly, even though it was such a close call.

    Americans are impatient, and when it becomes "obvious" when somebody has won the election there's pressure to admit the obvious and move on, and generally not to be a sore loser. That mentality backfired in 2000 due to the news media trying to jump the gun to call the election. Lesson learned.

    But the general practice in Germany is that news channels provide only facts by default. Whenever someone expresses their opinion, it is usually marked as such.

    That still applies somewhat in the US, but times have changed. CNN, for example, tries to be non-partisan, whereas Fox is totally right, and MSNBC is totally left. A similar thing occurs with newspapers, where the New York Times is left, and the Wall Street Journal is right, and a paper like USA Today generally plays it straight.

  189. Re:Why? by rochrist · · Score: 1

    Raise more than 50 freaking thousand dollars. In Massachusetts that shouldn't be hard, given ANY sort of grassroots organizing. He's had plenty of time.

  190. Re:Why? by rochrist · · Score: 1

    IN a larger extent, true. But a $50,000 requirement is set so low that it's irrelevant. If he's a remotely serious candidate, he should be able to raise that amount of money in MA without much strain and without requiring corporate donations.

  191. The cynicism here is depressing by ddt · · Score: 1

    Go visit his site, watch the videos. He's a smart, well-spoken guy, and he's a coder. Watch the debate video in particular, and the interview on Greater Boston covering the debate:

    http://www.fishmanforcongress.com/video

    The two party candidates talked over him like he wasn't there. It was incredibly disrespectful, yet he handled it with aplomb, and all his contributions to the debate were valuable and substantive. He doesn't deserve this cynical reception on slashdot. He's a geek reaching out. This is an opportunity for us to make a political difference, and we're being a bunch of putzes.

    This is a guy with 7% for zero corporate expenditures, and he's not a professional, two-party politician. This means he has promise as a candidate and could go far. Let's get his back.

  192. Re:Why? by rochrist · · Score: 1

    A) He doesn't have 15% support. B) Doing it your way, any crank with an agenda should be allowed to run and included in debates. Which would result in a total zoo. There has to be SOME gating mechanism, whether it's a minimal level of donations, or signatures on a petition, or what have you. But something.

  193. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    B) Doing it your way, any crank with an agenda should be allowed to run and included in debates. Which would result in a total zoo. There has to be SOME gating mechanism, whether it's a minimal level of donations, or signatures on a petition, or what have you. But something.

    How about the actual popularity, measured by polls, or would that make it too hard to just buy a spot? Thats generally how it works in Norway. Even putting the limit at 2% support we don't need many debates to let all the small parties above that limit participate in at least one.

  194. The the Libertarians need to be informing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Except no information suppressed at all.

    If a free market, they are under no obligation whatsoever to any individual or to deliver the message of any individual who hasn't paid them. If the people want to hear someone's message free market economics will take over and they will spread it. If nobody cares, the corporation isn't obligated to care either.

    That's the Libertarian way, suck it up and deal with it. If they really want people to be informed they need to crack open their wallet and buy some time to inform them.

  195. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Condorcet method is only good when you're trying to elect a single person. In other words, it would be great for the President.

    For Congress, you want some sort of simple proportional method. Open Party List is the best choice there. It's proportional, simple to understand, simple to fill out and generalises to national level easily while still ensuring local representation.

  196. America, land of corporate media by ToddInSF · · Score: 1

    as a replacement for being informed.

    Next time you endure the dueling idiocy and lies of the superpac ads, ask yourself who all that money is a hand-out FOR. And if they deserve all that cash, what special interests are getting it, and how we should put a stop to it.

  197. Re:Why? by toddestan · · Score: 1

    No, he's excluded because they don't want him there, and the $50,000 is just the excuse they came up with. If he had $50.000 in campaign donations there would be some other reason.

  198. Re:Why? by NemosomeN · · Score: 1

    Because he thinks getting rid of the Federal Reserve is a good idea. Because he thinks going back onto the gold standard would be anything but catastrophic. Because he does not realize that the Austrian school of economics has been soundly dis-proven. I like Ron Paul; he's honest, he's well spoken, and I know that if he says something, he really believes it is true. He is without a doubt a great guy, and a great American, but his ideas are just not workable.

    --
    I hate grammar Nazi's.
  199. Re:Why? by Compaqt · · Score: 1

    You're welcome to dispute any and all of his policy points. What I'm talking about is calling someone "insane" because you disagree with his policies. If you take that standard, one of the two US political parties (and half the population) will appear "insane" to you.

    If "insane" is meant merely as hyperbole (usually accompanied by "literally" as in "literally insane!", when it's really neither), OK, then. If it's something else, that's a problem.

    Lenora Fulani, Jesse Jackson, Chuck Baldwin, Lyndon LaRouche, Ron Paul, and others have policies that many or most people would not vote for. But that doesn't make them insane. The right word is radical or extremist (as a descriptive not a pejorative).

    --
    I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
  200. You are not feeding them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    According to the traditional owners of the USA, network television, you are not qualified to represent your electorate. Don't you understand that campaign donations are intended for broadcasters.

  201. Re:Why? by hoboroadie · · Score: 1

    If no one is bribing him he must not be a legitimate candidate.
    The free market has spoken.

    --
    They feared that it could be used to suppress protest or support unpopular rule.
  202. Won't someone please... by hoboroadie · · Score: 1

    Lead a campaign against child abuse.

    --
    They feared that it could be used to suppress protest or support unpopular rule.
  203. Marriage is not religious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the UK it was only relatively recently (1754) that the church demanded that all weddings be done in church. In scotland, this was not the case.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gretna_Green

  204. Televised versus other debates by oleg_stormforge · · Score: 1

    I have read a number of comments on this thread and find them to be interesting. I attended the debate on Oct. 10th between Congressman Tierney, Republican candidate Tisei and Libertarian candidate Fishman. The debate was very rowdy and the crowd did not conduct themselves in "dignified" fashion. Mr Fishman was the only candidate who addressed the crowd and asked that they refrain from booing or cheering during his time and that they allow all candidates to speak to the issues and questions. I wish that Mr Fishman would have equal opportunity during the televised debate, and while I personally do not plan on voting for him, he does have the strength of his convictions and a logically consistent platform for his positions. He is not a crackpot candidate and should be taken seriously by the electorate. I also find it interesting that the debates tend to be attended by party partisans and political junkies, but few "mainstream" voters. I believe that the tenor of the debate on the 10th would have turned off most voters even if they had attended. Please note that this debate was also held on the same date as the debate for the MA senate seat. Regardless Mr Fishman has a chicken and egg problem, how to get his name and views out to an electorate that pays very little attention to politics most of the time and when they are paying attention, is denied the opportunity to participate. While he is not my candidate of choice for this election, I hope that he considers continuing political life and works over the next couple of years to contribute to the community and build recognition. Such that if he choses to run again in 2014 he may have a greater base and these rules will be a non issue.

  205. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Voters don't have to understand Condorcet (by the way, Ranked Pairs is the way to go, and is a Condorcet method), they just have to understand "rank the candidates in order of preference, from most preferred to least. You do not have to rank all candidates"

  206. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    User

  207. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Twst

  208. Re:Why? by NemosomeN · · Score: 1
    1. Returning to the gold standard would devastate our economy.
    2. Dismantling the Fed would leave us unable to intervene to prevent economic catastrophe or overheating.
    3. Ending fractional reserve banking would threaten the solvency of our banking system.
    4. The Austrian School of economics has been picked clean of any useful, empirically sound ideas, and the carcass that was left behind has been completely discredited by all accepted theories and by events that have occurred that fly in the face of it.

    Mitt Romney is not insane. Barack Obama is not insane. Gary Johnson is not insane. I'm unsure about Jill Stein. I vehemently disagree with Rick Santorum, but he is not insane. I agree with several of Ron Paul's ideas, but he is insane. I'm not just being partisan, a large portion of Ron Paul's ideas are not the product of rational thought.

    --
    I hate grammar Nazi's.
  209. Re:Why? by NemosomeN · · Score: 1

    Watching Larry King's 3rd party debate. Jill Stein is sane, but some of her ideas are short sighted.

    --
    I hate grammar Nazi's.