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Congressmen Who Lobbied FCC Against Net Neutrality & Received Payoff

An anonymous reader writes "Ars Technica published an article Friday highlighting the results from research conducted by a money-in-politics watchdog regarding the 28 congressmen who sent a combined total of three letters to the FCC protesting against re-classifying the internet as a public utility. These 28 members of the U.S. House of Representatives 'received, on average, $26,832 from the "cable & satellite TV production & distribution" sector over a two-year period ending in December. According to the data, that's 2.3 times more than the House average of $11,651.' That's average. Actual amounts that the 28 received over a two year period ranged from $109,250 (Greg Walden, R-OR) to $0 (Nick Rahall, D-WV). Look at the list yourselves, and find your representative to determine how much legitimacy can be attributed to their stated concerns for the public."

192 comments

  1. US is an oligarchy, not a democracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-echochambers-27074746

    1. Re:US is an oligarchy, not a democracy by tlambert · · Score: 2

      http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/blogs-echochambers-27074746

      They're using the wrong word. It's a Plutocracy, not an Oligarchy.

    2. Re:US is an oligarchy, not a democracy by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      Excuse me, how exactly is plutocracy not an oligarchy?

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    3. Re:US is an oligarchy, not a democracy by tlambert · · Score: 3, Informative

      An Oligarchy does not necessarily mean that the wealthy control the government; it can also apply to dynastic rulership by families on the basis of something other than wealth, e.g. as in Feudalism, or it could be a combination of factors, not always involving wealth.

      The study referred to specifically called out wealth as the overriding factor in control, which makes it a Plutocracy.

      You can see from the wikipedia article on Oligarchy that it's a quite inexact term for what they are talking about:
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/O...

      "Forms of government and other political structures associated with oligarchy can include aristocracy, meritocracy, military junta, plutocracy, stratocracy, technocracy, theocracy and timocracy."

      For a supposedly academic study, you'd think they would be a little less loose with their definitions, particularly when they are counter to the conclusions they have reached, under some circumstances. For example, I don't think under any stretch of the imagination could we say that the government of the U.S. was a Theocracy, Technocracy, or Military Junta. Indeed, we can say that it went from a Timocracy to a Plutocracy about the time corporations gained citizenship, and dollars were ruled to be equivalent to speech by the U.S. Supreme Court.

    4. Re:US is an oligarchy, not a democracy by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 2

      So you're basically confirming what I was alluding to, i.e., that every plutocracy is an oligarchy, just like every car is a motor vehicle, therefore, the original article isn't incorrect.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    5. Re:US is an oligarchy, not a democracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It may not be incorrect but it is imprecise.

  2. Employees != lobbyists by Enry · · Score: 2

    I'm in the healthcare and higher education industry, but my beliefs don't always match that of my employers. While I can understand employees of a company may want to keep their business going, I consider it a far cry from actual lobbyists or company executives doing the same.

    1. Re:Employees != lobbyists by hey! · · Score: 2

      Well, you've never been in a position where your employer *required* you to attend fundraisers. Your views have nothing to do with it; your continued employment does.

      In effect this is money laundering, but it occurs at a management level where nobody wants to rock the boat because the pay is so good.

      --
      Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    2. Re:Employees != lobbyists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I worked at a certain pharma (Abbott) in the early 2000's, the emails to the employees from the company were heavy on us regarding some of the things Pharma (Pharmaceuticals manufacturing assn?), and that us employees could contribute to it... did not receive any other encouragements from my direct supervisors about it though.

    3. Re:Employees != lobbyists by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...and, I will state that corporations do give large sums to political entities through their various foundations, etc as well, and this is way before Citizens United and other Supreme Court fuck-overs as of late opened the doors. So it is easy to pick on the Koch brothers (samuel adelson, token liberal george soros...), but at least they're open/not denying about some of their efforts...

    4. Re:Employees != lobbyists by Bite+The+Pillow · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, employees are more likely to send money to sympathetic candidates.

      If everyone in Cable gives to a cable-friendly candidate, and everyone in pharma gives to pharma-friendly candidates, the end result is going to be a large number of donations on the side of those who support it.

      No one reports when the pro candidate got less money than the anti candidate... I expect it happens a lot, just because of this fact:

      We are talking about a difference of $15k, per candidate, on an election that cost $300k or more. Next election cycle, cable is going to give to these guys again, because they support the industry. So which came first, big contributions or voting for cable?

      If anyone is going to have any sort of point, they can't just throw out numbers and expect outrage back if they want to make some sort of coherent argument. It's easy to get people riled up because people are dumb. But that doesn't make an argument.

    5. Re:Employees != lobbyists by Gryle · · Score: 1

      Has this happened to you? I'm genuinely curious.

      --
      Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not entirely sure about the universe - Einstein
  3. Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    make it illegal.

    1. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      While that sounds nice, the problem with it is what happens when *I*, Joe Consumer, wants to lobby my own Congressman on an issue that concerns me?

      Am I not allowed to tell him/her what I want done on by behalf?

    2. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by mellon · · Score: 1

      That argument would make more sense if it were the case right now that you have the same access as a lobbyist. The point the OP is making is that if I ask you do to X, and pay you Y, that could be seen as bribery. If I just ask you to do X, and don't pay you, that's not bribery.

    3. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When Obama was a senator one of the few pieces of legislation with his name on it was his version of campaign finance reform. He held that up as an example of his leadership. As it turns out, it was an example of his leadership.

    4. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but you probably shouldn't be allowed to pay them off to care about what you care about.

    5. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

      As long as your lobbying doesn't include giving money or favours, fine. Lobbying should amount to a written letter explaining your reasoning for changes in law and how they benefit society.

    6. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      No, that's not right. The crime is accepting the bribe, not offering it. You should elect people who are capable of resisting temptation. And let them know you are watching them closely.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    7. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let us know when you successfully pull out the greed gene from our DNA.

    8. Re: Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      I assume you wouldnt bring a briefcase with 100k in it.

    9. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      "Lobbying" is "paid lobbying", so there's no problem with you writing a letter or scheduling a meeting. The problem is when someone pays $$$ for "special access". That is bribery and should be illegal. But paying for "access" and hinting at a preferred outcome is currently legal. It's only illegal to link the payment for a vote. Payment for "consideration" is legal (though still bribery).

    10. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How do you propose to get such a law passed?

    11. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hahaha, good one, but you can't elect people able to resist temptation. What reason to get into politics is there, then? None of the candidates gives a damn about improving the lifestyle of the American citizen (or any country whatsoever). They are only there for personal gain, and unless someone with power (aka not citizens) does something about it, that's what we get, no matter what the promises are.
      Not to mention that they lie, specially when the time to elect comes.

      And to add insult to injury, people will keep defending their party as if they had anything to gain for it.

    12. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The crime is accepting the bribe, not offering it.

      Perhaps in certain jurisdictions, but that statement isn't true in general.

    13. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, write a letter, spam its email & voice mail. You know, excercise speech.

      Spending...er, donating, money is not speech (even if the Supreme court has equated it thusly). It shouldn't be the litmus test for access, etc.

    14. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      I'm not talking about what the law says.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    15. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Lets turn that around a bit.

      What happens when you, Joe Consumer, decides you had enough and run for congress yourself in order to fix the issues personally. You then go out and campaign and say what you want to do. I hear you talking, let me introduce myself, I'm big evil coal company executive and I like your ideas so I throw some big time support behind you. I don't ask you to do anything other than stand on what you are campaigning for. I believe it will make a more free society and I think more freedom is beneficial to all of us.

      So I donate to you directly, I donate to a few of the support pacs around you. I even encourage my employees to support you. You only know me as someone who donated to your campaign. So, how much legitimacy can be attributed to your stated concerns for the public? How much bribery actually took place? How much has the lobbyist influenced you? What chance would you have if you are just a common Joe and your opponents are millionaires if people cannot give you large sums of money?

      Most of these "they were paid off" claims stems from people with a position attracting support not pandering their policy positions for the highest bidder. If a congressman held a position that was favorable to my livelihood, I sure as hell would give them money and try to keep them around. It's not that they are selling out to me, it's that I'm trying to keep what's good around.

    16. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by sumdumass · · Score: 1, Informative

      There is a fine line on this.

      Suppose your neighbor is going to install a swimming pool and in order to do it, they will have to tear up your yard to install the plumbing. Now suppose your late wife, mother, sister or whatever planted some rose bushes at the fence line and you do not want them disturbed at all because of the sentimental value attached to them. The contractor says- don't worry about it, we will plant new ones. You say that is not good enough, the originals must not be disturbed and protected else you cannot enter my property. So your neighbor decides to file for a right of way onto your property.

      Now you have a few choices. You can fight this on your own, possible winning or possible being out maneuvered by their legal team. Or you can obtain legal representation and leave it to them. If you get legal representation, they will be able to petition the judge directly and argue your case in a way that is likely more effective then you can. He goes in and tells the judge that these flowers were the last thing done between you and the lost loved one and losing the flowers would be like losing the loved one all over again. It would break your heart and crush your will to live. And this will happen year after year when they fail to come back up in the spring. The just decides that if your neighbor cannot guarantee the safety of the flowers, they need to move the pool so that it's installation will not encroach your property or endanger the flowers.

      So in this scenario, did you just bribe the judge or legal system by using a lobbyist (lawyer) who went and made your case through channels not open to you on your behalf in ways you couldn't make on your own so convincingly that you prevailed?

      That's one of the things lobbyist do. They make cases in ways that would influence the politicians though avenues not directly available to most people. 10,000 letters all saying do X would likely get somewhat ignored because it is so monotonous to read all of them. The thought of there being 10,000 of them probably doesn't register. But someone who can say I have 10,000 voters who want me to point this out is memorable in both what is pointed out and that 10,000 voters are behind it. And it is more likely that one person representing 10,000 voters can make this case in person than it is for 10,000 people individually.

      So while I agree that yes, payment for consideration is bribery, I disagree that all lobbying is bad or should be illegal. Even when that lobbyist gets access that you or I cannot.

    17. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      I know this... If you're that big time coal company executive and you gave millions to my campaign, after I'm elected and you call me, I'll answer your call personally, everyone else can leave voicemail.

      That's just how things work, and the problem with allowing the rich to have a larger say in things. And I say that as being, if not "rich", more well off than most.

    18. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      And if that call is just to say "keep up the good word", does it really matter?

      The entire point of that was to show that some of these bribery charges are actually the results of cheer leading more or less. If you support green candidates, does it mean they are holding positions because you gave them lots of money or does it mean you gave them lots of money because of the positions they already hold?

    19. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by AK+Marc · · Score: 2

      So in this scenario, did you just bribe the judge or legal system by using a lobbyist (lawyer) who went and made your case through channels not open to you on your behalf in ways you couldn't make on your own so convincingly that you prevailed?

      In theory (and practice) you have no fewer rights if you represent yourself. So, no, that's not bribery.

      That's one of the things lobbyist do.

      No, they don't. They have access you don't have. Because they pre-bribed the Congressman. It's not a bribe to pay someone money for "future consideration" (so long as that's not explicitly a vote). They have access *you* will never have. Thus, it's bribery.

      And it is more likely that one person representing 10,000 voters can make this case in person than it is for 10,000 people individually.

      If that's what happens, I might change my mind, but the "one person" is representing one company, and lying about the people they represent (there are not 10,000 people who want it, and if there were, they certainly didn't send letters to a lobbyist to take the issue to the Congressman).

    20. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by thaylin · · Score: 1

      Actually your "fine line" is incorrect tot he scenario being discussed. It would be more like you paid your lawyer, when then paid the judge a campaign donation to rule in your favor, I mean help him get elected next time.

      --
      When you cant win, ad hominem.
    21. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by sumdumass · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually, although it is hardly ever prosecuted when it is openly and know, offering a bribe is against the law too.

      http://www.law.cornell.edu/usc...

      It seems that if you offer a bribe, you can be fined 3 times the monetary equivalent amount of the bribe and be sentenced to up to 15 years in prison as well as being disqualified to ever hold any pubic office or work for the government.

      But Tom Steyer who recently announced he would give donations totaling 100 million dollars to candidates promising to support rejecting the keystone XL pipeline and support global warming efforts will likely never be prosecuted despite those acts specifically matching the first paragraph in the law

      (1) directly or indirectly, corruptly gives, offers or promises anything of value to any public official or person who has been selected to be a public official, or offers or promises any public official or any person who has been selected to be a public official to give anything of value to any other person or entity, with intentâ"
      (A) to influence any official act; or

      This is because for some reasons, campaign donations don't seem to count as bribery. Maybe they should when they have purposely stated attachments to them instead of simply amplifying already existing convictions or the politicians. Maybe we should just accept it and move on knowing that there are problems.

    22. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So I donate to you directly, I donate to a few of the support pacs around you. I even encourage my employees to support you.

      That's an important part of the campaign finance problem: simply preventing donations to candidates doesn't necessarily help because PACs can spend lots of money on advertising, perhaps without even directly mentioning a candidate, and have a lot of control over an election. Any solution has to limit their power as well.

    23. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      make it illegal.

      Oh, great. ANOTHER bonehead who wants to gut the First Amendment:

      Amendment I

      Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the government for a redress of grievances.

      Jesus Fucking Christ, how the hell did you get modded +5?

      What. The. Hell.

      Citizens aren't allowed to bitch to their Congressmen about things they don't like? And tell them what they DO like? Because that's all lobbying is. "Petitioning the government for a redress of grievances." "My taxes are too high!" "His taxes are too low!" "That law kills my job!" "Pass this law to kill that guys business!"

      And you want to make it ILLEGAL!?!?!?!

      That's SCARY. No fucking wonder our government is totally out of control.

    24. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      No, they don't. They have access you don't have. Because they pre-bribed the Congressman. It's not a bribe to pay someone money for "future consideration" (so long as that's not explicitly a vote). They have access *you* will never have. Thus, it's bribery.

      No, most of the lobbyist have pre-existing relationships with Congressmen which gives them more access than you or I have. But tell me, would you be more inclined to visit with me who you do not know, or your cousin that you met 4 or 5 times at family functions? How about your neighbor or someone who worked with you or played golf with you?

      Pre-bribing congress is illegal. In fact, there was a big deal in which a lot of congress critters went to jail and/or lost their seats over it. There is of course William Jefferson who's probably most notable for sharing a name with Bill Clinton. But there is also Rep. Randy "Duke" Cunningham who promised policy positions to people who gave him gifts. And of course there was the Abscam and Abramoff scandals relating directly to bribery and what you consider pre-bribery.

      If that's what happens, I might change my mind, but the "one person" is representing one company, and lying about the people they represent (there are not 10,000 people who want it, and if there were, they certainly didn't send letters to a lobbyist to take the issue to the Congressman).

      One person representing one company does not exist in a vacuum. That company has share holders and employees and support businesses who have the same. If you own a business with 100 employees, when you lobby for that business to be profitable, you are lobbying for those 100 employees to keep their jobs. If your business has 50 shareholders, you are lobbying for them also. This is true because of your fiduciary duty even if independently, those employees and share holders carry contrary opinions about whatever you are lobbying for. This could even be extended to the businesses that supply yours with parts, materials and so on.

    25. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Anubis+IV · · Score: 1

      How about we reclassify businesses as "not persons" and don't let "not persons" make any sort of contribution towards a political cause?

    26. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by TubeSteak · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So in this scenario, did you just bribe the judge or legal system by using a lobbyist (lawyer) who went and made your case through channels not open to you on your behalf in ways you couldn't make on your own so convincingly that you prevailed?

      No. You didn't.

      The lawyer's job is to represent your legal interests in front of a judge.
      In criminal cases, if you can't afford a lawyer, the court will appoint one to represent you.

      On the other hand, the role of the Registered Lobbyist was created specifically to regulate bribery of public officials and to shine light on the interactions of public representatives plus those seeking to influence them.

      Lawyers and lobbyists both have strict rules they have to abide by, but their basic function in society is *not* the same thing at all. Not even close.

      Because of increased disclosure rules, less people are registering as lobbyists and conducting their business outside of the public eye.
      No lawyer can represent you in front of the court if (s)he turns in their license to practice law.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    27. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Frankie70 · · Score: 2

      No, not a good idea. Then the USA will rank higher in all of those lists of most corrupt countries. We cannot then pretend that's it's the middle east, asian and third world countries that are the only ones which are corrupt.

    28. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, just drifting through here metamodding, but great post.

    29. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by gweilo8888 · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up insightful. Lobbying is just another way of saying state-sanctioned bribery and corruption.

      Take the money, gifts and favors out of the equation, and you have what true lobbying would be: a simple statement of facts and/or point of view as regards a matter, designed to inform or sway opinion through mere words. The fact that it has to come accompanied by cash and favors shows that lobbyists don't expect action to be taken unless a bribe is given -- and that is the definition of corruption. Not all lobbyists are evil (because right now, there's no way to have your opinion heard except to tie it to a bundle of cold, hard cash), but lobbying itself is undeniably evil and corrupt.

    30. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by nitehawk214 · · Score: 1

      You can tell them whatever you want. You are not allowed to bribe him.

      And note that I am talking about the current laws. Only lobbyists and corporations are allowed to bribe congressmen. Individuals are not. Even a group of voters are not allowed to even talk to congress. Only the rich and connected are allowed the privilege of bribing congress.

      --
      I'm a good cook. I'm a fantastic eater. - Steven Brust
    31. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      If you own a business with 100 employees, when you lobby for that business to be profitable, you are lobbying for those 100 employees to keep their jobs.

      Nope. Those are 2 very different things.

      In theory yes (it keeps the employees in line), in reality no.

      That is just a trickle down "God" theory, that the big guy upstairs is looking out for us all.

      The truth is, the rich are waging war on the poor.

      They are "looking out" and "representing" them like my rifle is "looking out" for dinner.

    32. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by dbIII · · Score: 1

      What a convoluted scenario to go waaaay off topic. The two situations are obviously completely different no matter what extra little petty distractions you add to your convoluted scenario. Just what I'd expect from your posting history where you keep going on about how the ruler of the day (eg. King George) is more important than the rule of law (eg. the line pushed by George Washington).

    33. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I say we all jump in the game and out lobby the cable companies. $20k is chump change if you get the whole internet aboard. Reclassify the internet as a utility and do other things to fuck over the telecom companies, they'll be sorry for doing it in the first place.

    34. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      If that were really the case, corporations would not be so likely to donate, as they would have gotten what they want without the price tag.

      It's like a bunch of plants, with money as the fertilizer. The more fertilizer, the more the plant grows, so all the plants/candidates that would favor common people's needs/wants desires wither as they don't get the fertilizer, the ones that get the fertilizer from the corporations and wealthy thrive and make sure they get more.

      It may not be direct bribery, but it makes no real difference.
      The public interests are not served, only the interests of the few are.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    35. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Duhavid · · Score: 1

      More likely, that call is to say "hey, dude, I really think you need to consider ...".
      And we all know that most people will consider, since that donation happened.
      And if they don't, well, they wont last long at this game.

      Fact is, we, as an electorate, wont elect a person of character.
      We elect, by and large, according to team affiliation.
      We, by and large, are pretty damn stupid.

      --
      emt 377 emt 4
    36. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      False, Employee wages and other compensation are not correlated with bussiness profits, in may cases they have a strong negative correlation. Employers do not want to give a mote of wages or other compensation that they do not have too. Things directly against employee's best intrest are commonly lobbied for by companies. See safety regulations, retirement entitlements, minimum wage. The only place where wages are guarenteed to follow company profibility would be insolvency.

    37. Re:Let's reclassify Lobbying as Bribery and by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Yes, I am aware the law says it's illegal. But that is attacking the problem from exactly the wrong angle. The value of the bribe is determined by the person taking it. Really, only he should be punished. But in reality, bribery is highly rewarded on both sides. The law seems to be only relevant as a weapon of blackmail to ensure full cooperation. But no matter how you look at it, the taker is the offender.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  4. I don't believe it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    All this is, is confirmation of what everyone already knew in their gut, but try to ignore on a daily basis. This is just for something as "small" as net neutrality, use your imagination for more important issues.

  5. No problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No problem, tonorow they can order Google to forget it.

  6. News Flash! by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 2

    Lobbyists influence politicians! Who knew!

    --
    If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
    1. Re:News Flash! by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      Newsflash, Lobbyists pay for "consideration" not votes. The effect is the same, so buying votes is legal in the USA. So long as you pay *before* the vote and don't try to take it back if they don't vote how you "request" (don't worry, then never vote against you).

    2. Re:News Flash! by bondsbw · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure whether to be more disgusted by the politicians who took a lot of money to vote against net neutrality, or by those who voted against it anyway.

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    3. Re:News Flash! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Money influences politicians! Who knew!

      FTFY.

  7. Greg Walden by Todd+Palin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    My congressman, Greg Walden, is in a rock solid Republican district. He gets re-elected no matter what he does. As long as he can stay out of jail and avoid a primary challenge he wins by 2 to 1 in every race. He can take money from the highest bidder and get away with it. He is "congressman for life".

    1. Re:Greg Walden by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll challenge him on the next run..I'll lose, but I can cause him to spend more money to do so.

    2. Re:Greg Walden by mellon · · Score: 1

      I hope you are voting in the Republican primary and not being proud and voting in the Democratic primary.

    3. Re:Greg Walden by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Submit him to Bill Maher's #flipadistrict.

    4. Re:Greg Walden by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Hence the reason for term limits...

      When the country was formed, the idea was to have citizen leaders who would go and make policy for a time, then go back to private life. It wasn't meant to be a career.

    5. Re:Greg Walden by Todd+Palin · · Score: 2

      He gets a Democratic challenger in most elections. If it is a candidate with experience and solid credentials the Democrat gets 35% of the vote. If the challenger is an 18 year old high school dropout that lives in their mothers basement, they get 30% of the vote.

      Run if you want, and you will get between 30 and 35 percent of the vote depending on your experience and funding. And, trust me, Walden will not care one bit either way.

    6. Re:Greg Walden by bondsbw · · Score: 1

      It's reasonable to argue the opposite, that people should be able to vote for whomever they want and they should be able to reward representatives who do a good job with another term.

      Now I would believe that, except I do not trust our electoral system to fairly represent the views of the constituency. This legal bribery we call campaign contributions, along with our plurality voting system, undermine the true will of the people.

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    7. Re:Greg Walden by Cantankerous+Cur · · Score: 1

      I don't think there's anything intrinsically wrong with being a career politician any more than managing to stay working for the same company all your life (albeit a rare feat these days). Being there longer means you know how things work and can get it done more quickly and efficiently. It's the greed messing everything up, as usual

    8. Re:Greg Walden by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      It's the greed messing everything up, as usual

      Yes, and since you can't remove the greed part... :)

    9. Re:Greg Walden by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      It's reasonable to argue the opposite, that people should be able to vote for whomever they want and they should be able to reward representatives who do a good job with another term.

      Yes, that is reasonable, in theory... the challenge is that the system in actual practice hasn't worked out that way...

      Congress has approval ratings so low it should be criminal, yet the majority of them keep getting reelected over and over...

      Why is that?

    10. Re:Greg Walden by Todd+Palin · · Score: 2

      Walden raises enormous amounts of cash from corporate interests. In addition to the communication industry he collects from mining, timber, pharmaceutical, medical, finance, war, chemical, ranching, and agriculture industries. Since he can't even come close to spending it all on his own re-election, he doles it out to other candidates in exchange for committee appointments and extra votes on critical issues. In other words, he buys more power. Then he actually uses the fact that he has power to persuade people to vote for him. In a district that relies heavily on mining, timber, and ranching, his support of those industries seems persuasive to many voters, even if the people that work in those industries getting screwed by this votes. People don't seem to be able to distinguish support of an industry from support of the workers in a particular industry, and the two don't always go together.

    11. Re:Greg Walden by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Congressman's constituents may think their asshole is doing a great job. When they are in reality worthless.

      Cynthia McKinney did nothing except gripe about the MLK coverup the entire time she was in congress.

    12. Re:Greg Walden by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, hence the reason to not allow gerrymandering

    13. Re:Greg Walden by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hate to defend Walden, but I grew up in rural Oregon. The people working in those industries cannot afford them to be disrupted. The folks running the show are perfectly happy to shut down jobs in a community if they don't get their way. It is a literal case of "if we don't let rich people have more money, they won't give us any jobs!"

      Hence, people support a candidate that keeps their employers in town.

    14. Re:Greg Walden by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, if a representative is truly so good and mindful of the interests of his constituents, a system with fixed terms would encourage him to find and coach a suitable replacement for himself for the sake of those interests, which is also a good thing.

  8. Statistics don't lie, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Notice the use of "average". Most of the congressmen who signed didn't really take that much; a few took a lot, but it makes a better headline to lump them all together.

    1. Re:Statistics don't lie, but... by FlyHelicopters · · Score: 1

      Yes, what is amazing is how CHEAP they are to buy.

      For $50,000 can I buy my own Congressman on an issue?

      If I have a few million dollars to toss around, it seems that I can buy all kinds of public policy, without any real debate.

      Sad, isn't it?

    2. Re:Statistics don't lie, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On this issue there was no market, there was no higher bidder. If the topic is disputed between two industries I guess the amounts rise.

    3. Re:Statistics don't lie, but... by NotInHere · · Score: 1

      For $50000, Lincoln has bribed all democrats and buyed himself a new hat! And that for something good.

  9. For taking zero dollars... by Nutria · · Score: 2

    does that mean that Nick Rahall is just an idiot for thinking that Net Neutrality is a bad idea?

    --
    "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    1. Re:For taking zero dollars... by gman003 · · Score: 1

      No, it means he's an idiot for not asking for cash up front.

    2. Re:For taking zero dollars... by Rockoon · · Score: 2

      does that mean that Nick Rahall is just an idiot for thinking that Net Neutrality is a bad idea?

      I think it means that he took a lot more than the otherwise top guy. It just wasnt a campaign donation... it was a straight up bribe such as a promise of a position when he leaves office.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
  10. Mostly Democrats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Interesting. They're also cheaper than Republicans.

  11. congressmen who lobbied fcc - paid off by CheshireDragon · · Score: 1

    Didn't we already know this?

    --
    "That's right...I said it."
  12. Net Neutrality == Less money in politics? by thule · · Score: 1

    I have my doubts that more FCC control over the Internet will cause less money to flow into politics. I also have doubts that just because the government is involved that there will be less playing of favorites. I can see the disaster coming when the FCC has their say in peering because of the Netflix deal. If a company gave to the right party in power, then that company gets their peering arrangements approved faster than ones that do not. Yeah, right, the government is *never* corrupt.

  13. Pretty much by rsilvergun · · Score: 5, Interesting

    one of the nasty parts of our history they don't teach is that large sections of our Constitution and the basis of our Representative government were designed to keep poor people from voting themselves the land that the wealthy had already claimed. It's all right there is books and documents from the time. There really wasn't any reason to hide it since if you were literate you were probably rich.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:Pretty much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Remember: http://www.wolf-pac.com/
      Move your ass, do something.

    2. Re:Pretty much by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I don't think it was intended to protect the wealthy so much as it was intended to protect against mob mentality. Even in cases where it protects land you own, you didn't have to be wealthy to own land.

      The most important thing was that they didn't like (and indeed just escaped from) a situation where lords and kings could just take anything you owned at any time they wanted because it was their "divine right." They certainly didn't want to replace that with a new government that was every bit as capable of doing the same thing, otherwise what the fuck was the point? Whether people voted you away from your land, or a king just demanded you relinquish it, is ultimately the same kind of injustice.

      Just because "the people" want it, doesn't make it any more right. Remember that "the people" also supported slavery, indeed certain items like California Prop 8 won with a majority of voters.

    3. Re:Pretty much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Nothing nasty in there. As the constitution was created, it was modern. Take europe of that time. The nasty thing is that it has not been updated since. Nowadays the european countries have very modern constitutions. Germany had two chances to make a democratic constitution, the USA only one.

    4. Re:Pretty much by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I really think this is an over reaction. Basically the idea is to put a cap on the amount of picket signs and billboards people can put up based on an arbitrary dollar figure. Dollars do not win elections. Look at the John Morse campaign in Colorado...I mean they spent what, 11 times what the opposition spent? Yet they still lost. Sorry but I think the first amendment is much too important of a thing to forsake just because you don't like how much money some person spent on a campaign.

      The wolf-pac proposal would also, for example, prohibit actions like those taken when SOPA was killed. (Also I like how they use made up statistics everywhere, like claiming that 96% of the country is behind them....if that was really the case, we wouldn't be having this discussion.)

      In situations like the TFA describes, I think a better solution would be to force congressmen and senators to recuse themselves of voting on issues that major campaign contributors have a vested interest in. That would VERY quickly solve the problem that they're attempting to solve (lobbyists would effectively be punished for contributing campaign dollars,) and it wouldn't run afoul of any first amendment issues.

    5. Re:Pretty much by BilI_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      if that was really the case, we wouldn't be having this discussion.

      I don't support that thing, but I don't think what you said is necessarily true. Many people vote for the 'lesser' of two evils, based on a select few policies that the 'less evil' party has. Other policies get ignored in favor of keeping the Great Evil from winning.

      So while it's true that this probably isn't a top issue for most people, the fact that we're in this situation doesn't mean 96% of the country isn't behind them. Though, I do doubt that statistic.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    6. Re:Pretty much by amiga3D · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I actually look at what money candidates receive and who paid it. If the people lavishing money on them are my enemy then I tend to vote for the other candidate. All too often though the other candidate is also taking big payouts from the same bastards. It's hard to win when both candidates are bought.

    7. Re:Pretty much by knightghost · · Score: 4, Informative

      Dollars do not win elections.

      IMHO that statement is 100% false and the example is a cherry picked outlier. Dollars are by far the most important thing in an election - especially the bigger elections. They pay for strategy and marketing to craft the proper lie then buy commercials to brainwash the populace.

    8. Re:Pretty much by guises · · Score: 5, Informative

      According to Politifact, it's only mostly false. The candidate who spends the most money wins 80+% of the time (98% for the house in 2004), but exactly how often they win varies by election.

    9. Re:Pretty much by dcollins117 · · Score: 2

      The most important thing was that they didn't like (and indeed just escaped from) a situation where lords and kings could just take anything you owned at any time they wanted because it was their "divine right." They certainly didn't want to replace that with a new government that was every bit as capable of doing the same thing, otherwise what the fuck was the point? Whether people voted you away from your land, or a king just demanded you relinquish it, is ultimately the same kind of injustice.

      Instead we have eminent domain, which is effectively the same thing.

    10. Re:Pretty much by DoofusOfDeath · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Instead we have eminent domain, which is effectively the same thing.

      Civil forfeiture is even more terrifying.

    11. Re:Pretty much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The same is true today (just because you can read DOES NOT make you literate.)

    12. Re:Pretty much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The 'buying' of votes to win elections is bad, but the bigger issue is the buying of the politicians votes that happens during the lobbying and re-election cycles. In the end the peoples vote becomes largely irrelevant. Even an elected official who isn't a greedy bastard initially with gets influenced by their corrupt peers and winds up listening the the persuasion of the lobbyists because those are the voices he/she hears most.

      I wish I knew a solution.

    13. Re: Pretty much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      I know one. Optionally direct democracy. Make a site where you vote can vote for each issue of you choose. If you choose not to vote individually on an issue , your vote goes to whatever representative you chose. It could be your neighbor, it could be Rush Limbaugh, it could be Obama.

      This way people who cared about an issue could make sure their vote was counted the way they want.

      It stops gerrymandering, it makes it harder to buy representatives without them loosing support.

    14. Re:Pretty much by dryeo · · Score: 0

      Maybe I'm just showing my lack of history but I thought the American colonies were British, you know, the country that beheaded one King for insisting in the divine right of Kings and then gave the boot to his son who also t

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    15. Re:Pretty much by dryeo · · Score: 2

      Maybe I'm just showing my lack of history but I thought the American colonies were British, you know, the country that beheaded one King for insisting in the divine right of Kings and then gave the boot to his son who also thought he had a "divine right". This was in 1688 that Parliament asserted themselves as supreme, passed the Bill of Rights of 1689, changed the Monarchs Oath to reflect the new reality and invited a Dutch man and his wife, the Kings daughter to rule on the understanding that Parliament called the shots. A parliament that included one house that was elected by land owners and renters who paid over X amount in rent. They were overdue for redistricting the ridings though which introduced corruption much like gerrymandering does now.. They also had an unelected house who put the brakes on the elected house doing things like making copyright for ever, instead limiting it to 14+14 years for the advancement of learning.
      Now it is true that King George III was muttering that all his subjects should have equal rights including the natives of N. America having rights to their land and this really upset some land speculators such as George Washington and of course the other rich people who did not believe in equality for everyone (look at the constitution, while claiming equality also supported slavery) because obviously those heathen Indians were no more human then those black people.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    16. Re: Pretty much by dougisfunny · · Score: 1

      That is an interesting idea. Split up the district's vote by however many people are in the district, and whatever parts aren't used directly by the people, gets used by the representatives vote. Or that could be displayed to the representative before they themselves vote to inform them of what the constituents want.

      Then when it rolls around to re-election, you can see how often they voted against their constituents wishes in favor of the lobbyist.

      --
      This is not the funny you're looking for.
    17. Re:Pretty much by rtb61 · · Score: 1

      Campaign donations do win US primaries because only a small percentage of the eligible public participates say between 10 and 20%. This enables stacking of elections, where all candidates standing for election have already been bought off. Now add this to off shore tax haven payments where corrupted politicians collect their bribes with luxury holidays and high value 'er' souvenirs and you have the complete corruption package all properly legalised by corrupt governments.

      Extra campaign contributions and payments are required for the politician sticking their neck out and 'publicly' supporting a corrupt law rather than play acting at being a maverick and then voting for the corrupt law anyhow.

      That sticking their neck out is what protest is all about, making the politicians feel exposed and at risk of political defeat not once but forever and losing all chances at future payoffs to gain one single payoff now. Want the internet as a public utility and protected by communications laws, then you have to make politicians feel the burn, feel exposed and feel at risk. Remember for them this is just 'ONE' payoff and they are risking all other payoffs to accept it and heh heh stick to it. The worse you make them look for accepting and 'acting' on it, the more likely they are to drop it and focus on their other campaign contributions.

      --
      Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
    18. Re:Pretty much by VortexCortex · · Score: 1

      They certainly didn't want to replace that with a new government that was every bit as capable of doing the same thing, otherwise what the fuck was the point?

      Hello new boss, same as the old boss... But WE'RE the new bosses, so it's all good. Read your history books further back than the 1700's.

    19. Re:Pretty much by ultranova · · Score: 1

      Maybe I'm just showing my lack of history but I thought the American colonies were British, you know, the country that beheaded one King for insisting in the divine right of Kings and then gave the boot to his son who also t

      I see the trend continues. But at least they were kind enough to click on Submit.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    20. Re:Pretty much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Instead we have eminent domain, which is effectively the same thing.

      If by effectively the same you mean differing in one key aspect, you are absolutely right.

      Eminent Domain, as I understood it, says that the government can make you sell the land to them for a market-reasonable price. In ye olden days, the king just took the land without any re-compensation.

      (Whether this is right or wrong, is completely beside the point of my post, which is that they are not effectively the same.)

    21. Re:Pretty much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I looked up civil forfeiture in my area and this is what I found ... "The Civil Forfeiture Act and Regulation allows the Director of Civil Forfeiture to initiate civil court proceedings against property believed to be the instruments or proceeds of unlawful activity. "

      So what is wrong with that?

    22. Re: Pretty much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the govt can file such suit with weak pretext and pretty much never loses those cases (being found not guilty of the criminal charge is not strong evidence in the civil case).

    23. Re: Pretty much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      It's a suit against property, not the owner of the property. Property has no rights, and no ability to defend itself, and therefore loses a lot, even when it had nothing to do with criminal activity.

    24. Re:Pretty much by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I don't think it was intended to protect the wealthy so much as it was intended to protect against mob mentality. Even in cases where it protects land you own, you didn't have to be wealthy to own land.

      The telling part is not where it protects land, but rather where pretty much all states had property ownership requirements to be able to vote.

      And the definition of "wealthy" is, of course, subjective; but the numbers are rather telling. In Rhode Island, for example, which retained property requirement longest of all the states, by the end of it, 60% of the state's white male population was excluded on that basis.

    25. Re:Pretty much by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 0

      The problem with those surveys is they don't take into account at all the popular sentiment. Take for example the Wisconsin recall a few years back. I think the incumbent campaign outspent the competition, but in the broader scheme that isn't what won the election. What won the election was that the voters genuinely believed that the teachers unions had gotten out of hand, and they believed that Walker was doing the right thing (it wasn't just Republicans that voted for him, he was popular among some Democrats as well.) This is probably also why Walker was able to raise more funds.

      If somebody believes in your cause, your campaign, your message, etc, they are far more likely to donate to your campaign. If they really have a vested interest in seeing you win, they'll jump aboard. Naturally, it follows that you'll likely be able to raise much more money. In the case of the politifact statistic, they don't take that into consideration at all. In the case of John Morse, he had huge financial backers from all over the country putting a ton of money towards getting him re-elected. The problem is, those people that contributed to his campaign can't vote for him (they aren't even in his state, let alone his district.) So, of course they lost.

      Otherwise, do you think Obama couldn't have won those elections without outspending the competition in both elections? Recalling off of the top of my head, I think he spent some $200 million above and beyond what the Romney campaign spent.

      Think about both the Wisconsin and Colorado recalls for a second though. If you hadn't heard of either of these events at the time they were going on, you had to have been living under a rock. I mean these were local issues that caught national media attention. What exactly is this campaign money buying, if not air time? Do you really think an informed voter couldn't have heard the political message from either side, and then researched the topic on their own? Of course they can, but most people won't bother. They also won't bother listening to that cold call either. Shockingly, most people will just vote however their friends tell them to vote, which goes back into the public sentiment part, so again the campaign dollars spent don't really mean shit unless the particular candidate is a complete unknown. If you really want to clean up elections, then stop telling people to get out to vote just for the sake of voting. It's my personal belief that you can do more damage by voting for somebody you don't know about than simply not voting at all.

      I mean really this is just a big show starring ugly people This guy's reaction pretty much reminds me of how most people react when their favorite sports team loses the final game in the playoffs: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v...

      Democracy has nothing to do with it, he's just upset because he had so much hope for his side winning, and they lost. Tough shit, get over yourself, move on, and in spite of his comments democracy is still the same as it ever has been.

      I'm really shocked though that we're actually seriously considering eroding the first amendment over this petty bullshit. I mean fuck, what's next, we put a dollar cap on the amount of sports merchandising? This issue is every bit as meaningless.

    26. Re:Pretty much by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 1

      There are certain cases of eminent domain that I'll accept. For example, a while back the city wanted to reclaim some of the property that my dad's business was sitting on because they needed to make the road wider. They were paying less than what I think it was worth, but I could understand it because that road was tiny for how much traffic it carried. But outright taking your entire property and then giving you the finger...not just no, but hell no.

    27. Re:Pretty much by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 2

      Actually I've heard of one of these things happening before. A cousin of mine was carrying $5,000 in cash. They just flat out took it away, and demanded receipts showing that he legally earned that money. THAT is fucked up. Past pay stubs and crap like that don't work either; they work under the assumption that you spend every dime you get and never save anything, and if you didn't just recently make a big sale or something like that, your money is guilty until proven innocent (i.e. they automatically assume it's drug money.)

    28. Re:Pretty much by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 1

      Sorry editing mistake, the police somehow saw him carrying that much money and took it.

    29. Re:Pretty much by dryeo · · Score: 1

      It's called a shitty network connection and I'm surprised as much got posted as did. Full version below.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    30. Re:Pretty much by Anon+Hope+4sweg · · Score: 1

      While it was to keep poor people from making the decisions. It was thought at the time poor people werent informed or intelegent enough to make a good choice on their own. Now days if our founding fathers were here they probably would make it a direct vote for most things.

    31. Re:Pretty much by pnutjam · · Score: 1

      "The only thing human about Indians is their shape."
      -George Washington

      -or something like that...

    32. Re:Pretty much by bhiestand · · Score: 1

      That's a nice logical-sounding rant and all, but at the end of the day you're telling me unions, corporations, and some very informed people spend billions of dollars every year without getting any return on their investment? Even though there is a giant mountain of evidence showing that lobbying has higher ROI than any other investment?

      No amount of money could have convinced people to vote for Romney. He was a terrible, terrible candidate. But with ~$1B of negative ads, they probably dissuaded a lot of people from voting for Obama and many other Democrats (or made them less eager to do so). And you're ignoring the fact that Romney wouldn't have even been a contender if he didn't have vast financial support.

      --
      SWM seeks new sig for a brief fling
    33. Re:Pretty much by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dollars do not win elections.

      Dude wake up and smell the coffee. Dollars DO! win elections everyday.

    34. Re:Pretty much by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 1

      That's a nice logical-sounding rant and all, but at the end of the day you're telling me unions, corporations, and some very informed people spend billions of dollars every year without getting any return on their investment? Even though there is a giant mountain of evidence showing that lobbying has higher ROI than any other investment?

      No amount of money could have convinced people to vote for Romney. He was a terrible, terrible candidate. But with ~$1B of negative ads, they probably dissuaded a lot of people from voting for Obama and many other Democrats (or made them less eager to do so). And you're ignoring the fact that Romney wouldn't have even been a contender if he didn't have vast financial support.

      Ok look at what you just told me here. First you essentially deny that campaign contributors aren't getting a return on investment, and then you essentially say that ~1B of money towards negative adds was effectively wasted since there was no chance in him winning.

      So clearly we need to revise the first amendment.

      (Which by the way, you pulled that figure out of your ass; the amount spent on his campaign fell well short of that figure, it was actually Obama's camp that came close to that.)

    35. Re:Pretty much by bhiestand · · Score: 1

      Ok look at what you just told me here. First you essentially deny that campaign contributors aren't getting a return on investment, and then you essentially say that ~1B of money towards negative adds was effectively wasted since there was no chance in him winning.

      So clearly we need to revise the first amendment.

      There is no contradiction, just nuance that I perhaps did not effectively convey. To get to 51%, you can either boost support for a candidate or reduce support for their rival.

      Romney's campaign likely knew all of the following to be true:
      - With 100% turnout, Romney would never be able to achieve 51%
      - Effective negative ads increase turnout among the GOP base ("more important to vote so we can get that evil commie out of there!")
      - Effective negative ads may decrease overall turnout ("they both suck, why vote?")
      - Effective negative ads against an incumbent leader of a political party trickle down the ballot (you can turn Congressional elections by running against the President)
      - Romney had a non-zero chance of winning (despite my hyperbole)

      Sure, Romney could have won. Possibly. But his loss does not mean those who donated to the cause got nothing out of donating. They improved their relationship with the GOP, gained key Congressional seats, reduced support for Obama, reduced Obama's success rate in implementing his policies, probably moved Obama to the right, and so forth.

      As for ~$1B, sure, it's a WAG. But I was talking about total negative ad spending on that election from the right, not just the Romney campaign. I haven't seen a good source on the data, and it is a reasonable estimate.

      And yes, Democrats use negative ads for most of the same reasons. Though Democrats tend to benefit from increased turnout and suffer from decreased confidence in government, so their calculus is slightly different.

      --
      SWM seeks new sig for a brief fling
    36. Re:Pretty much by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Yes, most of the founding Fathers and probably most Colonists seemed to have similar attitudes. Made it easier to steal or cheat them for their land.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    37. Re:Pretty much by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 1

      You're not really making a salient point. Your 5th bullet alone renders everything before it moot. As for your paragraph after that one, I often hear democrats complain that the GOP only has house majority due to gerrymandering. You can't have it both ways on this one. (Not that I care as I don't bother to vote. The whole system strikes me as pointless; basically it's a reality show drama where you choose the winner. Shockingly enough I'm registered to vote every year even though I deliberately avoid registering to vote.)

      Also both parties make the same arguments about higher turnout being in their favor, and both of them are equally full of crap. Only two presidential elections since 1960 (when actual counts became reliable) didn't have record numbers of voters, which was Bush Sr's only term and Clinton's second term. As a percentage, in 2004 Bush Jr had the highest turnout percentage since 1968, which was also the year Nixon won his second term, and his has not been matched since (though there have been numerous times where turnout percentages were higher before him.)

      I'm especially tired of hearing that argument, by the way, because it's one of the worst examples of how much our political system is best compared to NFL fans arguing about which team is better.

    38. Re:Pretty much by ArmoredDragon · · Score: 1

      Oops 1968 was Nixon's first term, actually.

  14. Oh great... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    More crap coming from the legal bribing in the US... thanks a-holes for ruining everything for the rest of us.

  15. like being in a 'civil' war? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    seems civil enough to the wmd on credit corepirate nazi depopulation band of 85 inbred crown royal spiritless mutants http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=wmd+on+credit+cabal+civil+war+instigation we pay for all of that too,, not to mention having to overlook the last of our innocents starving all over the world 1000s dying daily by our 'unwitting' neglect,, no wonder our honor & integrity appears a another falicy in our fictional heritage leaving our spirits paralyzed by constant deception

  16. And yet this is not considered bribery. by whoever57 · · Score: 1

    The connection is so obvious, but somehow this is not considered bribery. Is what the USA needs another truly devastating depression, which seemed to result in more evening out of wealth distribution after the "gilded age"?

    --
    The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    1. Re:And yet this is not considered bribery. by OhPlz · · Score: 1

      We all know it's bribery. Every system of government suffers from it. Given that, I doubt many are in favor of scorched earth to fix the problem. What would we end up with? Another system of government run by people which inevitably will lead to more corruption. At least with "lobbying", it's done in the open.

  17. WTF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not sure how to answer when Dewy, Cheatem and How is the only congressmen that has a vote.

  18. Re:I don't believe it! by fustakrakich · · Score: 2

    All this is, is confirmation of what everyone already knew in their gut, but try to ignore on a daily basis.

    They have to ignore it. Otherwise they would feel stupid for reelecting them, and people don't like to be made to feel dumb.

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  19. Campaign contributions != payments by jklovanc · · Score: 1

    Republicans signing the letters against Title II reclassification of the internet as a public utility have received, on average, $59,812 from the cable industry, 5 times more than the average for all members of the House, $11,651.

    That makes it sound like those Republicans can take that money and spend it any way they want. The Members of the House did not receive the money their campaign funds did. They are campaign contributions and can only be spent on re-election campaigns. While that may seem a fine distinction it is an important one.

    1. Re:Campaign contributions != payments by taz346 · · Score: 1

      So if I'm a certified public accountant whose job depends on me taking classes every two years to remain certified and someone gives me cash to spend any way I want to fudge their books, it's a bribe; but if they pay for my classes and recertification to fudge their books, it's not a bribe? Sorry, I'm not seeing the distinction there.

    2. Re:Campaign contributions != payments by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      They launder the money into other accounts, and they "campaign" however they want, whenever they want. They can "campaign" by taking a trip around the world to increase their "visibility" or whatever they want to say, staying in the best hotels or whatever they want. They just have to keep it on separate books, unless they've already laundered it.

    3. Re:Campaign contributions != payments by tomhath · · Score: 1

      The distinction here is that opposing Net Neutrality isn't illegal.

      If congressmen want to support it and their constituents continue to reelect them, then the congressmen are fulfilling their duty as elected representatives.

    4. Re:Campaign contributions != payments by taz346 · · Score: 2

      While it may be legal for a representative to vote a certain way, if they're voting that way because they're getting a payoff to vote that way, it's a bribe in my book. Calling it a campaign contribution is just semantics. Our system of unlimited spending on political campaigns enhances the likelihood that votes on issues such as net neutrality will go the way the highest bidders want it to go.

  20. What ? by SteveWP · · Score: 0

    Oh My Gosh ! You mean to tell me that politicians are corrupt douchnozzles Thank you I would never have known without this story.

  21. patents by mfh · · Score: 1

    While we're at it let's make patents illegal and force everyone to compete based on customer experience rather than who thought of something. Information wants to be free!

    --
    The dangers of knowledge trigger emotional distress in human beings.
  22. New Law by rsilvergun · · Score: 2

    you can only donate to candidates that you can vote for, and only so much money. Everyone gets the same amount of "Free Speech" then. All that's left after that is to enforce equal air time laws.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:New Law by TitusGroan8856 · · Score: 1

      the $ limit should be on the giver not the candidate i.e limit = $5k you cannot give $5k to two candidates, but you could give $2.5k to each. And you can only donate if eligible to vote. NB companies are not eligible to vote.

  23. Why bother? by SeaFox · · Score: 1

    ...and find your representative to determine how much legitimacy can be attributed to their stated concerns for the public."

    And what would that accomplish? It's not like anything is going to be done at the sudden revelation of who is and is not involved in influencing the FCC on the corporations' views.

    You would think the popularity of Netflix would cause the general public to be strongly on the Net Neutrality side, but for them this whole thing is still "nerd politics". They care about it about as much as they care about the wage gap -- not enough to truly do anything more than stay the current course and take it in the rear.

  24. um by Charliemopps · · Score: 4, Interesting

    So... donating to the campaigns of congressmen that'll vote for things you want is now bribery?

    Look at their own god damned quoted data: http://maplight.org/us-congres...
    They donated to 397 members of the house out of 435 members which is 91%

    Letter 1 was signed by 4
    Letter 2 was signed by 20
    Letter 3 was signed by 4
    So we have a total of 28 signers.
    So just random statistical chance would mean 91% * 28 = 26 of them would have received contributions.
    27 received contributions, so the total is only off by 1 member or 3%.
    Give me a break. Arstechnica is worse than FoxNews. Why does anyone even read that garbage?

    I despise ALL politicians, and I fully support net neutrality, but this "story" is a joke.

    1. Re:um by bondsbw · · Score: 1

      My belief is that all campaign donations can potentially constitute bribery. You're right that this story isn't particularly special in that regard.

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    2. Re:um by khchung · · Score: 2

      So... donating to the campaigns of congressmen that'll vote for things you want is now bribery?

      In most other civilized countries, it IS.

      --
      Oliver.
    3. Re:um by Charliemopps · · Score: 1

      Free speech is a hell of a two edged sword aint it? Despite that, I'll take it over the rest of th "Free world" any day. As much as there is wrong with my country, at least I can bitch about it and anyone in it publicly without fear of repercussions.

    4. Re:um by theskipper · · Score: 2

      The article is referring to statistics regarding the amounts received, not the distribution among the congressional population.

    5. Re:um by Nemyst · · Score: 1

      Wait, speech is money now? I don't think anyone opposes lobbyists going to the politicians and talking them into doing what they want. It's giving money to the politicians as an incentive (obviously without saying that that's the case too openly *cough*) that's outright bribery and is illegal in most sane, developed countries.

    6. Re:um by swillden · · Score: 1

      So... donating to the campaigns of congressmen that'll vote for things you want is now bribery?

      In most other civilized countries, it IS.

      So it's illegal to donate to political campaigns in most other civilized countries?

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    7. Re:um by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      >So... donating to the campaigns of congressmen that'll vote for things you want is now bribery?

      No, don't be silly. The rights of individuals to support politicians should not be infringed.

      What *should* be totally and completely eliminated is the current right of entities that *cannot* vote be given control over democratic elections, and by that I mostly mean corporations.

    8. Re:um by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The corollary for "free speech == money" is "more money == more speech".
      If you can't see why that's a problem in a democracy then you've strayed so far from rational thought that there's really no point discussing further with you.

    9. Re:um by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes.

      Further, most civilized countries don't even allow candidates to bring their own money into the election. Campaigns are funded by the state so that all candidates compete on equal ground.

  25. lolwut? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Aren't there individual limits (2400 for 2010, 2500 for 2012 and 2600 for 2014)? There seems to be a pattern of double payments on the same day which I might contribute to faulty data but then I see

    3/26/09 $400
    3/26/09 $2,400
    2/17/09 $2,000

    to the same senator from the same guy with the same occupation/employer at the same address. I didn't think the limit was for a single check...

  26. The Money Primary by PopeRatzo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The issue is not just that lawmakers are given money by corporate interests and then vote for their benefit. It's that someone cannot even participate in the election process without getting vetted by monied interests. Long before a politician runs for office, or even in a primary, he has to present himself to a roomful of rich people who will then determine that the politician will work on their behalf. The party doesn't matter, the process is the same. I don't care if they ran as a left-leaning democrat or a tea party Republican, they have to be vetted by the $30,000/plate club before they can take the first steps toward holding office.

    By the time they get into office, it's already assured that they will find a way to make sure the 1%'s interests are taken care of. Whether they take the extra step like writing a letter to the head of the FCC or sponsoring a bill, well, that's negotiable later for a price, but you already know for sure that they're predisposed to protect the wealthy and powerful.

    As someone above has pointed out, the US Constitution was founded as a plutocracy, and despite all the flowery language about liberty and equality, we were designed to be a country that was run by the wealthy.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
  27. um by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the point wasn't the representativeness of the sample, but the amount received (2.3 times the average), so statistically, you may have missed the point.

  28. Depressing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't know which is more depressing, the fact that everyone can be bought, or that the price is always so low. Sigh.

  29. Re:Campaign contributions != bribes by jklovanc · · Score: 1

    This is where similes are not always similar. Whether giving you money directly or someone pay for your classes they are both bribes. In the case of an accountant, you are supposed to make enough income to cover the expense of certification classes. In the case of politicians it has been shown that the cost of running a campaign far outweighs the income of most people. To allow non-billionaires to compete, others (more commonly known as supporters) have been allowed to pay for the campaigns through campaign contributions. This allows anyone who has enough supporters to run for office.

  30. double standard by jklovanc · · Score: 1

    You seem to have a problem with unlimited spending. The problem with campaign spending limits is that it becomes a Freedom of Speech issue. By limiting the amount of money that can be spent one is limiting the amount of communication that can be done. This is from a supreme court ruling;

    A restriction on the amount of money a person or group can spend on political communication during a campaign necessarily reduces the quantity of expression by restricting the number of issues discussed, the depth of their exploration, and the size of the audience reached. This is because virtually every means of communicating ideas in today's mass society requires the expenditure of money.

    What is your alternative? It is easy to point out problems and much more difficult to come up with solutions.

    1. Re:double standard by taz346 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm fully aware of the Supreme Court's recent rulings equating unlimited campaign spending with free speech. I disagree with their reasoning. Other democracies limit both overall campaign spending as well as the length of election campaigns, and those democracies function quite well. When the Court says, "This is because virtually every means of communicating ideas in today's mass society requires the expenditure of money," it ignores obvious alternative methods of mass communication. In the U.S., for example, we have public broadcasting networks in both radio and TV that could be used to give every candidate ample and equal opportunities to reach the public. The Court citing "free speech" as if it always triumphs every other consideration ignores the fact that our society and our courts often limit the free speech of individuals when not doing so would cause harm to other individuals or to society as a whole. Aside from that, I do not agree that campaign spending equals free speech. It comes down to whether or not we believe unlimited campaign spending distorts and corrupts the political process. I believe the evidence is that it clearly does, and I believe that issues like net neutrality illustrate that. Many of the representatives who signed Letter 2 that was referenced in the Ars Technica article represent areas where Internet access is very limited. They are betting that since so many of their constitutents don't have home Internet access, most of them won't even notice their actions on net neutrality or even know what it is. In fact, I doubt most of those representatives could explain net neutrality if asked. They got contributions and signed the letter they were asked to sign because that's how the campaign funding business works.

    2. Re:double standard by jklovanc · · Score: 1

      we have public broadcasting networks in both radio and TV

      Which very few people watch. To get the message out is needs to be where and when people are watching and listening and that means network prime time.

      The Court citing "free speech" as if it always triumphs every other consideration ignores the fact that our society and our courts often limit the free speech of individuals when not doing so would cause harm to other individuals or to society as a whole

      Libel, slander, hate speech, incitement to violence, etc are a far cry from expressing one's opinion on a political issue. Political speech is a very protected thing in the US.

      Aside from that, I do not agree that campaign spending equals free speech.

      Here is a problem with limited spending. Say later in a campaign a rival splurges and exposes some event in your past that is spun all out of recognition. You have spent almost all your limit and now can't respond effectively. Do you not spend as much earlier just in case? Wouldn't that limit your speech?

      Many of the representatives who signed Letter 2 that was referenced in the Ars Technica article represent areas where Internet access is very limited. They are betting that since so many of their constitutents don't have home Internet access, most of them won't even notice their actions on net neutrality or even know what it is.

      It is interesting that you have such a strong psychic link that you know what "[t]hey are betting". Your statement is merely your spin on their actions and has no basis in proof.

      They got contributions and signed the letter they were asked to sign because that's how the campaign funding business works.

      According to this of the 44 representatives who receive $30K or more in contributions only eleven signed a letter. Twenty five percent is not a very good success rate.

  31. Cultural Literacy by westlake · · Score: 5, Informative

    Large sections of our Constitution and the basis of our Representative government were designed to keep poor people from voting themselves the land that the wealthy had already claimed... There really wasn't any reason to hide it since if you were literate you were probably rich.

    A dangerous assumption to make.

    In 1776, one book, written in complex language, sold over 120,000 copies in Colonial America.

    First convert 120,000 into a fraction of the U.S. population in 1776: compared to the population at the time of 2.5 million, 120,000 is roughly 1 in 20, or 5%. Today's U.S. population is about 300 million --- of which 5% is 15 million.

    Fifteen million copies today! More surprisingly, Common Sense by Thomas Paine sold this equivalent in just three months. In its first year, it sold 500,000 copies, or 20% of the colonial population.

    Today's equivalent is 60 million copies.

    Were Colonial Americans More Literate than Americans Today?. ''Every Man Able to Read''

    In the late colonial and early federal era, disputes over land ownership centered on the opening of the western frontiers to settlement and the abolition of feudal tenures. The Last Patroon

    The Library of America's two volume "The Debate on the Constitution" can be found in most public libraries.

    For Americans this is Shakespeare, and more. Not only is it wonderful writing, it is wonderful thinking. -- Nina Totenberg, National Public Radio

  32. What amazes me most... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Is how cheaply some of them can be bought...

  33. Yeah, by rayk_sland · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Industry lobbyists exert control over Congress through bribery, Congress exerts control over the US through law, US exerts control over as much as the world as possible through sheer bullying. Americans unimpressed by the lack of voice in Congress? What about all the rest of us that have to put up with a world marred by industry lobbyists? America's lack of democracy poisons the planet. -- Guess we'l have to start teaching our children about Anthropogenic Global Insanity...

    --
    Jedis are stupid. If they were so powerful, why couldn't they handle counseling for a kid who missed his mom?
  34. Two wrongs don't make a right by thrashertm · · Score: 1

    Anyone checked if the Congressmen pushing for net neutrality have received contributions from Netflix and Google?

  35. Interesting obfuscation by jklovanc · · Score: 1

    regarding the 28 congressmen who sent a combined total of three letters

    Each of the 28 congressmen only signed one letter. The above makes it sound like some congressmen signed more than one letter.

  36. Who didn't sign by jklovanc · · Score: 2

    Take a look at this chart. There are 12 house members who received campaign contribution at or above the level of John Barrow. A total of $880K were given to these campaigns. If that $800K, $391K was given to the five campaigns that signed the letters and $489K was given to campaigns that did not sign the letters. Giving campaign contributions does not guarantee public support.

    Also take a look at this report. Out of the 51 bill the group had a position on the House voted their way four times. That is an 8% success rate. It does not look like the contributions are making a difference.

    1. Re:Who didn't sign by Nemyst · · Score: 1

      It doesn't have to be successful to be considered bribery.

  37. Saw your post history before replying by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I always do it. So, why are you running from a guy challenging you? Is it cuz you called him names first?

  38. Bi-partisan causation correlation fail by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Articles like this pretend to expose political corruption by lining-up votes with campaign contributions. A blatant example of the old correlation-causation fallacy.

    This article probably got slashdot attention because it both concerns "net neutrality" (a politically-mushy term like "healthcare reform" or "immigration reform" that everybody can project their own preferences into) and it makes Republicans look more corrupt than Democrats (an always popular meme here). The truth however, is that most political contributions are BY people who believe in a cause TO politicians who they believe have the same policy views already; people do not like to throw money at politicians who have not ALREADY demonstrated a commitment to the preferred position - it's too much of a gamble. This is true for Republicans with telcos (the telcos own infrastructure and prefer the government not tell them how to use it, and Republicans generally believe in private property and less government regulation) and it's also true of Democrats and trial lawyers (trial lawyers want no "tort reform" that would limit their ability to get lots of clients on contingency or for class-actions etc, and Democrats tend to have the same view, so these lawyers heavily fund Democrats). This is perhaps unsavory, BUT it is NOT the same thing as bribery.

    If you want to find corruption and bribery, look for the politician who votes contrary to his/her long-standing public position and gets funding from somebody who supports that inconsistent vote.... that's bribery

  39. Re:I don't believe it! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I was reading a comment of a /. user, when /. posted an article on the FCC vote, and why he was "republican" freakin laughable, the top 5 on the list are Republicans, and I believe the most influential ones as well. I can see the Republicans really have your freedoms and best interest at heart! He claimed the Democrats were trying to corner and cut off 'the peoples freedoms'.

    My point which would be yours, their all morons.. Both sides.....

  40. THAT IS bribery by dltaylor · · Score: 1

    None of the fiction about "access"; that letter is a service performed for a payment. The traitors should be executed.

  41. Averages can be deceiving by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Poor rep Nick Rahall signed that letter and got $0! Tea party much?

  42. And what about those supported by GOOG and Netflix by cornicefire · · Score: 1

    This is a two-way street and a battle between billionaires. They're handing out money left and right to lobbyists like the EFF. Why? They want net neutrality so they can make more money from ads and subscriptions. Let's try to cover this fairly, please.

  43. Re:K. S. Kyosuke gets called out & ran by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thanks for admitting you haven't done squat K.S. Kyosuke (despite your "big talk").

  44. K. S. Kyosuke gets called out & ran by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From a fair challenge like a chickenshit blowhard http://slashdot.org/comments.p...

  45. Oh please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So you have an article where they find out, horror of horrors, money is given by lobbiests - just like every other single issue.

    Then the article goes on to say that it was given to republicans! That aren't even on the FCC board!

    But wait, it's the democrats on the FCC that just threw us all under the bus last week, while calling this net neutrality.

    Excuse me while I yawn at your misplaced outrage.

  46. Buy them back by lonecrow · · Score: 1

    $26,832 is a paltry amount of money, just buy them back

  47. Moot point by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    because all potential candidates are vetted by the rich before you and I get a chance to vote on them. We're basically picking which corporate shill we like the best...

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  48. How contributions usually work: by sabbede · · Score: 1

    Okay, campaign contributions are very rarely used to change a politician's behavior. Its far more cost effective to contribute to someone already inclined to vote your way than it is to try and buy someone off.

  49. corruption by SebNukem · · Score: 1

    How is this not plain old corruption? Lobbyism is just an euphemism.