SOPA Markup Day 1: We Don't Understand This Bill, It Might Do Terrible Things, But Dammit, We're Passing It Now
from the how-congress-works dept
So, if you weren't paying attention, yesterday was a marathon session of SOPA amendments... It ran for 11.5 hours, with just one tiny break, and it looks like they didn't even get through half of the amendments. I'll get into some more details in a bit, but honestly the single best description of the insanity of these hearings came from The Washington Post's Alexandra Petri, who called them "nightmarish."If this were surgery, the patient would have run out screaming a long time ago. But this is like a group of well-intentioned amateurs getting together to perform heart surgery on a patient incapable of moving. “We hear from the motion picture industry that heart surgery is what’s required,” they say cheerily. “We’re not going to cut the good valves, just the bad — neurons, or whatever you call those durn thingies.”That really describes the situation perfectly. Over and over again the people in favor of this bill flat out admitted that they didn't understand the technology -- and when the various people opposed to it asked why don't they get some experts in to answer some questions, the supporters had no credible response. The DNS and security aspects were completely brushed aside. As Rep. Jason Chaffetz (who is fighting the good fight against this) pointed out repeatedly, there's simply no reason to rush this bill when there are such widespread concerns about it and no one has taken the time to get the answers to key questions.
This is terrifying to watch. It would be amusing — there’s nothing like people who did not grow up with the Internet attempting to ask questions about technology very slowly and stumbling over words like “server” and “service” when you want an easy laugh. Except that this time, the joke’s on us.
But the supporters of the bill -- mainly Reps. Lamar Smith, Bob Goodlatte and Mel Watt -- simply wanted to push forward at all costs. They rejected every amendment raised, except two minor ones (we'll get to that in a minute). Amazingly they rejected all sorts of quite reasonable suggestions -- while complaining that those opposed to the bill never had any suggestions to fix it! And yet when those actual proposals were brought up, they were rejected out of hand. It really was pretty disgusting. Goodlatte's responses struck me as particularly inane. He kept rejecting amendments because he feared that the amendment could be abused. The fact that most of those amendments were to prevent the much wider scale abuses guaranteed under SOPA never seemed to occur to him.
In fact, supporters of the bill regularly used arguments that actually could have been turned around on them. They refused an amendment from Rep. Darrell Issa to limit the powers of the bill to those who actually were in the US, saying that it would set a bad precedent for countries like China... and this came just after they were totally outraged that anyone might think that the entire bill itself sets a bad precedent for countries like China. The disingenuous bullshit was really ridiculous.
Rep. Watt was particularly keen to display his own ignorance. He regularly admitted that he wasn't very knowledgeable on technology -- which should have been a reason to recuse himself or to at least ask for more info from experts. Instead, he just insisted that all of the technical experts were simply wrong. Based on what? Nothing. How does someone like Watt get elected when he appears to want to regulate the internet based on pure faith and against what every single expert has said? It's downright scary.
Later, Watt angrily rejected an amendment to clarify some language to make sure it was limited -- by saying that he believed the language already said what the amendment added. If that's true, why reject the amendment? All it would do is make the intent clear. Instead, he said no. That makes no sense at all.
What was clear, from the beginning, was that the SOPA supporters were not there in good faith. They had no intention of listening to reasonable suggestions to fix the bill, and stuck together as a bloc to reject pretty much all of them -- even while admitting their own ignorance. The really sad part was when Goodlatte tried to equate the views of a couple of policy analysts who get money from the entertainment industry, with the views of nearly 100 independent internet engineers who have pointed out how problematic SOPA really would be. Watt and others tried to pretend that because each side could turn up someone who would say something that those views were equal. It's the insane Congressional equivalent of "he-said/she-said" journalism, where you "hear" both sides, but never seek out the truth. That's nuts.
The simple fact is that nearly every single actual credible internet engineer has come out against these bills. There isn't an equivalence where each side can turn up a few people. The scales are completely weighted down against the bills... and many of those people have no associations whatsoever -- even as SOPA defenders insisted that only "Google" experts were against the bill. Stewart Baker isn't speaking for Google. Sandia National Labs isn't speaking for Google.
The real insanity is that supporters of the bill are rushing forward just because they want to pass "something," and they don't seem to care about the consequences.
As for the two amendments that did pass, one was to say that if you "knowingly misrepresented" a claim on a site, you had to pay attorneys' fees. Of course, "knowingly misrepresent" is a very, very high bar that will almost never be met. A similar amendment by Rep. Chaffetz that would also require fees if you failed to get an injunction in court was rejected, because SOPA supporters were worried this would scare people off. As Chaffetz pointed out: that's the whole point. It would scare off those who don't have strong, legitimate claims.
The other amendment that passed right at the end, was from Rep. Jared Polis, requiring the State Department to do a study on the eventual impacts of SOPA. That doesn't change the law really. It just will at least let people check back in on the damage it does a couple years from now.
A few other key points:
- Huge kudos to Reps. Issa, Lofgren, Chaffetz and Polis, who combined to repeatedly point out the problems of the bill and to argue forcefully and compellingly about why we needed to fix these problems. That much of the rest of the Committee ignored these concerns, played them down, or rejected them for silly or nonsense reasons, is really just a statement on the sad state of Congress today.
- I heard from sources that a big time content industry lobbyist was seen hanging out in the "members only" area during the session. If that doesn't tell you everything you need to know about what's going on, then you're not paying attention.
- There was a bizarre elementary school-like fight that went on at one point. Rep. Steve King tweeted early on:
We are debating the Stop Online Piracy Act and Shiela Jackson has so bored me that I'm killing time by surfing the Internet.
Rep. Jackson-Lee found out about this and announced that she was "offended," at which point it seemed like a bunch of these old clueless men started arguing about how inappropriate it was for her to say she was offended. The whole session had to pause while they talked to a "parliamentarian" about whether it was okay to use the term "offended," eventually leading Jackson-Lee to change her statement. Yeah. These are the people in charge of making our laws. Scary. - With the session going on for 11.5 hours, there was a short break for lunch, but for dinner Rep. Lamar Smith offered "four kinds of pizza," but apparently only for other members. Staffers had to sit and starve. Nice of them, huh?
That said... if you want to watch more of it today, tune in either at the Judiciary website or the KeepTheWebOpen site and make sure you have a pillow nearby for when you want to bang your head on the desk or wall. Once again, I'll be live-tweeting some of the hearing (don't think I can make all of it) from my personal Twitter account.
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Filed Under: bob goodlatte, copyright, darrell issa, dns, dnssec, jared polis, jason chaffetz, lamar smith, markup, mel watt, sopa, zoe lofgren
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Watched a lot yesterday.
Is it too late to move to Canada? With representatives like this, I have my doubts this one will be a nice place to live for much longer.
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That our senators would openly "service" an industry that arguably was built on screwing its own producers is... well I can't find words to express my contempt.
Hollywood and its hangers on rake in a lot of money and then a small percentage is passed on to our 'elected' congress-scum ensuring things will 'go their way'. The fact our representatives and senators can be bought for such a small amount is actually embarrassing (and a whole other rant). But even more stunning is the difference between the hollywood industry and the tech industry. It brings to mind the anecdote from the 90's about Michael Jordan and how much money he makes per minute of playing time, and how many cars, and houses he could buy; and then how long he'd have to work to equal Bill Gates.
I would hope that if this law passes the tech industry would finally wake the fuck up and start buying a few representatives and senators of their own.
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Re: Watched a lot yesterday.
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Once you have the tech industry lobbying, their message is corrupted. Period. This is not about effective laws if one side has the money to buy those that make them.
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Personally, I am enjoying the shrill cries of the pro-piracy lobby
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Lamar Smith must be punished
It doesn't matter who replaces him: right, left, middle, old, young, sane, crazy. We need to identify someone who will run against him and fund that individual to any level necessary to guarantee a win. We need to send a message in a language that his colleagues will understand.
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Becuase Congress recesses fairly soon. After all,t he best time to push bad laws is just before a recess.
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Re: Watched a lot yesterday.
Maybe you should move to Brazil. You can enjoy all the third world Internet you like there.
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Re: Personally, I am enjoying the shrill cries of the pro-piracy lobby
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Re: Personally, I am enjoying the shrill cries of the pro-piracy lobby
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Re: Personally, I am enjoying the shrill cries of the pro-piracy lobby
I hope you don't have children because you'll have a lot of explaining to do one day...
Finally, this should make you angry that we have so many obviously dirty and bought politicians. Where is your outrage at the corrupt politicians?
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Re: Personally, I am enjoying the shrill cries of the pro-piracy lobby
Your views on people and situations are sickening. Us and Them. Nothing more frightening and sad in the world then people who think like that.
Oh, quick question, all those representatives who raised questions and voiced concerns over SOPA, are they also "pro-piracy" in your opinion?
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Re: Watched a lot yesterday.
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Re: Re: Personally, I am enjoying the shrill cries of the pro-piracy lobby
He is either a troll or paid for by the same people that bought the politicians, im betting troll.
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Smith himself was a major low point. First, he kept insisting that he had tried to work with the tech industry for months, but they wouldn't do anything. I assume that he meant that the tech industry would not agree to everything his MPAA bosses were telling him they needed. He also kept insisting that they would pass the bill today which showed how far out of touch with reality that he was.
Near the end of the day yesterday I came back to my office and was shocked to see that the meeting was still going on. I assumed that they must be replaying the hearing for people who missed part of it when it was live. They were going over the same arguments that I had heard several hours earlier, but I finally realized that it was still indeed going on and they were just recycling arguments.
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Re: Re: Watched a lot yesterday.
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Re: Re: Re: Watched a lot yesterday.
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Actually, based on their proposed amendments, they seem mostly aiming to neuter the bill and give 1000 outs to their friends.
Here's an idea Mike, how about you check out where THEY get their funding from? Or are you only checking out the people you don't agree with?
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In summary
-Regulate the internet
-Censor free speech
-Block/shut down any website deemed offensive
-Enforce a major media-controlled internet environment wherein they monopolize everything a-la television, radio, etc.
-Make copyright holders immune to legal retaliation
-Incriminate internet users
-Stomp on innovation and economic growth
-Strongly tempt tech companies to relocate their business overseas while simultaneously making foreign businesses apprehensive about doing business here
-Cause immense collateral damage
There's more but that's a good list. SOPA/PIPA are indicative of a morally corrupt government hell-bent on destroying America from within.
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And this committee meeting has had MANY examples of people sticking their fingers in their ears and yelling, "lalalala I can't hear you. You are wrong. I am right. lalalalala"
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Re: Re: Watched a lot yesterday.
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- You have no good arguments to present
- You are reduced to attempt to smear your opponents
- You are too lazy to actually dig up dirt on your opponents
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Oh, wait, you can't even be arsed to back up your assertions.
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- We have already argued it out 100 times over, considering how many SOPA posts are on this blog
- The smearing start with Mike. I am only asking him to smear his political heros in the same manner, in the eye of fairness
- I don't have to dig. Google donated "the max" to Issa.
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Re: Re: Watched a lot yesterday.
But I digress. You are clueless about our internet (even though you might be right for smaller rural areas). And we can download for personal non-commercial uses too, which says tons when you see SOPA going on. Not to mention our electoral system, while imperfect, is way ahead from the US.
I think we are accepting foreigners for permanent visa. Wanna apply for it?
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Public sees members of Congress as the problem
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Re: In summary
Take a gold star out of petty cash.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Watched a lot yesterday.
A number of legal experts up here have pointed out that it will, when challenged (not IF), that it will likely be found to be unconstitutional on a number of points. The best one has been that it will bring "the administration of justice into disrepute" a big no-no under our constitution.
At least the bill doesn't, yet, AFAIK, include silliness like DNS blocking which would have the security folks up here ripping their hair out and yelling, quietly, in committee that they don't want this, can't live with this, that it stinks and to stop it NOW. Usually they get their way on Parliament Hill. Not always for the better. But this time they'd be on the side of the angels.
(You'd probably have to be a native born Canadian to understand how it's possible to yell quietly anywhere but we somehow manage to do it.)
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How did Mel Watt get elected
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A congressman has actually said that before.
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It will make them push harder?
Shoot Reps. Lamar Smith in the head now!
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If I owned Google you'd see HUGE amounts on the donations. To prevent the money-happy retards such as Lamar and Goodlatte from screwing everything up.
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Nobody wants Hollywood, the RIAA, et al. running the internet, so go away. As someone previously said, if there was so much support for your side of the argument, you'd have your own blog with tons of followers, yet you don't because there aren't.
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Re: Lamar Smith must be punished
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Boycott
Funny how people saying they will move to Canada when our current government in power is just as bad.
Nostradamus got it wrong the world isn't going to end it was the world wide web that would end it 2012.
Money talks bullshit walks
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Re: Boycott
Seed harder.
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But I do agree with him. Sometimes you need destruction to rescue what's lost. Europe knows that too much.
I say let them destroy the US from within. I wish they did that without idiotic wars on terrorism or whatever and without sticking their noses on every single foreign issue. At least not when they can't live by what they say.
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Re: Boycott
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http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20110919/01530216000/us-marshals-service-asks-us-to-remo ve-comment.shtml
and who made that comment? An IP extremist pretending to be a critic. and I hope Mike turns over their IP address so that they can get investigated. There is no end to the low that IP extremists would stoop to propagate their agenda and I want those making these sorts of comments on behalf of critics exposed.
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Re: Watched a lot yesterday.
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Re: Re: Re: Personally, I am enjoying the shrill cries of the pro-piracy lobby
It's like using a nuke to kill some delinquints hiding in an alley, only so that, of the millions dead in a destroyed city, the delinquints were not among them.
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People in a Democracy get the government they deserve. When you have a voter turnout of less than 50% and it's RECORD-BREAKING, then I think you have an indication of how much of a shit US citizens give.
Don't forget that NDAA business. That bill was considerably more onerous than SOPA, and you sat there and took it. This bill will pass with flying colours, and you good little consumers will eat that shit up while *MAYBE* 40% of you vote at the next election, and not a single one of you changes your vote to align with a candidate who doesn't threaten everything that your forefathers lived and died for.
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Re: Re: Re: Personally, I am enjoying the shrill cries of the pro-piracy lobby
Obviously reading isn't your strong suit, so I'll repeat the question. WHAT ABOUT THE REPRESENTATIVES WHO RAISED QUESTIONS AND VOICED CONCERNS OVER SOPA? IN YOUR OPINION, DOES THAT MEAN THEY ARE PRO-PIRACY?
Do try and get over your bias and hatred of Mike. Focus on the issue, or better said question, at hand (see above, the stuff in all caps). Answer that before you go off on your Mike rants (which to be honest, I really don't give a sh*t about or care to hear, your thoughts on Mike's viewpoints and whatnot have been refuted repeatedly and with evidence/citations, there's no point in explaining how misguided and wrong you are in regards to Mike so I won't acknowledge the issue beyond this).
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wow...
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Rendition
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Even if you are, \b\ is a breeze when you see the horros show in the SOPA hearings.
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Re: Re: Re: Personally, I am enjoying the shrill cries of the pro-piracy lobby
There is millions of pirates who don't give a crap about copyrights that is all.
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I'm fully prepared to believe that perhaps the US is populated, in the majority, by sycophantic consumerist idiots. But were I pressed on the matter, I'd have to say that I don't think it's likely.
Ultimately you have a choice. Stand up for what is right with your vote, or stand up for what is right with your person. Significantly less than half of you do either, so it's difficult to not view you with scorn.
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Dominique.Tillman@mail.house.gov
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A Black List of Representatives
And make them know exactly what happens when representatives and senators stop representing the people that they are responsible to.
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And in your world the sun revolves around Hollywood (and you) so all things bright and beautiful come from Hollywood and to hell with everyone else, to hell with national security none of that matters.
Hollywood's alleged losses of income are primary, their copyrights sacrosanct and they'd never, ever fib about anything much less their tiny contribution to the American economy.
They can buy politicians by the boatload and that's cool with you but if Google dares donate/buy one you're screaming blue murder.
Then again, you come cheap. For free. Oh, sorry, you can't do that can you cause free is always piracy no matter what so you don't come free. Must be that someone gave you a free bag of popcorn fresh from the popcorn plant in payment for your support.
Have nice day.
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Just do your best to avoid the drool. I understand it's infectious and attacks critical areas of the brain such as reasoning, morality and honesty.
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I'm not suggesting revolution. But for every one of you who doesn't believe your vote counts (and from what little I know of your horrendously broken system, those people are actually pretty close to right), there's someone who votes for a member of the establishment. If you managed to convince the remaining ~60% of your nation to vote, you'd be a step closer to having representatives you actually represent you. Your people would feel more invested in the political process, and that level of participation (300 something million people?) can NOT be ignored.
Instead the country is happy to be lazy and just accept what is thrust upon them.
So much for the land of the free and home of the brave.
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George Bush: Questions?
[One man raises his hand]
George Bush: Yes?
UN delegate #2: Are you high, or just incredibly stupid?
George Bush: I assure you I am not high.
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Re: Re: Boycott
The thing people need to do is to patronize the free legal alternatives.
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First time
I work on the state level where it mirrors the federal, and on a typical session day we will arrive at 8am, eat lunch at our desks, support chamber operations until about 5-6pm, support the flow of them taking staggered dinners, resume chamber support at 7-8, continuing to midnight, then work for 2-4 hours further to process the reports they want on their desks in the morning. Due to budget abuses, this isn't spread across multiple employee shifts, this is individuals working up to 19 hours with minimal breaks while the legislators like Lamar Smith email out to all members and staff about member-only dinner being provided by lobbyists.
Thank you for including this often overlooked reality in your report on this absolutely disgusting legislation.
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world
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Re: A Black List of Representatives
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I'm sure more people would do that if we had a candidate that fit that bill, its gonna be Obama (more of the same) or one of these batshit crazy repubs. Yeah! fucked either way!
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The lead up video would be a mutagenic nuke going of and irradiating the city. Leading to a zombie apocalypse in DC.
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Right now the path to victory is spending tons of money on lies, slander and misconstrued truths. Anyone that does rise to the top in this system has no right being elected.
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I know this restates what you said--it was just such a good point that I thought it warranted some expansion.
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And even if they didn't, there's nothing stopping one from doing so. But, no, you just watch the ads and vote based on that instead of actually thinking a bit.
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I know you know what I mean, and if that alone stopped we'd have taken a good deal of money off the MPAA's table.
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I do! Since I visited Brazil recently (and not only tourist attractions), I fell in love with her.
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I couldn't agree more!
But it seems that the populace there would rather keep watching their TV and buying their burgers. I mean, it's not like there's actually anything to stop an independent from running, and with the internet, it's no longer anywhere near as expensive to get the word out.
That doesn't necessarily make it cheap to do so, nor does it mean that those with vast quantities of cash don't have a big head start. But your nation has been built on the hard work of people who didn't shy away from that sort of challenge, why would you not want to continue in a similar vein?
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Have you ever heard of "mutually assured destruction"? That's all you are proposing.
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What difference would that make? He's already a mindless puppet int he hands of the movie industry! He'd just keep dancing the jigs they wanted him to.
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No pro-piracy lobby? Not from what I've seen.
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But despairing won't change anything. The only way to change things is to do something. If you start voting with where your heart lies (and base that on readily available information of how the candidates have acted in the past, not what the god-awful media tells you), convince non-voters (and voters) to do the same, even consider running for local office with a view to bigger things, or anything that takes a little bit of the control away from the status quo, then you're on the right track.
Change is not affected by people posting mildly comments on the internet. It's done bit by bit. And it's done by people who actually try. Do you think your country won its independence from the British by mailing each other letters saying "The British are mean and I don't like them"? No, they stood up and represented themselves. Some otherwise perfectly ordinary people rose above and performed world-shaking acts, with the support of the populace.
Seriously, Americans, it's time to shit or get off the can. Start challenging the system - You may not, personally, make a difference. But even Einstein based his work on what had come before him.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Watched a lot yesterday.
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Sad but True
What does that quote mean? In short, I think it means if you want congress to behave or act a certain way, you need to pay them. Congress is not about logic, insight, innovation, or critical thinking. We are in fact a capitalist society. I think Churchill was simply alluding to the fact that our opinion really doesn’t matter in Washington. Care to stand out on the street corner and join the protesters on Wall Street? This did not impact congress in one way, shape, or form. Yet, somehow people feel this is making a difference. If you want congress do something, get out your wallet and stand in the hallway and make sure they pass your legislation.
I agree entirely with the authors point about this legislation being destructive to the internet. But, common sense doesn’t matter here. If you don’t like it, get ready to pay to change it. What will stand and what will fall? That will be determined by he who has the most money. Vocalizing your opinion, well everyone has one of those and they usually give them away for free.
This is why Rick Perry said he was going to take down 3 agencies of government and then couldn’t even name them. WOW! If your planning on doing away with a government agency you should at least know what it is? So yeah, a flawed bill will pass. I don’t think half these guys congress understand the full impact of what they do. But, I don’t think they care. They simply do what they are told to do by their financial source. That is very much a reality of what we are dealing with today.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Watched a lot yesterday.
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U.S. History: Committees of Correspondence:
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Watched a lot yesterday.
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I agree the internet opens doors but the system is gamed to keep independents from having any real shot at a national election. You need to have huge petitions signed by an enormous amount of people just to get on the ballet, and rules vary state to state and county to county. So now you need a staff in every state to collect signatures, mostly by going door to door. There are all kinds of little catches to the campaign process which keep any independent without about 30-100 million to throw around out of the race, for instance- by literally not allowing his name on the ballet.
So what do you do? Start your own party with less money and a lot more internet, fine. Then you are competing with the real parties, but not really because you won't get the same media coverage or invited to any debates. So they will be all over the news and tv lambasting you while only people who already support you will see your response. Not to mention you still need people on the ground doing mailers, going door-to-door ect.
Sure you could probably get 'some' mainstream coverage, if you sink to their level. But then you end up corrupting yourself.
I see you point and agree whole heatedly. Hopefully someone steps up and meets the challenge, but I doubt they won't just be another empty suit by the time the system is done with them. But I have given up on this country having a non-violent revolution a long time ago.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Watched a lot yesterday.
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The South Rears It's Ugly Head
It seems fair to say there's nothing more corrupt than a southern politician.
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Re: Watched a lot yesterday.
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I'm still calling for everyone to vote for Ron Paul, he's just not going to win even if he gets the popular vote.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Personally, I am enjoying the shrill cries of the pro-piracy lobby
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Personally, I am enjoying the shrill cries of the pro-piracy lobby
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Re: Re: Lamar Smith must be punished
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I'd be (pleasantly) surprised,
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Rep. Watt
It was the most egregious example of dishonest and corruption that I'd ever seen in my life. The guy is terrified of pissing off his RIAA overlords (who are top 5 donors to his reelection campaign).
Corrupt, corrupt, corrupt.
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Google makes money from advertising. The people who advertise legit are businesses that have lots of money (not pirates or "rouge websites")
If google is so bad, why don't the movie and music studios pull all their advertising?
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I've no doubt the odds are stacked against. The old guard *always* has the advantage over those who wants things to get better. But if nobody is prepared to challenge things, then things will always stay the same - simple as that.
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This is what purchased government looks like
Guaranteed, Lamar Smith, Bob Goodlatte, and Mel Watt have cushy jobs waiting for them as entertainment industry lobbyists (like Chris Dodd) once they leave office.
America has been bought and sold at auction like a sack of potatoes. The real question facing us is if any of us give enough of a damn to do something about it.
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In my (incomplete) defence, I genuinely thought you meant that there were only 2 candidates. There *are* people who are largely ignorant of the other candidates and they are a VERY large part of the problem, because they don't care enough about their own country to find out.
That isn't a good enough defence, though. I simply shouldn't have been a dick. Instead I should have worded my objections to that concept much better.
Again, you have my apologies.
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Not that I am advocating a violent revolt. I just see little other chance of of disrupting the system enough to allow some change to happen. I pray someone can prove me wrong.
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I would like to think that it's not the case. But the last few elections and their results seem to be showing that your government is moving further and further away from a plebiscite as an effective way to solve the problem. I just hope for the best, in that respect.
Regardless, there needs to be action from the people. Neither form of change will occur without that.
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Re: This is what purchased government looks like
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Re: Personally, I am enjoying the shrill cries of the pro-piracy lobby
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Re: Watched a lot yesterday.
By threatening the economy, you're now possibly terrorist threat.
By being a terrorist threat, you're now subject to arrest and indefinite detention.
You've been tracked.
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http://getyourcensoron.com/
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Corporate Fascist Plutarchy
Corporations are not your friend.
Religion is social cancer.
Keep corporations and religion out of government. Period.
Otherwise, fight, physically, if it comes to it, to reclaim your country from these evil people.
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Re: world
They could only do that if Canada's Internet was routed through the U.S. I don't know if it is or not.
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Well do what you want but clearly they would not last 5 minutes in British politics.
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Outraged
Why is it that people who don't know what these things mean have to be taught in public law sessions at taxpayer expense with the corporations whispering in their ears?
Hey how much is a plane ticket to Brazil? I've got a 50 kb/s connection =(.
And i thought I was outraged at the DMCA.....
Well, there is a silver lining to this. Maybe more people will start using TOR and it will get faster...
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How is Hollywood going to buy laws with no money?
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Another requires an overhaul of the system. But I like the Indian notion of bribery not being illegal, just whoever's on the receiving end could be set up for blackmail (IIRC).
We can change the system, it's just going to take a LOT of work to get through the BS.
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In The Netherlands, where I'm from, it's not a perfect system either, but we do have something like 10+ different parties.
And each party with their own viewpoints, bullet points and ideals.
The greens, the party for animal rights, the labour party, christian democrats, the socialist party, to name but a few.
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Also, the media won't pick up on it, because it's old hat after that. No need to hold someone accountable over ancient history.
Besides. there is a new $celebrity_scandal_of_the_day to talk about for about 24 hrs.
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How does Mel Watt get elected?
Of course, that's true of lots of these people. Most of them need to be knocked off in primaries, thanks to gerrymandering that's how you really make a difference in the House.
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NOOOOOO
Unbelievable they must got paid extra by MPAA and RIAA to go through the holidays.
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Hell ya!
"Anonymous, a hacker organization that made headlines earlier this year by shutting down government websites during the uprisings in Tunisia and Egypt, said Friday it was preparing to launch what it called “Operation Blackout,” and rallied Americans to participate in nationwide protests in an effort to stop the legislation from passing."
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Re: Re: Re: Personally, I am enjoying the shrill cries of the pro-piracy lobby
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I get elected. A bunch of people stand on street corners holding signs telling me how much I suck. I get elected again. And Again. And again.
If these people really wanted to affect real change, they would spend their time researching some real alternatives to the current democrats and republicans who are strangling this country. They would tell all their family and friends who these people are. They would spend their time campaigning for these candidates and they would get them elected. Until then the Occupy movement doesn't really mean a whole lot.
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Re: Public sees members of Congress as the problem
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I agree, sorta. I spent a great deal of time in the 2004 election researching alternate candidates, and they are out there (most states had like 5-8 candidates on the ballots). The trouble is the vast majority of the major media outlets are either pro-democrat or pro-republican, and neither wants information on alternatives to get out there (two candidates even got arrested trying to participate in a debate, and most media outlets didn't even cover the arrests).
I tried convincing as many friends and family as I could (and won a few converts) but most people are/were stuck in this mindset of "the republicans are bad and only the democrats can beat them" or "the democrats are bad and only the republicans can beat them".
I'm originally from Illinois.
Our last governor was a democrats. He reports to prison in, I think, February to serve 12 years for corruption.
The governor before him was a republican. He is currently serving 6 years for corruption.
Lamar Smith is republican.
Chris Dodd is democrat.
The simply truth is that when you look at how both parties operate, their methodologies may be massively different, but they both result in the same outcome (a small group of ultra-rich retain all the power and wealth, the rest survive as more or less a welfare state).
The problem isn't that there aren't alternative, it is that the alternative aren't given enough voice by enough major media outlets for enough people to learn about them.
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If only 40% of the people vote, and the vote is pretty well split down the middle, that's only 20% of the people who are voting for each party. If you can convince just 10% of the people standing on the sidelines to vote, and pull maybe 5% of the vote from each party you'd be left with:
Rep - 15%
Dem - 15%
Ind - 20%
You can still have a huge victory by just getting a small percentage of bystanders and pulling a smaller percentage of moderates from each side.
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Had the British accepted the claim, that would have been the end of the issue.
We didn't have to fight to win independence. We had to fight to keep it.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Personally, I am enjoying the shrill cries of the pro-piracy lobby
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I mean, come on, Ron Paul is still running himself.
But yeah, you're right, there is too much power at the broadcast level, they get to pick the candidates who are invited to the "debates". Which, btw, isn't really a debate, as that would take too much time and can't be done with commercials interstitched. The televised debates are just candidates reiterating talking points in a question and answer setting.
Debating isn't about answering stupid questions, it's about exchanging ideas, and arguing those ideas in order to try and convince the other parties in the debate.
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Which are generally pre-approved before they agree to appear on show.
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Fat chance.
Read an article couple months ago, we're at 35 of the 37 states turning against the federal government needed to reboot the nation, new continental Congress. New government. New nation.
We need it.
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