House Candidate Lets Web Users Set His Schedule 116
brahn at actblue writes "From ABC News: Jeff Seemann, running for one of Ohio's seats in the House of Representatives, '...has an unusual approach in deciding how to spend his campaign. He asks Web surfers: Should he sleep in? Prepare for his debate? Campaign door to door?' (More coverage here and here.)
Best of all: Jeff is fighting back against Diebold and their paperless voting machines -- and they're based in his district!"
I vote for (Score:5, Funny)
Re:I vote for (Score:2)
Re:I vote for (Score:3, Funny)
This is bound to work out well... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This is bound to work out well... (Score:5, Funny)
"Representive - I've got you scheduled for Juenau at 8am and Point Barrow at noon followed by one of the Kodiak islands at 3pm"
Re:This is bound to work out well... (Score:4, Informative)
Actually one of the less gerrymandered looking district maps I've seen. 18 and 6 are the only suspicious looking ones. That and the fact that the district containing Columbus is split kinda weird (Franklin County). It's also curious to note that the part of Montgomery County that slipped into the 8th district contains almost soley Wright Patterson AFB.
Re:This is bound to work out well... (Score:2)
Playing that kind of game with him wouldn't nearly be as funny as it would for the poor guy in Alaska :)
Re:This is bound to work out well... (Score:3, Informative)
From there, I've found pretty good success finding their websites and other information using Google.com.
Perhaps one of the best resources you can use in determining who to vote for is Opensecrets.org [opensecrets.org].
This guy must be in a poor district, the incumbent has raised three times more than him, but that still only comes to $126,000. The difference in funds in t
Re:This is bound to work out well... (Score:2)
Re:This is bound to work out well... (Score:2)
Re:This is bound to work out well... (Score:5, Interesting)
Every little "bubble" you see shooting off of a large district is a larger town that was stuck in the district in order to absorb the democratic votes from it. For instance, the northeast and southeast parts of Marion County (Indianapolis, mostly district 7) are included in the 5th district, which except for those areas, is almost all rural, or very high income (north of Indy).
Similary, the southeast side of Ft Wayne (very low income, heavily Democratic) is separated from the rest of the city.
The 4th district was drawn almost specifically to put Purdue and IU in the same district (very liberal tending towns, and most residents are younger and less likely to vote) and then lump them in with nothing but rural voters.
It's sad that part of the reason that Indiana sends so many Republicans to Congress is because the Republicans at home are the ones that drew the districts for them. (They packed as many democrats as they could into the 7th and 1st district, and spread the remaining ones around well enough to make them ineffective.
I think that congressional districts should follow cultural and economic boundaries as well as possible. That way, you have voters you have a vested interest in the same thing represented by one person. It makes no sense for a person in one of the poorest neighborhoods in the poorest city to be represented by the same person as that of the richest person in the richest neighborhood. (Southeast side of Indy and Carmel, respectively)
Re:This is bound to work out well... (Score:5, Funny)
"Well, uh, first up, I have to go to a support rally for nazis, then I have to proclaim at a press conference "M$ $uX0rz, Linux r0x0rz j00 b0x0rz" (How do I pronounce that?), then I have to calculate Pi to the last digit, resolve an infinite loop, and build a quantum computer, after that I have to setup a free-porn website. Well, actually, I have to set up 1,283,948,283 different free porn websites, but I'll just set up one and tell everybody that recommended that one that it's the one they asked for..."
No kidding ... (Score:3, Interesting)
What is this, the political expansion for the Sime or something? Other than a gimmick, I'm not sure what this gentleman hopes to achieve.
What will he do if he gets elected? Hold nightly cam sessions to allow his fans to tell him what to do and wear?
Just sounds all so wierd to me.
any angle (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:any angle (Score:2)
I'll be very surprised if he wins (Score:4, Insightful)
If he is very good and genuine, he may stand a chance, but I wouldn't bet on it.
Nifty Ideas for input, though. And I can appriciate a man who stands up for what he thinks is right.
jobs, not donations (Score:3, Informative)
As Walmart found with a small town in CA- when a corporate giant leans into the political process that blatantly, people get really pissed.
They won't have to do a thing- if Diebold has enough employees in the county, he'll simply loose because a vote for him will be turned into a vote for putting Diebold employees out of work. Happens allllll the time, and people are dumb enough to fall for it ev
Re:I'll be very surprised if he wins (Score:1)
If companies brought back paper, then they won't need data and storage on computers.
I just find this bastion of Ludditism surprising here.
Re:I'll be very surprised if he wins (Score:3, Informative)
BTW, Ludditism isn't really an appropriate description. The Luddites wrecked machines to protect their jobs. /.ers tend to be against non-paper trail voting because it is Very Bad For Democracy. Big di
Re:I'll be very surprised if he wins (Score:2)
If companies brought back paper, then they won't need data and storage on computers.
I just find this bastion of Ludditism surprising here.
Here comes my obligatory Diebold link [mintruth.com].
It's not because it runs Windows. The reason is they are a business first. They depend on monetary transactions for their business and they seem to, how do you say... 'screw that up'? How can I begin to trust them in light of their apparent failures and technical problems [swarthmore.edu]?
Th
Ex-Ohioan Requests Contact (Score:1)
GIMMICK. (Score:4, Insightful)
His website should be called (Score:1, Funny)
The Sims: DC (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The Sims: DC (Score:4, Funny)
Uh-oh (Score:4, Funny)
He's doomed.
Redesign site.. (Score:4, Funny)
And then Ramen noodles for lunch. Yum!
Re:Redesign site.. (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Redesign site.. (Score:2)
Re:Redesign site.. (Score:2)
At first... (Score:3, Interesting)
He's trying a gimmick, a bad one at that, to get elected. Getting "in touch with the community" doesn't mean letting them completely plan your day...
Gimmick yes, but bad? (Score:3, Interesting)
I agree he's trying a gimmick, but is it necessarily a bad one? He's recieving press, he's getting his name out, and if he continues with schedules like the ones suggested in the article, he could make a very good name for himself.
No harm in him trying to make himself stand out from candidates that do sleep in, don't attend events, but have enough money to advertise their campaign to death. Don't
It might not.. (Score:2)
Educating the public on what is involved in the political process would be a noble goal and could be done in this way.
The disconnect between the an {insert country name} politician and the public can't be helping to create a healthier democracy.
Voters (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Voters (Score:2)
In fact, the company I work for, there are a lot of slashdot readers. Furthermore, we work in the same building where Seemann has his office.
He's going up against Ralph Regula - the incumbent who's been our rep since November 7, 1972. Seemann's pulling out all the stops but I doubt he's got much of a chance. Regula's name is big around here - the whole family is involved politically - and he's always done right by the people so nobody has ever had much reason to seek out a new candidate.
Mezonic Agenda Tie-in (Score:1, Interesting)
Marketing (Score:1, Interesting)
For the other, (and more important), he is doing his supporters more active (it is not just going to an speech, it is more participative) so they do more work (some old studies about media and politics showed that the message from the leaders was mainly received by their supporters, who where the ones in charge of
Wait a minute (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wait a minute (Score:2)
Re:Wait a minute (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:2)
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:2)
We can't have it both ways.
It certainly has its merit; but, where is everyone's suspicion?
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:1)
He doesn't actually have any power currently as he is unelected, so he can't affect much, and in the worst way of it being abused (ie his campaign being sabotaged so he has a lie-in and doesn't prepare for debates) there is still a human element to check it.
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:2)
First, it disturbs me someone is not bothered by "The worst that can happen (as regards to this being "democratic") is that he doesn't do what the vote says." That's the whole point of holding an election: To get people into positions of power to enact change(s) that his constituents desire.
It really doesn't matter if he's elected or not. What's suspicious is what if he *does* follow the way his constituents 'vote' - which is to say, he votes the way his numbers are dealt to him per issue based upon th
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:2)
From my previous post: It is *all* conjecture at this point because no one is doing this; but, let's answer the what-ifs before they are instituted.
I know the point. My point is let's raise our voice *before* something like this gets into the heads of elected officials (incumbents or candidates) before it becomes a practice we'll all bitch about after it's put in use.
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:1)
I promise you... (Score:2)
I promise you, when they figure out PayPal, they are gonna be all over that.
Re:I have always wondered... (Score:2)
When presented with the most recent state budget, our governor made a list of vetoes and included an explanation of why he vetoed each item. The list was published in the paper and online. It was very clear and made sense.
So naturally, the state congress quickly voted to override nearly all his vetoes. Heaven forbid we get rid of any pork in the budget!
Sound familiar... (Score:4, Funny)
OOO! Let me try. How about build a house with one room. Once inside, take away the door [livejournal.com]. Hilarity ensues.
Re:Sound familiar... (Score:2)
Re:Sound familiar... (Score:1)
Cool... (Score:2, Funny)
He's cool (Score:4, Informative)
Re:He's cool (Score:2)
Hey, Seeman? Fuck you.
If you do not understand what I am talking about, mod not, but read this. [clevescene.com]
"Markos Moulitsas, posted some harsh words about the American contractors who were murdered, burned, and strung up on a bridge by insurgents in Fallujah. "I feel nothing over the death of mercenaries,"
Server using GWS/2.1 (Score:1, Informative)
curl -I jeffseemannforcongress.com 2>&1|grep ^Server
Server: GWS/2.1
Diebold (Score:3, Funny)
Best of all: Jeff is fighting back against Diebold and their paperless voting machines -- and they're based in his district!
I can see Diebold continually voting for him to "sleep in past noon" and "begin another cocaine binge" in an attempt to make him lose the election.
Re:Diebold (Score:1)
So he won't have a Slashdotted Sunday, after all, or even a Diebolded Sunday as the parent suggests.
Re:Diebold (Score:1)
1. Have him take a shower.
2. Have him change a lightbulb.
3. Profit!
(yeah, I had to work the underwear gnomes into this...)
why so hard for Congress-people to vote? (Score:4, Interesting)
A sort-of on-topic question which occurred to me during the VP debate, when Cheney was chiding Edwards for missing votes in the senate: why is it so hard to get our congress-people to vote? "Missing votes" seems to be a ongoing and constant criticism of even our best political representatives.
Do they have to be physically present to cast a vote? If so, why? Can't we afford to get these people a blackberry or a treo or something? (I'm not being facetious, I just don't know.)
~jeff
Re:why so hard for Congress-people to vote? (Score:2)
I found some more info on the Senate [c-span.org] and a lot more for the House of Representatives [house.gov].
Re:why so hard for Congress-people to vote? (Score:3, Insightful)
The Congressperson must be present in order to vote within a small window of time.
But that's the one time when they really "represent" us? You know, this is, afterall, a *representative* democracy.
Don't think I'm attacking Kerry when I say this; it goes for all congress people: I understand missing one or two unimportant votes--I really do. But when you're too busy whoring yourself out to special interest groups and corporations to be bothered by your "civic duty," there's a problem.
I think we nee
Re:why so hard for Congress-people to vote? (Score:2)
Personally, I wish there was a way to enact remote voting in a secure fashion. But for something as important as congressional voting, I don't think there's a good way to go about it in a way everyone would be in agreement on. Let alone approving such a drastic change
Re:why so hard for Congress-people to vote? (Score:3, Insightful)
If they don't have to be there to vote, why should we expect them to show up for anything else? Requiring them to be there in person demands a certain level of responsibility.
If they don't care enough to get off their rear and show up to vote, they don't deserve to be able to be lazy and vote from their sofa.
If you want them to be there more often, you might want to extend their term, then they would spend less time cam
Re:why so hard for Congress-people to vote? (Score:1)
Re:why so hard for Congress-people to vote? (Score:2)
The American Way (Score:1)
A politician has already acquired the office - so they kick back and let the staff and PACs do all the hard work of figuring out issues. The average citizen never fought or died in a war for the freedoms such as voting - so they kick back and watch cable. Perhaps if one had to register and vote in order to buy cable-tv, or beer, or cigarettes - more citizens would vote.
Perhaps if PACs were outlawed,
Re:why so hard for Congress-people to vote? (Score:2)
Re:why so hard for Congress-people to vote? (Score:2)
The only way a non-present vote could be established for the senate is through a dedicated, private, NSA-secured national fiber network. Either an entirely new network, or an existing Federal/Military use only network.
All through NSA supplied and regulated encryption and Voice and Video streaming for the house/senate floor, along with between congresspeople.
I would be for it mind yo
Re:why so hard for Congress-people to vote? (Score:2)
Stop counting heads.
What everyone in this country has apparently forgotten, once a certain number of people vote yes or no, further votes don't matter. These numbers are almost always known before the vote is recorded.
Why should they show up?
Seriously, did the entire country skip that day in civics class?
Why did I see this article? (Score:1, Troll)
Re:Why did I see this article? (Score:1)
Let me get this straight... (Score:3, Interesting)
I think my brain is starting to bleed.
Lets slashdot him a vacation (Score:2)
Ok, maybe not... but I'd personally write a little script to automate my voting if he had an option to 'sit home, masturbate while on the phone with DC'.
Transparency (Score:5, Interesting)
Republican or Democrat doesn't really matter when you worry they do something meriting impeachment behind closed doors.
Politicians that do this WILL win it's as simple as that.
Choices (Score:1)
Re:Choices (Score:1)
Oh, wait, wrong poll....
Re:Jeff Seemann? (Score:2, Funny)
is this our candidate?
What an appallingly-tacky joke. I hope you get your cum-uppance.