Campaign Financing Cyber Loophole 292
goombah99 writes "The Washington Post is criticizing a little-noticed bill wending it's way through congress that would allow unlimited and unreported campaign contributions by corporations and individuals as long as it was confined to internet advertising and publicity buys. While internet spending was only $14 million last year it is growing at a rate of 30 fold over four years poising it to overtake conventional media spending."
Nooooo...... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Nooooo...... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:You can't do that in the US either... (Score:2, Interesting)
none of the above (Score:3, Informative)
Re:You can't do that in the US either... (Score:2)
I could see allowing a person to cast a single 'no' vote for one candidate instead of a 'yes' vote for someone else, but that's the only way I can think to reconcile the two.
Am I missing something?
Re:You can't do that in the US either... (Score:2)
Have you heard of Instant Runoff Voting [wikipedia.org]?
More info at fairvote.org [fairvote.org] and instantrunoff.com [instantrunoff.com].
Re:You can't do that in the US either... (Score:2)
Well, at the last election over here I didn't mind much between the Labour and the Liberal and the Green, but I definitely didn't want the Tory, so I put a massive big cross next to his name just to make that clear... That's how it works, right?
Re:Nooooo...... (Score:3, Funny)
And that's all I've got to say about that.
Re:Nooooo...... (Score:2)
Re:Nooooo...... (Score:5, Informative)
Actually, if you think the porn industry is a driver for technological advances, that's nothing compared to campaigning, at least when it comes to demo/geo-graphics. Have you bumped into any porn/dating-system ads that appear to pretty effectively map your ip address to your locality ("Find someone in Smallville to sleep with tonight!")? I believe that political campaigns will use everything at their disposal to make sure that their banners are being displayed where (and to whom) they think it will make the most sense.
Those gratuitous "Do you think John Kerry was lying?" or "Do you trust George Bush?" banners as seen on Drudge or elsewhere have nothing to do with real campaigns, and are entirely bait to get people to visit some cheesy "survey" site that attempts to purchase your soul for permission-based adware installs and other shenanigans. They just know that "Is global warming real? Vote!" is a tease that many people cannot resist.
Yes, I know that most AOL users will appear to be coming from Virginia, but most broadband users are reasonably easy to pin down in terms of state. Certainly it's pretty easy to tell when a visitor is from Europe, and to just rotate in an ad for a Vespa or something.
Maybe not (Score:5, Interesting)
Campaign 1: $.5 million invested online
Campaign 2: $15 million invested online.
That's 30 fold (and 14.5 million).
Campaign 1: $100 million invested, Campaign 2: $120 million invested.
That's 1.2 fold (and 20 million).
Nobody is going to target the internet with large amounts of money when it's more feasible to target the general public using television/newspaper ads. Nobody is going to say, "Hey! Look! I can donate $100 million in internet advertising" *when the money can be better utilitised somewhere else*.
Re:Maybe not (Score:4, Interesting)
I don't think that's the point. The point (in my opinion) is why are they going to allow online donations to be unlimited (under a particular circumstance), but in the same circumstance offline it isn't allowed to be unlimited? It's crazy.
When will the government stop treating everything "online" as something completely different and therefore subject to completely different laws? I'm surprised "accepting campaign donations online" hasn't been patented yet.
Re:Maybe not (Score:2, Insightful)
Well, no, but we can reasonably expect it to replace nearly all other forms of advertising over time. If radio, tv, and newspapers are delivered to a home theatre pc then this would be internet advertising, wouldn't it?
Re:Maybe not (Score:5, Insightful)
Basically a less than unfront politician is enabling a new method of illicit campaign financing to get passed what is already a pretty shaky set of legislation. They must have thought the current legislation was just taking too much effort to work around and to be honest the current set arn't the brightest and managed to stuff up every now and then, so there after a much easier system of funding (the republican mantra, eliminate that nightmare of bureaucratic red tape with an aim to maximising productivity and profits togethor with full employment for family members and friends).
Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:4, Insightful)
But I am absolutely against recent "liberal" attempts to stifle Free Speech by restricting campaign contributions. I think it is paramount to a repeal of the First Amendment to say that you cannot use your money in the way that you see fit. If a person wishes to give speeches on the corner in support of his candidate, it is wrong to take away his right to do so. If a person uses his own money to buy a soap box and megaphone to do it more effectively, it is wrong to take away his right to spend that money. If a person gives money to his candidate in order that the candidate can furnish other supporters with soap boxes and megaphones, is it right to take that right away? Where do we draw the line? Why do we draw the line?
It is not anyone's business but the IRS how I spend my money, in my opinion. If I want to blow a million dollars on TV ads for my favored candidate, the government ought not have the right to stop me anymore than they have the right to stop me from buying lollipops for the sick kids in the hospital.
How the "liberals" got caught up in this illiberal crusade is beyond me. It smacks more of anti-Republicanism than anything else. By restricting the campaign contributions of the rich, they effectively limit the amount the Republicans can take in from their supporters. That that crackpot McCain and the worthless Feingold were the people bringing the originally passing bill to the floor is no big surprise, but that we have widespread support of the erosion of our most cherished First Amendment rights among the people sworn to protect and defend our Constitution is abominable.
Good for this current bill. Let's bring back Free Speech to the citizenry.
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
But the left side of the spectrum seems to attract plenty of Streisands, Soroses, Speilburgs, Jobses, and the rest. There are plenty of rich democrats/liberals - to say nothing of the big labor unions, most of which have more to spend on influencing campaigns than a given company ever would be able to get into the budget. In fact, those unions exist almost entirely to do things like that (collectively influence oth
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
Why would you think that? A campaign finance law that prevents, say, someone backing a Libertarian or Green, from running specific advocacy ads right before an election is just as abusive to those groups as it is to the two traditionally larger parties. Possibly worse, actually.
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:5, Insightful)
i) unlimited spending
ii) undisclosed spending
Like you, I'm torn on the former. There's a personal liberty issue, but the consequences of unlimited spending are worse, IMHO. Unlimited spending by the two bug parties acts as an effective barrier to entry to third parties. They can't draw much corporate funding until they have influence, and grass roots funding simply can't compete to obtain that influence. Personally, I'd bar all corporate contributions and allow unlimited personal contributions, from anyone eligible to vote. Control of Government should be left to citizens who have that right... it's what the Founding Fathers wanted.
ii) Undisclosed political contributions (above a very low level) are absolutely inexcusable. Accountability, accountability, accountability. The electorate has the right to know who is financing a candidate. It's a vital piece of information in the democratic process.
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
Yes and no. The winner-takes-all nature of the American political system makes it almost impossible for third parties to get anywhere even if they do have money. Whether that's a feature or a bug is arguable.
Accountability, accountability, accountability.
Now that I'll agree with.
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
Well, look [infoplease.com], I just can say that the system don't work since 1876, they could have changed it by the time ? And it seems to me that the original system (1789-1800) was more democratic (not by the numbers, but by the constitution article).
I already did a post [slashdot.org] about that in June.
Voting methods like Schulze method [wikipedia.org] used
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
In the American system, there are still numerous parties, it's just that the coalitions are permanent, and you vote for the coalitions. Both the Democrats and the Republicans represent a range of differing views that would be quite unusual in a single European political
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:3, Insightful)
This problem is an accurate reflection of the outcome of the election. People withdrew support for the left coalition, without giving support to a right one. Therefore they get a center one.
In the American system, there are still numerous parties, it's just that the coalitions are permanent, and you vote for the coalitions.
The problem there is that the American people oft
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
It's a feature. Just look at the train wreck that was the last election in Germany to see what a highly fractured representative government turns into. You get people running the show with only 10 or 15% of the vote - they spend all of their time swinging deals with each other and no time actually ge
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
Who said evil? My point is that it's just a huge waste of time. A system like that doesn't try to please everyone, it just tries to please a small, highly focused group (often very extreme on one view or another)
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm sick of bug parties, I think we need scientists to create sterile male politicians with glow-in-the-dark gonads to try to wipe them out.
We need some new parties... ones that represent someone other than money and status quo (i.e., the big two) or crackpots (i.e., most of the rest).
In a way, yes.. (Score:3, Insightful)
And in principle I agree that an individual AND organization can support political parties or candidates they like, be it orally, physically or financial wise.
What's troubling however is that, this this 'rights' is being literally abused, not to 'support' but rather 'buy' a candidate or party.
Really i can't see how does an organization or business paying, yes paying, 100k to Republican and then another 100k on democrats can signify 'support'. Thats just covering the grounds.
I suppo
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
I think it is of paramount importance that I point out that the word you wanted there is "tantamount" :-) (now watch someone point out that I misspelled it)
I have to say I agree. Although money is a big part of why politics stinks, I firmly believe that the First Ammendment either means what it says or we have surrendered it. My confliction is over disclosure. I wanna know which candidate is being bought by which mega-corporation, but anonymo
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:5, Insightful)
In theory, I think you make a good point. However, there are a couple of things that you don't take into consideration. For example, do we really want our elections to be for sale to the highest bidder (more so than they already are, that is)? An unlimited amount of money poured into a campaign can effectively buy a certain outcome, given how susceptible the general population is to advertising.
Also, consider the nature of most of the "speech" that results from campaign contributions. Have you ever seen a political television advertisement that added anything worthwhile to the discussion - or indeed do anything that wasn't mainly posturing and hand-waving?
I certainly think that individuals should have the right to say what they want about politics (just like anything else), and spend their own money in the process. However, I would draw the line when it comes to giving other people enough money for them to repeat their mantra loudly enough and often enough that it drowns out the dissenting voices.
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:3, Insightful)
Disgusting. You have no concept of what "shall make no law" means, do you? Who the hell are you to decide whether or not a particular message is "worthwhile" or not?
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:3, Insightful)
If someone has money, then that money can be turned into political clout. Period. As long as people can write newspaper columns or own and edit newspapers, they can be paid to support one candidate or another, directly or indirectly. To prevent this from happening would require enormous restrictions on individual liberty. This isn't like with judges, where you can prevent someone from brib
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
That may be, but giving money to a political party is different. Newspapers influnce opinion, which may influence policy. A direct contribution directly influences policy, and that is fun
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
I have a simple solution.
A simple solution which is easily circumvented if employed as actual policy. Preventing campaign finance abuse is like trying to prevent piracy. You either have to clamp down all mass media, or there will be a loophole to sneak through.
Look at it this way; during an election campaign, could I, as a private individual, purchase a newspaper
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
I understand what you're saying, but I disagree that this is what campaign finance legislation is preventing. The law is telling individuals that they can't speak. That's me. Me, oni, and you, AthenianGadfly. We'll get fined or sent to jail if we put up a website with a political message.
Doesn't that seem wrong to you?? Sure, the prohibitian is "only" 30 days before an election. I can put up my website 60 days before the election, no
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
At the end of the d
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
Oh, and the other key part of the freedom of speach, the corallary I guess, (maybe the inverse).. I should have a right to not listen....
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:5, Insightful)
So, if I really can't stand something that Hillary Clinton is sqawking about, can I just get up on the stage next to her and protest? No? How about 10 feet from her? Maybe 20 feet? No? But all I want to do is wave around a giant puppet head of her with horns on it and beat my loud drums! It's freedom of speech, and I demand that my puppet head be visible next to her during while she's talking, since it's my freedom of speech, too.
And if I can't have that, I demand the ability to stand in the public street and block traffic. I don't care about people who are trying to drive to where Hillary is going to be, it's my puppet display that should trump all other forms of expression, even if an ambulance carrying your heart-attack-having grandmother is stopped because of me.
What's that? Maybe there should be a permitting process for the use of public space so that Hillary and her supporters can apply for and get use of it for her rantings, and I can use if for my rantings too, when it's my turn? Oh wait - we already have that system, and it works just fine. That doesn't seem to influence the people that want to smash the windows of a Starbucks store to somehow retaliate against The Man for having a permitting process, but there's no satisfying some freedom-minded people, I suppose (unless they get to smash something owned by millions of people's 401k investments).
Re:not really (Score:2)
Even if you have a right to do something, exercising that right has consequences.
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:5, Insightful)
I would argue that it's important because it's essential for democracy. It allows ideas to be introduced and challenged, accepted or rejected, on a level playing field. When you allow unlimited spending on things like political advertising, the playing field is no longer level. It's like having a debate between two sides, where both sides show up with the largest PA systems they can afford and try to drown each other out.
Does it really serve freedom in the larger sense to allow people to act in ways that subvert an essential component of liberal democracy? We don't allow people to tamper with voting machines -- we should not allow them to distort the public discourse either.
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:5, Insightful)
Who decides which ideas and expressions contribute to the public discourse, and which distort it?
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
That made me laugh.
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:5, Insightful)
These campaign finance laws are all about limiting the quantity of speech, and your complaint is with the content of it. The people you want to thwart are still going to find ways of getting their message across. They've got the money to buy the lawyers to find the loophoes. And, in the mean time, if way of outside-the-establishment types want to put in our own two bits, we have to prove that we weren't contributing to a party. Heck, I don't even like the two-party system we've got, but if I buy some radio air-time to say so, I've "contributed" to a political party, by these rules! It's ridiculous!
And if we start getting into laws that regulate the content, you can look for even more pro-establishment favoratism.
When it comes to government corruption, more government is not the solution.
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
When it comes to government corruption, more government is not the solution.
you are absolutely correct!
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:5, Insightful)
Have you ever looked at the disasterous effect campaign finance reform has had on small political parties in the U.S.? It has nearly destroyed them. Small political parties depend on few people giving larger donations. Large political parties depend on more people giving smaller donations. Why do you think the two major parties, and all the mainstream politicians are clammering for campaign finance reform, and the small parties hate it? Because it eliminates anybody but the Republicans and Democrats from the game.
One thing that is hard for most people (like you) to understand nowadays, since the most prevalent religion is state-worship... that the government is not omnipotent and benevolent. If the government says "We are going to regulate campaign finance to level the playing field", that doesn't mean that the government intends to level the playing field, nor that the government is capable of that if it wanted to. What "campaign finance reform" is, is the absolute control over all forms of political speech by the political elite. THAT is what people like you support, even if you don't want to admit it.
Wrong idea about what it's free FROM (Score:5, Insightful)
"Freedom of speech" doesn't mean you're free from me speaking louder than you because I'm persuasive enough to get get several other people to join me (pool funds, whatever). The constitution's guarantee of free speech refers to your freedom from interference by the government. That's why the campaign finance laws limiting speech are such a bad idea - they involve the government judging when and how you can express your opinion about something... something that's exactly contrary to the founder's strong words on the subject.
Does it really serve freedom in the larger sense to allow people to act in ways that subvert an essential component of liberal democracy?
How does two people getting together to say something against what you have to say equal subversion? It's exactly the point - it's free association and speech, exactly as guaranteed under the constitution. If you can't manage to get enough people to see your point, and thus attract the same communications horsepower as the people you oppose, then you need to re-examine the merits of your position. Unpopular, minority opinions do get through the larger noise when they are compelling enough. See voting rights and similar issues as examples.
Re:Wrong idea about what it's free FROM (Score:2)
And regarding broadcast media, the government is already explicitly disallowing everyone but the networks from broadcasting a signal over the public spectrum. This is why it is possible to make it illegal to use profanity or show a nipple on television, and why the equal time law was legal.
So if there is ever going to be any sort of effective campaign financing law, it will affect only television a
Re:Wrong idea about what it's free FROM (Score:2)
But it does mean that I should be free from some forms of persuasion. i.e. I can't persuade people to join me using a baseball bat. Why should your form of persuasion (financial power) be allowed? Why should some people get a greater voice because they can blugeon people to join them with bribes?
Re:Wrong idea about what it's free FROM (Score:2)
I'm afraid that's not a good analogy. Physically forcing you to do something (say, with a baseball bat) is called assault (plus several other illegal things, depending on the circumstances). Sitting down with ano
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
The politicians are civil servants, which means they should be paid by taxes, not by corperations. They're the lawmakers so their allegences must be to the people.
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:3, Insightful)
That's not liberal, that's socialist. Being Liberal means you support people's freedom to do things; socialism means you think soci
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
"Liberalism" is always conflated with socialism in the US. Socialists call themselves 'progressives.' Socialist feminists and radical separatist femanists are conflated with liberal feminists.
The radical right started a campaigin against the national endowment for the arts claiming the NEA supported pornography and things like that, and the result was cutting funding for programs like Sesame Street and public broadcasting..
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2, Interesting)
I agree that free speech entitles you to spend your own money to publish your views. However, this is not quite what political campaign financing does. (And the same can be said for the general lobby and PR machinery.)
If the CEO of a large oil company wants to spend his money or his company's money to make public that "Hi, I am the CEO of Exxon Mobil and I support candidate X for president because I think it would be good for the economy and my company if he gets elected.", then that would be perfectly ac
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
If anyone can spend however much they want, then the gap between the rich and the poor (or do you deny that exists?) means that only the rich have a say.
Do you think the rich have the same interests at heart as the poor? Or even middle class?
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
Honestly, I think the only way to go about this is to completely outlaw all campaign contributions. There should be a complete overhaul of the voting system, whereby candidates wil have to present their views and ideas in a public forum, open to challenges from their opposition and from the public. This would scale up nicely, with higher level debates being opposed by defeated candidates from previous rounds. The main reason this doesn't exist already is because the current political systems all eveolved p
Re:Free Speech Zone (Score:2)
You mean like having Free Speech Zones for people who oppose you politcally?
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
It's absurd to clain that free speech is infringed by limiting advertising. Everyone will be heard if contributions are limited; just not the richest 24/7 as they would be with unlimited funding. Why isn't it also "stifling" of the free speech of poor people that they
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
Speaking as a conservative, I figured that liberals weren't particularly for or against it. The mainstream media, of course, supported it because it gave them more influence, and enough incumbents and established lobby groups supported it because they knew ways around it.
So I suspect media spin of it as a left-right issue was what threw people off. The right wing immediately assum
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
Need I remind you that Corporations were completely forbidden from all participation in US Political campaigns untill 1886: In Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad Company [118 U.S. 394]. They were regulated by the States and subject to all STATE regulations, taxes and fees etc. Seems to me that removing Corporate personhood is a CONSERVATIVE concept, rather than a liberal one. But it is the Liberals that are pointing this
What is the liberal case that money is speech? (Score:2, Insightful)
But if you follow Rousseau you would counter that what is abstract is not real
Re:Does my liberalism require that I reject this? (Score:2)
Re:Liberal (Score:2)
I find it interesting that you say that, and yet, from your extolling of welfare-state socialism, you oppose my right to keep the money I earn from my own hard work. I'd rather have that freedom than the freedom to sponsor corrupt politicians.
Re:Liberal (Score:3, Informative)
American Liberalism is entirely different to the classical form of liberalism, it's difficult for non-Americans to understand. Classical liberalism is a great deal closer to what is referred to in the US as "libertarianism". It's confusing because the two meanings of the term are so far apart that it makes very little sense.
Fun wikipedia links if you're really bored:
you were waiting, here it comes (Score:2, Funny)
BU$H G1V3S J00 UP 2 3 EXTR4 1NCH3S CL1CK H3R3 2 V0T3
Crikey (Score:5, Funny)
I don't look forward toward that day, let me tell you.
Re:Crikey (Score:3, Funny)
Clumsy way to protect blogs? (Score:4, Insightful)
More likely a way to protect trolls & astrotur (Score:2)
More likely it's a way to protect trolls and astroturfers; from what I see this is the huge growth market in internet advertising--especially for political candidates. Here's a few fun things you can try:
I Wholeheartedly Support This Bill (Score:2, Funny)
better the Internet than TV (Score:4, Interesting)
2. Fewer stupid people will passively receive ads than with TV, per ad dollar spent. It's better that they waste their money online.
3. Dollars spent on ad space will be far more distributed and to substantially less rich people, effectively redistributing income. At least, the money is much less likely to end up in the pocketbooks of Big Media. Yay, capitalism and (partial) socioeconomic justice at the same time!
Why, again, would this not be an improvement?
Re:better the Internet than TV (Score:2)
The issue here isn't that there's going to be ads on the internet. It's that ads on the internet do not have to be declared like other ads and forms of campaign contribution.
Doesn't matter (Score:2, Informative)
And a 30 fold increase over four years? That's not so astounding. Virtually everything which has an initial state and a larger end state, grows 30 fold over some arbitrary period of time. I mean it would be one thing if you could say it would grow 30 fold indefinitely.
The number of MP3s I bought grew 30 fold over the last year. Once I took a sip of orange mountain dew, I like
Re:The 2000 election? (Score:3, Insightful)
C'mon, really? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:C'mon, really? (Score:2)
Last I checked, they can't even VOTE... I don't see an issue.
I feel they should just have to deal with it by having no influence at ALL.
Re:C'mon, really? (Score:2)
That's how a corporation can wield influence...
In Related News, (Score:4, Funny)
A Modest Proposal (Score:5, Funny)
It would be much more dignified if US politicians were allowed to nail a simple "Bill of Fare" to the front door of their office suites. This would itemize the services on offer - "Have your business rivals arrested - $10 million", "Pollute a wilderness area - $67 million", "Hunt and Shoot Wetbacks for Sport - $39 million", etc. - but the quid pro quo is that it would no longer be legal in any way to accept undocumented contributions.
We'd then all know where we stand, and politicians would be given back the one thing they crave above all else - respect.
The U.S. government is for sale... (Score:2)
Sneaky legislation is just one small part of the corruption.
Extrapolation (Score:2)
This just in: Scientists report that there is no detectable change in the sun's radiation, hence we will truly be able to live on earth forever. Another report notices that since cell phones are getting half as small every two years, in the year 2015, they will be so small that we will be required to press the buttons using a magnifying glass and a n
MAKE UP YOUR MINDS, PEOPLE! (Score:4, Insightful)
Slashbots: BWAAAAAA! DON'T YOU REGULATE MY BLOGS!
News reporter: Political blogs are big money, and there may be a loophole that will allow massive donations to political parties in the form of Internet advertising that won't be regulated by the election laws.
Slashbots: BWAAAAAA! Meaney politicians will flood the net with ads. THE GOVERNMENT SHOULD DOOOO SOMETHING!
Make up your minds, people. Either blogs are NOT regulated, and the People With Money And An Agenda will use them, or blogs get regulated. Sauce for the goose, good for the gander.
Re:MAKE UP YOUR MINDS, PEOPLE! (Score:3, Interesting)
I'm not saying blogging is bad or should be stopped. I just don't see the hype over it. I mean the fact that a blog business can make millions in revenue just boggles my mind.
People have to learn what "rhetoric" is. Put some perspective on things.
Tom
Re:MAKE UP YOUR MINDS, PEOPLE! (Score:5, Insightful)
So they do.
Now, it's true that some of them shouldn't, and many of them aren't worth reading, and many more are of interest only to a small circle - friends or family or people of common interested (whether that be politics or raising puppies or knitting pullovers).
But some of them really are good.
And remember that those millions in revenues are spread among millions of bloggers, and the average blogger is lucky to cover his bandwidth bill. A few make worthwhile amounts of money; one or two make enough to live on.
Re:MAKE UP YOUR MINDS, PEOPLE! (Score:2)
I understand all too well (Score:3, Insightful)
I expect several more "Overrateds" and at least one "Troll" before the day is out.
I have had the temerity to point out a logical inconsistency in the slashbot groupthink - this is thoughtcrime and double-plus-ungood and I must be rightmodded.
Let's just cut through the nonsense (Score:2)
What about Ads couched as Entertainment? (Score:2, Insightful)
Semi-dupe? (Score:2)
http://politics.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=05/09/ 23/1226250&tid=153&tid=95&tid=219 [slashdot.org]
?
(Note that Slashdot got the summary of the bill entirely wrong -- it was actually designed to amend the FEC Act of 1971 to exempt the Internet)
Sweet! For Bloggers! (Score:2)
Big rich donors giving unlimited donations to political blogs such as mine? Who could poss
Politicians are scum and here's what to do.... (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course, this will never, eVAR happen, as these egomaniac dirtbags, like that fucker Tom DeLay who I pray goes to prison for life, will fight to the death over anything like this.
Free Pr0n http://excaliburfilms.com/partner/mainaffiliate.c
Real democracies work that way (Score:4, Informative)
This is why Rumsfeld standing up pontificating about how America is a symbol of democracy to the rest of the world is such a joke.... except we don't know whether to laugh or cry.
Re:Politicians are scum and here's what to do.... (Score:3, Insightful)
not violating a law that didn't at the time exist
AND you're shilling free pr0n?
but you think politicians are scum?
Legalised Corruption (Score:4, Informative)
Political adverts all over TV, billboards, etc; corporations buying their own politicians; elections being won by the PR machines; legislation going to the highest bidder... I'm not saying the system here in the UK is wonderful, but at least those things aren't big problems here.
Here's a solution.... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:It's "its" - not "it's" (Score:2)
Ever heard of the word irony? Might want to look it up (if your humour hasn't been surgically removed already).
Re:Fold (Score:2)
So, TFA talks about the increase to date, the submitter blithely imagines this rate will continue for the NEXT four years. Starting from a low base,(presumably about $460000 in 2000), he assume
Re:A better idea (Score:2)
In any case, flat taxes (like sales, gas, vice) are regressive. A poor person would most likely end up paying a much larger percentage of their income than a rich person under a flat tax.
Re:repeal the first amendment (Score:2)