Open Source Foes In Bed With Abramoff 230
Will Rodger writes, "Citizens Against Government Waste has said some highly critical things about open source software in the past. They've also pounced on supporters of the OpenDocument Format along the way. Alas, it seems their close ties to Jack Abramoff have drawn the (unfavorable) attention of Senate staff."
Vote the bums out (Score:5, Insightful)
This comment is perhaps the most telling in that it shows that Abramoff *knew* what he was doing was wrong and that this would not even pass the sniff test.
The groups are Norquist's Americans for Tax Reform; the Council of Republicans for Environmental Advocacy, which was co-founded by Norquist and Gale Norton before she became Secretary of the Interior; Citizens Against Government Waste; the National Center for Public Policy Research, which was a spinoff of the Heritage Foundation; and Toward Tradition, a religious group founded by Abramoff friend Rabbi Daniel Lapin.
This is the sort of incestuous behavior that the current Republican and NeoCon administration encourages. Of course the whako left is not immune from this sort of behavior either, but it seems to have reached a new high in the current political climate. So, regardless of your political leanings, please recognize that this is not the way to run a democratic (small "d") government and now is the time to clean house in next months elections. I'd love to see a complete overhaul of all sitting candidates in favor for new blood, Democrat *and* Republican who can hopefully work together in a more non-partisan way to actually do something rather than continuously position and campaign.
As an aside: How many days a week are our representatives and senators actually on the job in DC? What is their work week like? Anybody here know?
Re:Vote the bums out (Score:5, Funny)
To quote Lewis Black: "The only thing stupider than a Republican or a Democrat is when these little pricks work together."
Re:Vote the bums out (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, I should add that you're stereotyping of all politicians as being the same is pretty silly and unjustified. It's hard for most people to realize that these are people -- all with their own individual beliefs, opinions, principles, and moral convictions.
Talking about trying to get people to get more accomplished is contrary the very design of our government, which tries to slow down legislative action. You don't *want* laws too change too quickly, or a short-term shift in the balance of power can lead to long-lasting negative rammifications. And, contrary to popular belief, "compromises" are not necessarily better than *either* side, let alone the particular side that one chooses to believe in. Should the north have "compromised" on the issue of slavery -- "Well, you can keep them as slaves, but they get days off"? Should we have compromised on ending Vietnam -- "Well, we'll take *half* of our troops and equipment from Vietnam"? Of course not.
People stick to their moral viewpoints because they believe that they're right and a compromise is bad. When they think that a compromise is in the best interests of the nation, they work toward it. It all depends on the situation.
Talking about trying to get people to get more accomplished is contrary the very design of our government, which tries to slow down legislative action. You don't *want* laws too change too quickly, or a short-term shift in the balance of power can lead to long-lasting negative rammifications. And, contrary to popular belief, "compromises" are not necessarily better than *either* side, let alone the particular side that one chooses to believe in. Should the north have "compromised" on the issue of slavery -- "Well, you can keep them as slaves, but they get days off."? Should we have compromised on ending Vietnam -- "Well, we'll take *half* of our troops and equipment from Vietnam."? Of course not.
People stick to their moral viewpoints because they believe that they're right and a compromise will work out poorly. When they think that a compromise is in the best interests of the nation, they work toward it. It all depends on the situation.
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What error?
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Having moral convictions keeps people from getting elected, because politicians' way of getting elected is to say whatever pleases the most people in their constituency, instead of what they really believe in.
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We need more statesmen
(props to Bloom County)
Re:Vote the bums out (Score:4, Insightful)
However, I don't know how long ago your uncle served in the US House, but the events of the last 15 years, particularily the last 5, have basically proven to me that if anybody is in Congress due to their conscience they made it there because their conscience conviently fits in with the multinational corporate cabal that pays for our campaigns through lobbyists.
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That's because 99% of politicians give the other 1% a bad name.
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Its particularly hard for me to realize this, as my representative happens to be John Sullivan, who regularly franks me solmenly promising to fight the US Constitution, and one of my senators is the infamous Tom "impulse sterilzation" [washingtonpost.com] Coburn.
Neither is in any danger of being voted out of office soon either. Lucky you, America!
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Since you want to play Grammar Nazi:
They poll every time a vote is taken, it's a matter of public record, check for yourselves
That's *two* comma splices in a single sentence.
It may shock you to learn this, but a congressman's job entails far more than voting. It's nonstop meetings, from shortly after you wake
Re:Vote the bums out (Score:5, Insightful)
Bi-partisian-ism, is as bad for people as are oil companies who collaborate to fix gas prices. One of the basic principals of capatalism is that any system works best if all parties (be it corporate or political) are under the pressure of competition, and even better if that competition is fairly even, so that all parties are constantly having to look over their shoulder. What we have now is a bloated government caused by a severe imbalance of power, a political monopoly, of sorts, by the extreme right. Just as bad as a monopoly, however, is the consistant agreement between parties. Way too much blood has already been spilt under the cliched and dubious banner of "bipartisanship". No, what we need are strong leaders who will fight for their convictions, but who are willing to play by the rules set by the US consitution. THAT'S how a good system works. Some of the most prosperous periods in US history were caused by a balance of power... the 90's being one of them. Both Clinton and the Congress were at their best when they were at odds with each other... that was a fine example of our system of checks and balances in operation.
The term "bipartisan" is simply a catch phrase, used, usually by the far right, as a way of trying to move the public perception of the "center" over to their side. It's a Rovian tactic, it's anti-capitalist, it's tacky, and most of all, it's not even an idea that we really want. What we need is compromise under the pressure of heated debate... NOT Bipartisanship.
Absolute Power (Score:2, Redundant)
Publically financed elections would save lots of money. Politicians would have to convince the voters to vote for them by words and actions ins
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In Canada, political parties receive money according to the number of votes they received at the last el
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There may be talk, but for decades now, the Supreme Court of the United States has ruled that corporations are legal persons, and enjoy all the constitutional protections afforded to persons. So, if we ever passed a law that forbade corporate political donations, the Supreme Court would strike it down as unconstitutional. And corporations would certainly bring it all the way up to the Supreme Court.
The only way to fix this clu
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If a corporation had all it's assets seized for a period of time as punishment for committing a crime, that would be a much better deterrent... You could also throw all the shareholders in jail for the term of the sentence.
A corporation should also not get the opportunity to negotiate it's sentence, an individual doesn't, they merely get handed a sentence by a judge and that's it.
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So it supports the incumbent party the most, is what you're saying. Sadly, that's what most "clean election" laws end up doing.
Another good one, it means groups like labor unions, the ACLU, and the NRA can't run issue-specific ads. This is especially bad s
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groups like labor unions, the ACLU, and the NRA can't run issue-specific ads.
But looked at the other way round, why should an unelected single issue organisation influence the vote for government? Just because the NRA for instance, doesn't like a party or candidates policy on guns, should that allow them to influence an election that should be about the whole policy platform? Think about the Swift Boat Veterans at the last US presidential election - what relevance did their pressure group interest have
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My solution is to get away from trying to eliminate free speech, and start trying to promote it. The citizens still own the airwaves. Appoint a date each year in which all broadcasters must transmit the "Official Debates". Everyone on the ballot will be invited, though not required to participate. Each candidate will be allowed to enter a question(s) for the debate, and everyone in the debate will be given equal
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Here, here. A complete, 100% change of direction. A vote for anybody but an incombent. Make EVERYBODY involved in the system accountable for the failures. Our system would function MUCH better if, instead of waiting for one party to cease the majority of the governmental process, the people simply replaced BOTH PARTIES every four years with those who can cooperate.
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Go to Hell. I said nothing of the sort and will not tolerate ignorant asses like yourself. NeoCon actually has a very old etymology going back to around 1921 and has no basis other than political. Read more about the origins of NeoConservatism and how it has been twisted here [wikipedia.org].
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The fact that the term was used first in 1921 doesn't tell you anything about what it means today. Today, it's a useful, descriptive term that is used both by conservatives and by their opponents. Whatever political baggage it has today has been created by the neo-conservatives and their heritage from Reagan onwards.
and has no basis other than political.
Yes, indeed: we're using political terminology to describe political concepts.
But you ap
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Did you read the sentence *immediately* after what I wrote? Lemme help you: "Read more about the origins of NeoConservatism and how it has been twisted here [wikipedia.org]."
But you apparently subscribe to the typical neo-conservative view that "we're right, and everybody else is wrong and trying to get in our way with politics".
I think you have me confused with someone else. Please be careful to whom you re
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Let me help you: if you write about "how a term has been twisted", then, all things being equal, you're implicitly saying that you prefer the original usage and disapprove of the modern usage. I'm saying that the modern usage is what counts; there is nothing "twisted" about the term because people today know what it means and who it re
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Are you serious? As a proud member of, "Everyone Who Isn't Everyone - EWIE" ... This it the first and only time I've been presented with the position that NeoCon = "...leftist codeword for 'Jew'".
Do tell me more? This ought to be interesting.
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Odd, I didn't realize that the Bushes, Cheney, Rumsfeld, Grover Norquist, Rush Limbaugh, Ann Coulter, Sean Hannity, and so on, and so on, were all Jews. Also, does this mean in your imbecilic little world that Noam Chomsky (who, in case you can't tell, is Jewish) is an anti-Semite? WTF?
This is simply another pathetic attempt by ultra-right-wing nutbags to take a common conception of right-wingers and try to throw it on the L
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Speaking only for myself, I have heard and used the term for quite some time before I'd ever heard the whole jewish conspiracy angle. So there's at least ONE person out there who says neocon not because they're anti-semitic, but because they need some term to distinguish between old style conservatives and new style conservatives. I think such a term is needed, as I agree on many points
First Time (Score:2)
This is the first time that I have read about the "jewish conspiracy angle" to the term "neo-con". What are you talking about? I'd never considered Karl Rove, Dick Cheney, or any of the rest of the cabal bent in the stereotypical, "Jew" direction.
Re:Vote the bums out (Score:4, Insightful)
Ok, so who is representing the guy who lives paycheck to paycheck and would be homeless (along with his wife and children) if his job got outsourced? I don't know of a single lobbyist who works for free, do you?
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It The group that you describe believes that the Republicans represents them -- it's who they vote for. It used to be that the labor unions lobbied for laws that would help these people.
Re:Vote the bums out (Score:4, Insightful)
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So what you're saying is that most choices can't be broken down simply to two different solutions? Welcome to pretty much every democracy outside of the USA :)
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No, what I'm saying is that we're really only presented with ONE solution for any given problem- vote in the guy who was bought and paid for by the corporations. It doesn't matter what party you vote for, the option is still the same.
Welcome to pretty much every democracy outside of the USA
If we had more than one solution, it would be welcome to DEMOCRACY.
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If he is a member of a union then his union is doing heavy lobbying. If he is not a member of a union then he is SOL. Those are the breaks. If you want to get anything done you need to get organized.
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When the lobbyists decide public policy it is still democracy as long it does not turn into an oligarchy. It is no longer a representative democracy, but one which is weighted by lobbying / money power.
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It seems to me that modern nation-states are realizing that they are mostly too small to have any weight in the current and upcoming political environment. There exists now the European Union, the Eurasion Union, the African Union, Caribbean Community, South American Community of Nations, and the Arab League.
Orwell correctly predicted that the future would have continental super-states. Nowadays, the only securable border is an ocean.
Hmmm. (Score:2)
And the names even match! Bonus!
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Wow, accusing a guy of antisemitism? I think the ad hominem attacks are hitting a new low here. If you can't argue with him, just shut up, eh? Tell you what. You explain how our exploding debt, peeking into every single person's shopping list and phone call, and massive concentration of power at the federal level are "normal" conserv
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Aha -- this isn't actually about what the parent wrote after all! It's because the parent's username, MBraynard, suggest's that he's SWEDISH. You think that all SWEDES are inferior scum, don't try to hide it by couching your words. Take your anti-nordicism elsewhere!
(/sarcasm)
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You're right. What the parent poster meant to write was
"This is the sort of incestuous behavior that the JEWS encourage, what with their diamond-hoarding plague-ridden hooked noses and their beady little JEW eyes, twin
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It might have been more accurate to say
"over bagels, picked apart by their JEW claws, made by the sweat of the gentiles that they crush under their JEW feet"
The JEW claw is the single most obvious shared JEW attribute and you shouldn't ignore it. Without it hoarding diamonds and running loan sharking businesses would be much tougher.
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Jews? What the hell does that have to do with any of this? You've come perilously close to invoking Godwin's Law [wikipedia.org] here!
There may be a lot of Jewish neo-cons, but I don't think there's a sufficiently close association that the one could plausibly be used as a euphemism or slur for the other! Nor did the grandparent poster make any atte
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And it is arguably not "democratic" either, because paying people for political influence is not acceptable behavior in a democracy.
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I was racking my brain how to respond to GP. You hit the nail right on the head.
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My Stalinist Slavemaster isn't watching... (Score:2)
... so I'm able to make this post. I don't have much time though. He'll be back and cracking the whip again real soon.
The original Neocons were all Jews who abandoned the New Left.They were(and are) hated by their former comrades.
NeoCon is one of those terms whose meaning is little known by the sheep who bandy it about parrotting their Stalinist slavemasters.
Yes, Neoconservatism originated with Jewish intellectuals who wanted to break with the Left. My point is that arguing against Neoconservative po
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Between 2001 and 2004, Abramoff gave more than $127,000 to Republican candidates and committees and nothing to Democrats, federal records show. At the same time, his Indian clients were the only ones among the top 10 tribal donors in the U.S. to donate more money to Republicans than Democrats.
Bush's comment about Abramoff in
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To concentration of power in the same boys' club is the problem. Turn things upside-down, and mix things up a little -- like the whole Tower of Babel thing.
The new blood in the House and Senate may very well be as potentially corrupt (some day) as the current batch of incumbants. However, the incumbants (many have been around for seemingly forever -- see my Utah's Orrin Hatch
All of them? (Score:4, Funny)
Must be a big bed.
Re:All of them? (Score:5, Funny)
>
>Must be a big bed.
It went well until everyone decided to do introductions and handshakes.
"Foley, Jack Abramoff."
Then things got weird.
Mod Parent Up (Score:2)
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Well you know what they say ... (Score:2)
Citizens Against Govt Waste (Score:5, Insightful)
I've often wondered about this group. They remind me of something my college accounting prof. warned us about. (He's a CMA-Certified Management Accountant, outside the classroom.) Bean counters should never be put in charge of a business, long-term. They tend to focus too much on the money aspect rather than if the long-term is better served by a few extra expenses, e.g. getting a tetanus shot for $ rather than fighting the disease later for $$$$$.
CAGW has struck me as being too pennywise in the past. Not that they haven't had some good points, but their focus is often too narrow.
Looks like this kind of irony is something they could use, if they chose to, as a learning experience.
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Re:Citizens Against Govt Waste (Score:4, Insightful)
example: I did the math, and I think "pork barrel" spending amounted to about 1% of the national budget ($23B of 2 or so trillion). Pork is bad on principle, of course, but if you think that's the biggest waste in America's federal budget you're just parroting something you heard on talk radio.
More info about what exactly they said... (Score:5, Informative)
If you're like me, you're probably wondering, "The who said what about what?"
Wikipedia to the rescue [wikipedia.org].
Read on past the Linux stuff. This is the same group that took money from Phillip Morris and then (can you imagine?) complained that the Department of Health and Human Services report on the dangers of smokeless tobacco was a waste of taxpayer money. Go figure.
Abramoff also in bed with software patent trolls (Score:5, Informative)
This is a repost [slashdot.org] of a comment I have made previously, but I think the connection is important. Jack Abramoff took money to lobby on behalf of a company, eLottery, whose business model basically depends on software and business method patents in order to raise the cash they need to spend on lobbyists. Without the patents, there would at best be a trade association for such companies in a competitive market, probably more open in its dealings with government as well.
An article several months ago in the Washington Post [washingtonpost.com] described more about how Jack Abramoff took money to influence congressional proceedings. In this case, it was to scuttle a bill that would have prohibited state lotteries from going online. As with his work with Indian casinos, Abramoff pulled strings to get otherwise anti-gambling members of Congress to vote against a law prohibiting companies like eLottery from conducting lotteries over the Internet.
Oh, did I say "companies like"? Oops, no, just eLottery. They seem to have some patents [elottery.com] "broadly covering Internet retailing of state lottery tickets". In other words, software patents, or actually business model patents (legalized monopolies) disguised as them. Of course, those patents let them raise capital from investors eager to profit from that legalized monopoly. Where did that capital go? Right into lobbyists' pockets.
Re:Abramoff also in bed with software patent troll (Score:3, Insightful)
Let's be clear here. To
CAGW once ran a hit piece on me (Score:5, Interesting)
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Luddites for the children (Score:2)
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Of course not. These people aren't stupid. But at the time the article came out, Scientology was conducting a defamation campaign against me that included, among other things, anonymous faxes to various media outlets, most of whom were too smart to take the bait. But CAGW was eager to cooperate -- and very sloppy in their "reporting". Failing to contact me or the university for a response is simply inexcusable, but it's what one would ex
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Told 'ya so! I wrote about this half a year ago. (Score:5, Insightful)
Bruce
Re:Told 'ya so! I wrote about this half a year ago (Score:2)
It's funny that you say that... I seem to remember people asking for just that when you made the connection in your speech.
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Jack Abramoff? (Score:5, Funny)
Are They Really *Evil*? (Score:5, Interesting)
Abramoff raised money to elect Republicans, Hastert controlled those House Republicans (and through their majority, the House). Together they made laws for the past 6+ years.
Now they're revealed to be in league to suppress open source. Are these Republicans really evil, or does it just require corrupt politicians to give evildoers the advantage they need to win? Is there a difference?
Not to say it's wrong, mind you... (Score:2)
Do you have any sources on this other than The Daily Kos?
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http://www.cnn.com/2005/POLITICS/05/09/real.delay/ [cnn.com]
http://www.globalexchange.org/campaigns/sweatshops
http://www.msmagazine.com/spring2006/paradise_full
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Sticky Abramoff Web (Score:2)
Any sources other than The Daily Kos? (Score:2)
Two links to The Daily Kos in three articles, both by the same poster. Again, do you have any other sources, that people other than those on the far left side of the "Progressive Movement" might find credible?
Open source already has a reputation for being left-wing. But The Daily Kos has one (even among Democratic politicians) for being so far left wing that it's brewing the Kool-Aid for the entire Democratic party.
If we're to get Open-Source ad
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I did want to point out that Daily Kos isn't as far left as its reputation though. A year or two ago it was further left in relation to the U.S. public, but now it's almost mainstream. Of course, it's a large population and has its share of radicals and a few brave Republicans.
Abramoff a real piece of work (Score:3, Interesting)
http://www.pbs.org/moyers/moyersonamerica/capitol
Corrupted Windows Filing System (Score:5, Informative)
Preston Gates & Ellis [wikipedia.org]: 'The "Gates" in the firm's name is William H. Gates, Sr., father of Microsoft founder Bill Gates.'
Abramoff's gang of Republicans took control of the entire elected government in 2001.
"The DOJ, now under the administration of U.S. President George W. Bush, announced on September 6, 2001 [wikipedia.org] that it was no longer seeking to break up Microsoft and would instead seek a lesser antitrust penalty."
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I haven't found documentation of how many shares in the corporation Gates still owns/controls, but I expect he's still in the game.
Thinking otherwise is a wild-eyed coincidence theory.
what do you expect? (Score:2)
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Unrealistic, you say? Well, cynicism is cultured by the establishment. If we expect the worst of politicians, and hold them to those low standards, then should we be surprised when the scumbags take us up on our invitation? It's past time to prosecute politicians, lobbyists, and corporations when they interfere with the processes of g
If you really want to understand Washington, (Score:2)
It Works! (Score:2)
Jack had a girlfreind named Foley. They'd meet each other there, hold hands and think pure thoughts. But one day Foley didn't show up. He was sucking cock back stage at the armory in order to see some big rock group for free.
Doesn't that work? It totally works! Of course, the cat is completely out of the bag about the Republican party now. They're trying to do damage control but when you look at all those rich old men and you realize how much they real
msft sure loves conservative think-tanks (Score:2)
Some conservative think-tank starts screaming about msft being denied it's rights; and - whodathunkit - it's msft funding the entire thing!
Wasn't the letters-from-dead-people campaign another example of one these msft scams?
Not a shill anymore ... and they use Linux (Score:2)
However, the organization has been cleaned up, and has returned to its original mission, and if you look at some of their more recent work and argument, they are doing what their name implies, and as a hardcore liberal / libertarian European who finds even the US **Democratic** party too right wing for my taste, I find myself agr
Open Source Foes in Bed with Abrahamoff? (Score:2)
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The "right" to bribe politicians to vote your way isn't a right, much less essential-- and I'd be just as happy to see a bright light pointing at these scumbags, and see just how many lobbyists and dirty Congresscritters we can convict and jail from what we get out of Abramoff. Whether the politicans are Democrats or Republicans doesn't matter one bit to me...what matters is whether they are honest or for sale to the highest bidder.