New Site of the Day
Check out Latinos for 89.
Clean Money, Fair Elections
Check out Latinos for 89.
Posted by
Yes on Proposition 89
at
8:48 PM
Labels: Internet, Latinos, Online Action, Prop-89, Proposition-89, Spanish
In addition to our Action Center and our online and offline materials, we are also providing easy tools for people to use email to organize their friends to help pass Proposition 89.
In just a few minutes, you can help mobilize grassroots support by sending an email to your friends asking them to join you in supporting Proposition 89.
With your help, we can use email to efficiently organize enough people to take on the Sacramento special interests that are spending big money to stop reform.
So take five minutes and use our email tool to tell your friends about Proposition 89.
Posted by
Yes on Proposition 89
at
3:49 PM
Labels: Action Center, Buck the System Now, Internet, Online Action, Prop-89, Proposition-89
Last night, the Proposition 89 Blog began rolling out version 2.0 -- this will allow you more tools to stay informed about the campaign.
Speaking of websites, some Attorney/Business in Irvine named Mark Patlan is a real hack. He has an Op-Ed in today's OC Register that talks about websites and Proposition 89, but it is clear by the writing that the author hasn't visited this website. Mark Patlan is a hack. It might be that he is a hack writer, it might be that he is a hack lawyer, or maybe it is because he isn't much of a political hack when it comes to the internet, but Mark Patlan is clearly a hack.
Here's what really got me about his column, the way he transitions directly from, "Further restrictions are included in Proposition 89 on the November ballot" straight into setting up a pathetic straw man against the current system:
In order to understand how these regulations chill political speech, imagine that there is a cause that you wish to support or oppose – building a toll road, universal health care, universal preschool or saving the endangered brown gnatcatcher. Now you wish to do something about it.
You learn that there is a political committee supporting your position. So, you contact the committee and offer your ideas on how you could create some grass-roots support for the effort. Perhaps, you could set up your own Web site and launch an e-mail campaign. Then you could take donations to support your efforts, or channel donations to the political committee.
After consulting an attorney, the political committee politely declines your help, instead asking only for your money.
This example illustrates how campaign finance regulation reduces political speech to financial contribution, the very evil that it purports to address. Under the California Fair Political Practices Act, the minute that you spent any money on your cause or raised any money for the cause, you became a political committee subject to the Act. Once you raise or spend $1,000, you become subject to the Act's strict reporting and disclosure requirements. And you don't dare "coordinate" your campaign with another "committee."
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Posted by
Yes on Proposition 89
at
7:49 AM
Labels: Action Center, Big Money, Fact Check, Internet, Opponents, Prop-89, Proposition-89, Special Interests