Daily Kos

ACTIVISM: :08 Minute Activist 3rd Installment

Sat Dec 18, 2004 at 12:13:37 PM PDT

One of the things I've noticed here on Kos is how effective people can be when they join in here together to accomplish some goal. Here on Kos you can be transformed from a solitary pissed off person into an important component of a finely tuned, well-oiled, society fighting machine.

The way life is structured these days, it's hard for people to find the time to do something about the numerous injustices that face us today. This got me to thinking, "If Jane Fonda can provide us with a good abdominal workout in eight minutes, why not use the same principle to try and change the world?"

Warning: Today's Mission deals with the Voting Irregularity Issue.

A little bird told me perhaps I should preface this mission with a little explanation of our stance here at :08 Minute Activist. But read fast..as you know, we don't have much time.

Regardless of where you stand on the voting

problems in Ohio and elsewhere, 9 out of 10 Dentists agree that the main goal to achieve is voting reform.

Maybe the glaring problems that are Oh-so-evident now, have always been there. Perhaps they are only now coming into the light as our most recent national elections have been closer than Siegfried and Roy at a horror movie.

Or maybe, just maybe, dark partisan operatives who's lust for power is surpassed only by unquenchable greed, have had just a little to do with the way things have turned out.

The point is we just don't know, do we?

We can thank both the policies of George Bush and the programming of FOX news for dividing Americans against one another to the point that we may never see another landslide election again for quite some time.

So whether or not small inaccuracies have always existed in our system is really irrelevant to our modern-day problems. Times, they are a-changin.

The point has been made here and elsewhere, and I think the logic is pretty much irrefutable, that if banks can maintain pretty much 99.9% accuracy when accounting for our dollars, then the same standard should be applied to our votes.

One other thing that I think we can all agree upon, is that a determined and willful attempt was enacted by republicans in this and many other elections to suppress and disenfranchise voters based on the color of their skin.

I've heard it argued here that while vote suppression is wrong and unethical, there is really nothing that can be done about it now. After all you can't recount a vote that could never be cast. While this may be true, surely

there are actions we can take now to insure that this never, ever happens again.

So what I am hoping is that I have identified two aspects here regarding the voting situation that everyone on the left (and maybe even some on the right) can agree upon.

We need open, transparent and accurate elections that can be trusted to reflect the true will of the people.

And we need to insure to all Americans that the

intentional targeting of any group of citizens with the expressed intent of silencing their electoral voice, will not be tolerated.

So without further adeiu, Let's Get on with today's mission.

As you may know, Leading demoicratic House representative of the Judiciary Committee, John Conyers , has been holding an investigation in order to determine exactly what went on in Ohio. This may lead to full hearings, which would go a long way towards bringing the reform that we all desire.

It has been reported that Rep. Conyers has requested One Million emails to the House Judiciary Committee, demanding full Congressional Hearings regarding the massive suppression of voters, and evidence of possible

vote tampering that occurred there.

Well it sounds like Conyers could use a little show of support, perhaps as a means to combat some of the indifference that some of of us have witnessed regarding this issue.

Say no more, Rep. Conyers. :08 Minute Activist is here to help.

This link will open a new browser window. In that window you will find the contact page for the House Judiciary Committee Members.

Today's mission is to send Rep. Conyers the correspondence he so desires

Now all we need is some text:



Dear House Judiciary Committee Members:

Recent revelations made at the Hearings on Ohio Vote Fraud that was held recently by Rep. John Conyers have cast a harsh light upon deep flaws within our electoral system.

There is in my opinion, ample evidence of a willful attempt by Sec. of State Blackwell and others to affect the outcome of the vote through unethical means, such as the imbalanced distribution of voting machines.

This not only smacks of unethical partisan behavior, but also of racism, as evidence has shown that the areas targeted to be under equipped have overwhelmingly been minority areas, particularly those areas known to have certain voting tendencies.

It is unconscionable to me that 80% of all votes in America are counted by only two companies: Diebold and ES&S. I consider it unacceptable that there is no federal agency with regulatory authority or oversight of the U.S. voting machine industry.

I find it particularly disturbing that The vice-president of Diebold and the president of ES&S are brothers, and that the chairman and CEO of Diebold is a major Bush campaign organizer and donor who wrote in 2003 that he was "committed to helping Ohio deliver its electoral

votes to the president next year."

These actions cannot be tolerated in a free democracy and I am hereby demanding that action be taken on my behalf.

I would very much like to see legislation passed that guarantees open and accurate voting process in this country. I would also support any legislation that leads to harsher enforcement of laws pertaining to vote

suppression.



House Judiciary Contact Page  

Will open a new window.

As usual here, you may feel free to cut and paste the above letter, or if you are feeling spunky write up your own little diatribe. Feel free to share your letter with

us here.

As today's mission was pretty simple, my calculation shave

us at about 5:50 or so into today's activism.

Since we have a little time left, I'd also like to direct you to the efforts of the women at codepinkalert.org

who have actually put together A Voting Bill of Rights  that they will be submitting to Congress.

They are seeking 25,000 e-signatures before they send it.

This should take you all of a minute to accomplish.

Sign the bill & pass it on to your friends.

Click here to Sign

the Bill..opens a new window

Well once again, this concludes this weeks :08 Minute

Activist.

I'd really like to thank you for participating, but I'm

just too damned busy. Just kidding, I do thank you, very

much.

P.S.

To those who insist on continually calling out Kos and other outstanding citizens of this site and calling them cowards, etc. Just fucking stop it will ya? I can guarantee that if Kos makes anything off this site it's negligible, and it's quite possible it puts him in the red. I know that it requires dedication to maintain a site like this, not to mention lots of bandwidth that is not free ( like this site is to each and every one of us ) What anyone says here in these forums is up to each and every one of us. Contrary to popular belief, Kos is not our leader. He's a guy with a cool website. Whether or not you agree with his stance is irrelevant. If you want to fight for voting rights, do so. It's called Freedom people. I know, I know, freedom incldes the right

to call Kos a coward I guess, but I'm telling you here and now that it's just plain ignorant to do so. If you think it's going to make Kos change his tack, then you are stupider than your typing errors indicate. So if you insist on remaining ignorant, keep it up, but if and when Kos locks all our asses out because of it, no one will hear your screaming as 30,000 plus descend on your home

and obliterate it.

Poll

Today's Action Tally

89%43 votes
2%1 votes
2%1 votes
2%1 votes
0%0 votes
4%2 votes

| 48 votes | Vote | Results

Tags: (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 28 comments

  •  Reposted (4.00 / 13)

    from earlier. Hoping to see some more action today.
    Let's cut the navel gazing people and get to work.
  •  Brian (none / 1)

    thanks for reposting.  recommended highly.

    if you ever need a good secondary or primary action item you can find one easily on ppipes.  check out the new daily roundup or just look for a message with this icon

    as soon as this steelers game is over i am writting today's edition.

  •  re-recommended! (none / 1)

    There were some great comments on the first one - o well.

    Let the great world spin for ever down the ringing grooves of change. - Tennyson

    by bumblebums on Sat Dec 18, 2004 at 12:27:43 PM PDT

  •  STOP SPAMMING CONYERS (3.33 / 3)

    Can anyone, anywhere, link to a verifiable release from Conyers' office that such a "send a million emails" request was ever made?

    As anyone in the IT industry can tell you, no one sane ever asks for something like this because:

    the incoming mail will overflow the mailbox and make the account unusable (if not crash the system altogether)

    once a story requesting mail is out on the Internet, the mail never stops as the address is picked up by spammers, and again the account becomes unusable.

    Send Conyers and the Judiciary Committee your thoughts, please. But send them by regular mail. Don't email in response to an unsubstantiated Internet urban legend.

    - What happens on DailyKos, stays on Google.

    by Jon Meltzer on Sat Dec 18, 2004 at 12:29:12 PM PDT

    •  mailing (none / 1)

      something to a legislators theses days is a waste of time.  it takes way to long for mail to be processed due to the anthrax scares.  it will take several weeks to a month to get there.  now i had no idea whether the request is an internet legend, i am just saying snail mail is not worth your time.

      at the very least sending an email to a legislator about election reform lets them know people out there are conserned.  they count each and every email that comes in.

      plus we need much more activism around here than what we have been doing lately IMHO.

    •  i may be dense (none / 1)

      but i thought the million  requested is intended not to go to conyers, but to the judiciary committee.

      all the same, i think conyers deserves to know he has support.  it might also help to contact our reps & urge them to support conyers.  the smear machine is in gear & we should defend him.

    •  asdf (4.00 / 2)

      I thought e-mail was the preferred method of contacting the government in light of the anthrax attacks.  That's what  I have  always done anyway.  Since I had a few minutes I checked Snopes to see if this specific e-mail request was an urban legend.  

      I searched for:

      *Conyers

      *send a million e-mails

      *voter fraud

      Snopes didn't have anything.   I don't think contacting Rep. Conyers with our support for his work on this issue constitutes spam, anymore than I thought sending e-mails to Olbermann in support of his covering this issue on Countdown was spam.  And if you read Olbermann's blog, you can tell that our e-mails made a difference.  

      My husband who has been an IT guy for over 20 years said that this type of e-mailing should not be a problem for mail servers.   He said more, but he's dragging me out the door to dinner.  

      Thanks Brian, for this assignment and also for including CodePink.  They are doing some fine work too.  

      Beesly/Halpert '08

      by Mariposa on Sat Dec 18, 2004 at 01:02:28 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

    •  Ummm... (none / 1)

      It is our right, and in my mind responsibility, to tell our leaders what we think. If it jams their mailboxes, then maybe they will actually LISTEN TO US.

      Regular mail isn't a bad idea, in fact it used to get more attention than email. But now they may be about equal. Snail mail takes more effort and so is given more weight, but the anthrax scare makes them less effective than they once were.

      I appreciate your concern, but sometimes I just wish Democrats would stop finding reasons NOT to act and would just plain get active. We are too quick to say, "Oh it won't work," and give up.

    •  Thank You (none / 0)

      I appreciate your concern. I do happen to be a network admin, so I will say to you that indeed you are partially correct.

      You or I would be insane to take on the kind of email that Conyers is reported to be asking for, but a mailbox set up for the gov, should be more than able to handle it.

      The 2 GB limit for Outlook .pst files is no longer the limit, they will now hold as much email as a hard drive can handle. Outlook is probably what they use believe it or not, I always expect the gov. would have some super duper Unix dealie, but they love making Power Point presentations and Excel spreadsheets, which I learned from reading Richard Clarke's Against all Enemies

      These days an 80gb hard drive is about $50.00, so I'm not to worried about messing up their systems.

      If mass email could hamper our government, we are in much more trouble than we thought.
      Here's a 4 for you though for sharing your concerns.

  •  sent to conyers (none / 1)

    I support your efforts on behalf of the voters of America, and I hope this will lead to coherent election reform.

    It is very troubling that our votes are handled by private corporations.  I believe that only the U.S. government should manage elections and count votes.

    xxxx

    will email the repubs as well.

  •  to majority (sensenbrenner) (4.00 / 2)

    I urge you to support Rep Conyers ongoing efforts to assure fairness and transparency in our elections.

    I am very concerned about the role of private corporations in American elections.  I believe that only the U.S. government should manage elections and count votes, and that reform should include a uniform national system to replace the current confusing hodgepodge.  

    It is troubling that Americans have doubts about our electoral system.  Transparency and coherence are not partisan issues, and will benefit all citizens.  

    xxxxx

    http://judiciary.house.gov/

    •  Sensenbrenner (none / 1)

      As much as I dislike Sensenbrenner's record, I have to say I was impressed by how he responded (but not the content of his response) to my letter concerning the 1st .08 minute activism diary.

      He snail mailed me a response and personally signed it.  However, he is my local congressman, and I live in a wealthy rethug dominated city where many of his top donors live, so that may have something to do with it.  Anyway, here was his response:

      Dear Mr. Badlands,

      Thank you for your recent corresponcence regarding a Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Inspector General's 9-11 report, and H.R. 10, the 9-11 Recommendations Implementation Act.  I appreciate the opportunity to learn of your views.

      I understand you are displeased with CIA Director Porter Goss' delay in relasing an Inspector General report on the 9-11 attacks. Director Goss has asked the Inspector General to clarify conclusions about who personally should be held accountable for the 9-11 intelligence failure.  As you may be aware, internal CIA investigations are often classified for decades.  The CIA has indicated the report is not being stalled, and Director Goss is carefully considering it.

      Thanks again for Contacting me.

      Sincerely,

      F. James Sensenbrenner Jr.
      Member of Congress

  •  mission 1/2 accomplished (none / 1)

    For some reason, whenever I try to submit my form on the House Jud. Cmte. site, my browser locks up. I've given up on submitting that one, but I did sign the Code Pink petition.

    It takes a village to raise a special child.

    by roses on Sat Dec 18, 2004 at 01:17:40 PM PDT

    •  Same problem (none / 1)

      Earlier this morning (on the first go-round of this diary!) I had the same problem, but I just sat there and finally my letter got sent.

      Off-topic from your post, but to answer someone else above: I'll send a letter to the Hon. Mr. Conyers anytime I damn well please. If he or any other members of the Judiciary Committee or the whole House or the Senate doesn't want my "spam" then they can resign and go home!

      I don't need anyone's invitation or permission  to speak my mind to the regular people to whom I've entrusted my governence. If their precious email boxes get filled, then they need bigger boxes.

      Oh yeah, stick with it Brian, you ain't a goin' nowhere!!

      There is nothing natural about the abomination of modern factory farming and its attempt to reduce living, feeling beings to machines. -Stephen Walsh, Ph.D.

      by timerigger on Sat Dec 18, 2004 at 01:58:52 PM PDT

      [ Parent ]

  •  Can I go on (none / 1)

    the road to nowhere with you and be your groupie??!
    Great work, writing, humor, point of view, commentary, and Idea! .....you can have my eight minutes every time.

    "The public have an insatiable curiosity to know everything, except what is worth knowing"....Oscar Wilde

    by 313to212 on Sat Dec 18, 2004 at 01:32:59 PM PDT

  •  I took action elsewhere (none / 0)

    I sent my letter demanding an investigation in Ohio three weeks ago but I told Conyers that unless he agreed to take action on VOTE ONLY BY MAIL for 2008 I was pulling my support from him.
  •  BRIAN: FIX THE LINK that IMPAIRS Conyers' work (4.00 / 2)

    You write:

    It has been reported that Rep. Conyers has requested One Million emails to the House Judiciary Committee...

    This may be true, but your link DOES NOT go to the House Judiciary Committee, it goes to Conyers group, clogging their system, and impairing their work.

    In fact, an email went out from Conyers' legislative assistant imploring people to stop this senseless spamming (obviously Conyers' group does not need any urging).

    The CORRECT link, to the House Judiciary Committee:

    http://judiciary.house.gov/Contact.aspx

  •  thanks (none / 1)

    I thought for sure that was the link to send to, but I do believe now that you are correct.
    I'll repost again tomorrow with the new link.

    Also, I really don't care whether or not it's true that Conyers requested this. Broken Mail boxes, whatever it takes, this helps the gov. know we care.

  •  Love the concept (none / 1)

    Please keep this up. I totally agree with your observation on how this community can take action due to our numbers. Thanks for getting involved and helping the rest of us become aware of how we can make a difference with just a few minutes of out time.

    "If you don't want to fight for the future and you can't figure out how to beat these people then find something else to do." BILL CLINTON, Sat Oct 29, 2005

    by DriftawayNH on Sat Dec 18, 2004 at 05:28:20 PM PDT

  •  Taking action regularly - our responsibility (none / 1)

      Someone pointed out a while back (on DK, I think) that while Democrats tend to get active and do energetic political work in a crisis - Republicans view political action similarly to  working out at a gym - something one does several times a week to maintain health. Your call to action is terrific and something we progressives need to do in a much more disciplined way. Thanks. IMO this is the only way we can take back this country and reestablish democracy.

    You don't get to keep democracy unless you fight for it.

    by artebella on Sat Dec 18, 2004 at 07:53:02 PM PDT

  •  Sense of humor (none / 1)

    witty repartee and ethos much appreciated.

    And the concept of the 08 minute activist is pretty brilliant....(I tried something called the Raise Hell Machine...but that was ahile ago...)

    I actually like that Kerry graphic.....lol.

  •  well, I think I did it right (none / 0)

    I went to the first link and it didn't open so I went to the second one which was e-amiling the committee directly and sent this:

    I'm disgusted that we can't even inspire confidence in the election system in our own country because of a few people's actions. We have to be able to provide every citizen in this country with confidence that their vote not only counted but that the importance of that vote was safeguarded by eliminating all threats to offset votes with easily corruptable systems and partisan shenannigans.
    I sincerely hope that you pay attention to the results of the hearings held by  Rep. John Conyers, many Americans already have.
      so if I screwed up let me know. I'm so not computer/Internet savvy.....but I try and I try.

Permalink | 28 comments