Well said. There have been actual reforms, with the Arizona model  best 
known,
that address most of your concerns. In that system a candidate needs   to 
gather 
4000 signatures and solicit donations of $ 5 each for ballot access. 
Not 5 thousand per voter,  just $ 5.
 
Then he or she is eligible for state $$ for their campaign. Think  that ( 
but am not sure )
corporate or union donations, while OK, subtract from the amount the state  
gives
to any candidate. 
 
Trouble is that TV costs money, the multitude gets 90 % of their  
"information" from TV,
and without TV access there is almost zero chance to get elected. So, while 
 I hear you
loud and clear, and essentially agree with your ideas, there are practical  
problems
and if they are not solved then the big donors call all the shots for the  
winning
candidates. 
 
In 2008 BHO pledged to run his campaign only with Federal matching  funds.
When he realized that he could pull in half a billion he wiggled his way  
out of his promise.
So, how do you deal with this kind of thing ?  He wasn't the first and  
won't be the last.
 
One idea is to allow all contributions from all sources but ( 1 ) require  
Internet disclosure
of all donors and amounts in 24 or 48 hours, and ( 2 ) limit allowable TV  
buys only to a
set maximum figure. Candidates could then spend all they want on newspaper  
ads,
radio, web ads, direct mail, etc. But TV would be equal for everyone on the 
 ballot.
 
Another issue is how the current system makes it easy for  
multi-millionaires or billionaires 
to run since they can pay for the whole schmeer out-of-pocket. What can be  
done
about this ?  Nothing that I know of.
 
There are a whole set of issues dealing with campaign finance. For now it  
is unclear
how best to address them all. Maybe a good start to refuse to donate to  
campaigns
but just a word to the wise, that, by itself, won't do the trick.
 
Billy
 
 
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

 


-----Original  Message-----
Date: Fri, 23 Sep 2011 18:56:29 -0700 (PDT)
Subject: The  Campaign for NO Donations
From: Redshirt Bluejacket  <[email protected]>
To: "Centroids: The Center of the  Radical Centrist Community"  
<[email protected]>


A pinpoint problem with  the whole American political system is the
specter of all the politicos  running about hat-in-hand for cash. Now
I'm not against charity to the  poor, but for those already living well
-- as all of these politicians  are, even the comparatively 'honest'
ones -- who wants my money better  barter a service for it!! Am I to
believe that these politicians know  better than I how I ought to use
my own hard-earned money for my own  benefit? And what, exactly, is all
this money needed FOR? Most  politicians crow about how much they got
this quarter or than, then seem  to squander it. Money, naturally, buys
media time with which the  candidate may become 'known' for their face,
if not their ideas; but  buying time from the media chains us to the
conception that this ought to  be the natural order of things -- but in
the Internet age, we ought to be  able to break those chains!! One
person advocating powerful ideas can  outcontend a dozen defenders of
what so obviously does not work, has not  worked, will not work. And
what else does the politician need cash for?  To pay advisers who won't
work for free because their hearts are with the  paychecks, not with
the ideas? To pay for food and lodgings on the  'campaign trail'? Only
if there aren't supporters out there who'll take  the candidate in for
the night. To gas up that campaign vehicle? Drive  your own car, and
spend some of your own money if you wish to earn a job  which happens
to be high-paying from the public trough.

Indeed,  not long ago, I received a solicitation for a contribution
from a  political candidate I personally have favored. Not a terribly
uncommon  event, as I have signed up to a number of political mailing
lists simply  to see what sort of things would be communicated to me.
But this one was  different, not in content, but for who it was from.
Without naming names  or identifying what office was sought even, it
was from one of the very  small handful of politicians who I generally
respect and consider to be a  principled person whose deeds
consistently and uncompromisingly match  what they claim as their
fundamental views. Here was a candidate who had  spoken out against our
broken campaign structure and its deleterious  effect of winnowing
choices to the media-approved insider establishment  candidates of the
two major parties, about the power of individuals to  bypass this
corrupt process and prevail through the power of ideas. And  what
especially struck me about this fundraising appeal was how routine  it
was, how like all the other politicians it spoke of a need to  raise
'x' amount by the end of the quarter or the financial reporting  period
to achieve some perceived advantage in the public eye. Naturally,  it
surely came from a campaign operative, not from the  candidate
directly, but it just as surely could not (or at least ought  not) have
come without the candidate's knowledge.

Now, I  understand how a campaign works in this day and age, and the
powerful  forces pressuring candidates to surrender their principles to
conformance  with a well-worn mold. But if candidates -- and their
supporters -- wish  to capitulate to a broken and corrupt system, well,
that'll only make  things worse. In every such campaign is the steady
drumbeat of  conformists echoing the mantra that we've got to work
within the  confessedly broken system in order to obtain the power to
fix the system.  Well I'll tell you, I've seen one party 'in power'
over the system, and  I've seen the other party 'in power' over the
system, and what has  universally happened is the party in power
insists that it must maintain  the broken and corrupt system, and
continue playing within the broken and  corrupt system, so that it may
use the power it earned by berating that  system to simply maintain
what power they have. Naturally, the persons  who prevailed by showing
fealty to the flaws of the system are not going  to repair the very
cracks through which they crept into power, for they  will continue to
believe that this is how power is properly achieved,  until they are
shown otherwise. If we compromise our values to gain an  uncompromised
system, we never gain an uncompromised system. Period. And  that is
exactly why the candidate whose solicitation I received ought to  be
able to do so without asking for campaign money.

The  Constitution of the United States of America requires my
conscience and  my vote if I am to elect public officials of my liking;
it does not  require a dime of my money. And while it is true that no
one is forced at  gunpoint to make campaign donations, the entire
system is set up to  extort donations from the citizenry by hanging its
manufactured  importance over their heads. Americans dug over $2
Billion out of their  pockets for politicians last cycle (at the
federal level alone); and why,  because they wanted to? Because they
had no better use for their money  than to put it into the hands of
government officials -- of both parties  -- who have shown little
respect for the value of money and less ability  to wisely cabin their
use of it? The system conditions people to believe  they can not 'win'
without giving money just as it conditions people to  believe they
require the general intervention of government at all, that  government
is a proper arbiter and enforcer of religious or moral codes,  and that
the American government owes its blood and treasure to the world  in a
burdensome policing role. Even the wealthy, the Wall Street bosses  and
union heads, who are oft perceived as having more skin in the  game,
and who receive boondoggles back from the politicians they  support,
must chafe at the thought they have no choice but to give up  millions
(often to candidates for both parties, as many corruption  scandals
have exposed), both aboveboard and through under-the-table  favors. On
such people, more than anyone else, this system of  artificially
induced donation pressure acts as a disproportionate tax,  one quite
possibly spent more frivolously than those collected by the  formal
structure of taxation. And so is the entire system premised on  a
fallacy which needs disproving, and badly.

We owe it to our  country, to our country's friends, to those who seek
to emulate us, and  to our future, to demonstrate that an idea can
indeed by more powerful  than a dollar; that powerful ideas can prevail
over moneyed ideas. We owe  it to ourselves. If every American woke up
to the fact that they needn't  give away a penny to politicians, if no
funds at all rolled into those  campaigns, the playing field would be
truly leveled, and the candidates  would need to prevail on the
strength of ideas alone. The solution, then,  is not convincing people
to give more and more; it is convincing them to  give nothing -- a
proposition strongly aligning with their natural  interests in keeping
what they have earned. Now, suppose 150 million  people vote next
election and we end up picking a 'winner' from another  pair of
moneyed, manicured establishment candidates. That 'winner' can  then
turn around and point to the votes cast as being an endorsement  of
'the system' itself; all of these people voted despite the  systemic
flaws pointed out to them, so they must approve in some measure  of the
system as it stands. The same may be claimed to apply with cash  given;
in fact, possibly more so as the amounts of cash involved have  evolved
to staggering plateaus. Our current president reportedly speaks  of
raising a billion dollars all his own, and high profile House  and
Senate and governors races are likely to enter the realm of tens  or
hundreds of millions of dollars more raised.

I am of the  conviction that there is no intellectually strenuous
proposition in  convincing people to not part with their own money
unnecessarily. Imagine  if this goal became the focus of those who
truly believe that this system  is broken, and are not willing to await
the empty promise of the next  election cycle, and the next one after
that, and the next one after that,  to begin effecting a transformation
of the system. And imagine the  support a politician would garner by
simply declaring, "I don't want  anybody to give any of their money to
any politician." I wonder, now,  whether any political type possesses
the fortitude to stand and exclaim  as much; but I surely do. Give away
no free money to politicians -- of  any party, of any ideology --
they've surely not earned it as well as you  have.  


-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

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