| ▲ | alexpotato 4 hours ago | |
So interesting point about things being public vs not: If congressional votes are private, you never REALLY know if your congressperson is actually voting in your best interests. You only see certain bills pass and if they are in your favor, you can probably make some assumptions if they voted or not. If the votes are public, now EVERYONE can see who they voted for. That sounds great! Then you realize that lobbyists can also see who the congressperson voted for. Lobbyists that have a lot more money and influence than you do. Lobbyists that can hold back millions if the vote is against their interests. My point isn't that one format isn't better than the other. My point is that there are "no solutions, only tradeoffs" | ||
| ▲ | markhahn 2 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
what's the problem with everyone knowing how a rep votes? their voting should be a matter of record, not any form of leverage. the dumpsterfire of campaign finance is completely orthogonal (and also both important and simple to solve). | ||
| ▲ | fogof 4 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | |
Do you think there is a tradeoff in this case? If so, what is the best counterargument against making PACER records free? I think it's important to note, as the article does, that these records are already "public" (that's what the "P" stands for) what's at issue is whether you should be charged a fee to access them. | ||
| ▲ | functionmouse 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
ban lobbying | ||