Revolving Door: Sixteen Former Judiciary Committee Staff Are Lobbying Congress Concerning SOPA
from the feeling-of-corruption dept
We recently wrote about two Congressional staffers who were very active in the SOPA/PIPA debate leaving Congress to work as lobbyists for the entertainment industry, helping to get those bills passed. This is a well-trodden path. The Sunlight foundation highlights how there are sixteen former Judiciary Committee staffers currently lobbying over copyright issues, and the vast, vast majority of them are working for groups in favor of these bills. There are just two working for those opposed to the bills. This kind of revolving door between Congress and lobbyists remains quite troubling. At the very least, it raises questions about who the staffers are really working for when they’re in Congress: the people… or their future employers?
Filed Under: copyright, judiciary committee, lobbying, pipa, protect ip, sopa
Comments on “Revolving Door: Sixteen Former Judiciary Committee Staff Are Lobbying Congress Concerning SOPA”
They all should be shot for treason and terrorism against the general public. Copyright, as is, is horribly skewed in favour of a small number of “Imaginary People” (oh, look, that abbreviates to IP! What are the odds?) at the expense of the general public, who are treated like terorists and criminals for doing what is federally mandated in the Constitution.
The time to take arms is now. As soon as SOPA is signed into law, report every single Congressman/Senators’s website who voted for this for copyright infringement to everyone, as well as every single major studio, label and TV station. Then, perhaps, after all their money has been frozen, their sites seized and no definitive recourse given, they might understand.
These traitorous fucks deserve nothing. Not even mockery.
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They certainty don’t care about the peoples needs.
However, they do show remarkable concern for their own welfare.
I do feel prison is a good deal for them.
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“They all should be shot for treason and terrorism against the general public.”
In China there is a good chance they’ll be executed (China has executed one of their top FDA officials for accepting bribes). In the U.S. it’s considered free market capitalism and hence rewarded.
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(now I don’t think they should be executed, but perhaps jail time should be considered).
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We need poetic justice. Screw prison. They should be forced to live in project housing and work in a minimum wage job for 5 years, or be forced into the military for a full tour.
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forced into the military for a full tour.
I doubt the military would want most of them. The military has a strict code of Ethics and the UCMJ. This sort of activity would be something that the military would look down upon (as is true for most federal employees, who would find themselves in jail for this sort of activity.)
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I was kinda thinking they could all be shipped up to a little town called Alert at the northern end of Baffin Island in Arctic Canada. The closest land in Canada to the North Pole.
Summer lasts all of a week or two. Maybe three. So for the rest of the year they could lobby polar bears not to eat them. Might work.
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?Every normal man must be tempted at times to spit on his hands, hoist the black flag, and begin to slit throats.?
????????????H. L. Mencken
?
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why don’t you piss off and mind the affairs of your own country?
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Oh, don’t worry, I have a lot of traitorous fucks in my own country. Most of them happen to be called David Cameron.
A man who causes fear cannot be free from fear.
– Epicurus
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Yeah case in point ….
A Paranoid Congressman Rep. Bob Etheridge (D-NC) Assaults Student on Washington Sidewalk
Follow the money
At the very least, it raises questions about who the staffers are really working for when they’re in Congress: the people… or their future employers?
I don’t think it raises the question, it answers it.
Re: Follow the money
Up-vote for insightfullness.
The tighter Copyright enforcement tries to grip society the more aspects will slip through their fingers.
A nit, but the article says the number is 3, and not 2.
Lobbyists sell a scarcity…access, and who gets the benefit of such scarcity depends upon who hires them.
Sounds to me as if the opposed companies have been a bit slow on the draw in securing their services.
Part of the economy of influence that corrupts our government today is that Capitol Hill has become, as Representative Jim Cooper put it, a “farm league for K Street.”
Watch Lessig @ Google on Youtube.
Campaign donations/contributions when in Government = Jobs after Government… and that goes for researchers, secretaries and all the usual Senate / Congress hangers on.
Get the $ out of Government.
“Congressional staffers who were very active in the SOPA/PIPA debate leaving Congress to work as lobbyists for the entertainment industry”
I thought prostitution was illegal.
Two sets of rules – again.
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High Court, Low Court again …
At the very least, it raises questions about who the staffers are really working for when they’re in Congress: the people… or their future employers?
Who pays to put politicians in office?
Once you answer that – answer this: by virtue of the above answer then, who do politicians represent?
And thirdly; who hires the staffers?
S M E A R!
Congrat Mike, slipping further into the muck. You can’t argue the contents well enough, so now you are down to trying to tar and feather people.
Desperation. It’s ugly!
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I would think you, AC, of all people would oppose SOPA/PIPA.
Once these bills pass and become law, ICE will start seizing web sites at an incredible rate, likely starting with Techdirt!
When Mike is no longer on the web – what will you do with your time?
Maybe just sit there and mock round things for not having corners?
Re: Re: S M E A R
Why would they seize Techdirt? Mike is full of himself, but he rarely if even intentionally breaks the law.
Perhaps you would like to scare monger some more, maybe you will tell me that the http protocol will be outlawed and we will all be stuck back using Archie.
“Maybe just sit there and mock round things for not having corners?”
Nah, I’ll just mock idiots for not adding much to the discussion.
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Of course, the government is here to help. Trust them, for they would never ever abuse power, right?
Lets just make all laws broad enough to be applied in almost any situation. Who needs to be presumed innocent until proven guilty?
(And – Archie? Really? Cranky old guy showing his age.)
Re: Re: Re:2 S M E A R
“Archie? Really? Cranky old guy showing his age.”
He is probably not old. He probably heard Hollywood is turning Archie into feature length film.
Re: Re: Re:3 S M E A R
He’s still pissed cause his proposed RFC for the http protocol that said every third data packet has to contain his name, one of his famous wise quotations and a bill for $1 delivered straight to the browser was turned down as being idiotic.
Re: Re: Re:4 S M E A R
Yeah, I read that RFC. Didn’t it include roman orgies, sheep, and a never ending spigot of wine, running out of his 56k DSL internet connection?
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“…he rarely if even [sic] intentionally breaks the law.”
But isn’t that one of the (many) major problems with SOPA/PIPA? Intent doesn’t matter. Hell, guilt doesn’t seem to matter, so why would intent.
Re: Re: Re:2 S M E A R
Didn’t you get the memo? Guilt and Intent no longer matter. It is all about who you know, and which court you can gain access to. The high court and a slap on the wrist for people who fund politicians, and the low court for everyone else.
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“Why would they seize Techdirt?”
Wow, not understanding the implications of that which you desire can only lead to frustration.
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At least the idiots add more than you do. Like intelligence, reason, proficiency and some level of understanding.
You’d just rather stand on the side of the road tossing fresh cowpies and passing cars and complaining about the side splatter when they hit what you through them at.
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I would think you, AC, of all people would oppose SOPA/PIPA.
Once these bills pass and become law, ICE will start seizing web sites at an incredible rate, likely starting with Techdirt!
Really FUDboy? That’s all you got?
When Mike is no longer on the web – what will you do with your time?
Watch the anti-terror internet surveillance bill unfold
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Ah, so you are a fascist. Makes sense, I guess. It explains why you never can see the possibilities. After all, the Stalinists had their artistic schools stifled first. bThe same with mid-1930s Germany and early Maoist China.
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“so now you are down to trying to tar and feather people.”
So the question is why does Mike have so much ammunition to work with then? Shouldn’t that be troubling? Shouldn’t these potential conflicts of interest not exist?
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Swing and a miss. These people all had jobs in Congress, at one level or another. They now “lobby” on behalf of vested interests to get the laws they want.
Even India at the hieight of its corruption problems didn’t do so quite so openly as Congress. This says almost as much about the psyche of those on the Hill as it does about those same vested interests.
The whole system needs torching in order for Americs to survive as a republic, and not a dictatorship.
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Yeah, what a bad idea… hiring people who know how government works. Fucking stupid as hell!
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Once you leave government, there should be a 20-year bar on coming back in any capacity, even as a lobbyist. This reduces the chance of those peoiple waiting for those “cushy jobs” with vested interests.
From Government to Lobbyist
When I sign a contract for consulting, part of the contract is a non-compete clause for anywhere from a year to two. We should have the same clause for congressional staff and elected representatives, only it should be 5 years so there original contacts in Congress have grown cold. Better yet, do away with lobbying, but at least the non-lobby clause would be a start.
Movie Ref
In the movie distinguished gentleman Eddie Murphy implied it best at the end when he made references to all the cons he pulled before were nothing compared to the ones he pulled in congress only difference is the ones in congress were legal.
i would have quoted hi but I don’t remember the exact words and I would not want Techdirt taken down for infringement even if I did.
Why are those lobbyist not in jail for corruption?
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Because BOOTSTRAPS! or TERORRISM! Or BECAUSE WE SAY SO!