There's been a lot of talk, recently, regarding ALEC's influence in authoring voter ID laws. I recently stumbled upon a video - it's not recent, or anything - of ALEC's founder speaking to a religious right conference, stating:
4/10/2012 11:42:57 PM
I've never heard anything about ALEC and thought, "Hey, that's nice."It's just another non-transparent way for companies and special interest groups to buy direct access to legislators.
4/10/2012 11:48:52 PM
^^ All I hear is someone being honest. Who seriously wants their political opponents to vote?
4/11/2012 12:30:51 AM
He's not talking about low voter turnout. He's talking about vote suppression.
4/11/2012 7:56:37 AM
I'm surprised that corporations have been slowly pulling out of ALEC over the past few weeks. I just haven't seen that level of public outcry to warrant all these high profile corporations leaving. Maybe this is a preemptive tactic or I just haven't been paying close enough attention to the anti-ALEC movement.But for people who do not know, ALEC is a mostly conservative pro-business organization of corporations, lobbyists, and revolving door politicians, which drafts and proposes various legislation which is provided to our wonderful elected representatives before finally being introduced to legislature with sometimes minimal modifications. You may have noticed that similar legislation has been introduced across America in GOP controlled states such as voter id, ultrasound/abortion access bills, union busting, etc. This is simply ALEC-drafted legislation propagating through the conservative legislatures. It appears to be a highly effective system with real results.
4/11/2012 9:09:08 AM
More on ALEChttp://www.democracynow.org/2012/4/12/outrage_over_stand_your_ground_laws
4/12/2012 3:50:54 PM
I was somewhat curious as to whether ALEC was losing its support due to its Voter ID laws or its Stand Your Ground laws. It appears that companies may be receiving pressure on both fronts.As a side note, when I was using the search feature to see if this subject had already been posted, I found this post that JesusHChrist had made:
4/12/2012 5:27:09 PM
I'm still not getting the point. There is a political organization in this country which lobbies for political ends you disagree with? Color me shocked.
4/12/2012 6:15:46 PM
4/12/2012 9:32:23 PM
4/13/2012 1:56:30 AM
4/13/2012 1:29:13 PM
The Supreme Court says you're an idiot. None of the Amendments you listed say anything about requiring ID to vote. Besides, you oppose the first amendment on corporate speech, so why should you be allowed to wrap yourself in the constitution this time?
4/13/2012 5:05:16 PM
Yeah yeah, corporations are people too, right Willard?
4/13/2012 5:08:32 PM
Winning debates against LoneSnark is so easy. You just let him post.
4/13/2012 5:52:02 PM
^^ And only people you agree with enjoy constitutional protections. We know. Some guy working for citizens united gave up his rights when he took the job. If he wants to be considered human again he can always quit, right?^ Glad to see you've given up on your idiotic position, given how many states already require voter ID. http://www.ncsl.org/legislatures-elections/elections/voter-id.aspx[Edited on April 14, 2012 at 10:36 AM. Reason : .,.]
4/14/2012 10:29:18 AM
Exposing ALEC: How Conservative-Backed State Laws Are All Connected
4/14/2012 12:39:11 PM
http://www.salon.com/2012/04/23/alec_attacks_shareholders/Corporations have certain 'personal' rights because corporations are made up of people. But, when the very people who give a corporation its personhood oppose the way a corporation exercises those rights, it's a violation of the corporation's free speech.ALEC should just get it over with and propose a Constitutional amendment that defines 'we the people' as corporations and actual natural persons as mere personal property.
4/23/2012 11:24:35 PM
misrepresentation of the facts. The shareholders had their say when they set up the corporation. They wrote a corporate charter which outlines how the corporation will be run. If the shareholders want to be asked every-time the corporation decides to spend money, they being shareholders can draft a new corporate charter themselves which says so. But for the government to instead come in and attempt to impose such a charter upon the shareholders is NOT a defense of shareholder rights.
4/24/2012 12:00:52 AM
I'm sure I've posted these before...but whatevs.http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vuGE1VxVsYohttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mAKL3Rl_Ihc&feature=sh_e_se&list=SL
4/27/2012 3:48:23 PM
Another Fault Lines video that's somewhat relevant to ALEC is this one, Disenfranchised in America:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wCRC6NbRshc[Edited on April 27, 2012 at 4:57 PM. Reason : my internet speed requires me to drop the video to 480p]
4/27/2012 4:57:02 PM
Bump
12/2/2012 11:39:55 AM
http://www.goodjobsfirst.org/sites/default/files/docs/pdf/snakeoiltothestates.pdfStudy finds that states that scored highly on the ALEC-Laffer Economic Competitive Index were more likely to have slower growth in GDP, employment, and income.
12/2/2012 11:55:28 AM
An important time to remember who is really writing the laws in Florida and NC.
7/13/2013 11:35:28 PM
^ Very true. I believe ALEC was behind stand your ground.
7/13/2013 11:54:44 PM
oh god, those evil people who dare to disagree with me!!!
7/13/2013 11:59:36 PM
The problem isn't merely that they disagree with what is good and right but that they use their special degree of access to push their harmful agenda through.
7/14/2013 4:34:37 AM
Specifics Supplanter? Stand Your Ground laws played no part in the prosecution or the defense of the Martin case. So why is it
7/14/2013 8:50:57 AM
only in the jury instructions
7/14/2013 9:05:14 AM
^ How so? Jury instruction with regards to 2nd Degree, Manslaughter, Reasonable Doubt, or Self-defense?
7/14/2013 9:28:41 AM
Didn't it also have something to do with the decision not to initially arrest, which helped spark the national attention this case got.http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/13/us/george-zimmerman-to-appear-in-court.html
7/14/2013 10:20:28 AM
^ You raised the issue. Don't put the burden on someone else to explain why ALEC has anything to do with the Martin case.
7/14/2013 10:26:09 AM
^^^"Self-Defense" is closer to it; from pp. 12-13 of the instructions: http://www.flcourts18.org/PDF/Press_Releases/Zimmerman_Final_Jury_Instructions.pdf
7/14/2013 12:09:20 PM
Stand your ground was not used as by the defense during arguments, but it was part of the jury instructions as noted above:
7/17/2013 1:43:45 PM
7/17/2013 7:37:31 PM
http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/dec/03/alec-funding-crisis-big-donors-trayvon-martin
12/4/2013 4:55:30 PM
[Edited on December 4, 2013 at 5:01 PM. Reason : -]
12/4/2013 5:00:54 PM
^ from that article.
12/4/2013 5:03:57 PM
o look they're calling homeowners "freeriders" because they install solar panels and therefore don't need to pay the power company for electricity: http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/dec/04/alec-freerider-homeowners-assault-clean-energy
12/7/2013 9:18:28 PM
utilities are required to run wire to thier houses and have enough capacity to support them when the sun doesn't shine. who should pay for these things? the customers who don't have solar panels?
12/7/2013 10:16:09 PM
^ are you joking?Their motivation and implementation of that law is crooked and corrupt.
12/8/2013 1:54:17 AM
do you agree that there is a cost associated with maintaining the capability to provide power to those with solar panels when the sun isn't shining?
12/8/2013 9:30:22 AM
You make it sound as though these people don't pay an electric bill when they use electricity from the grid. Your next argument could just as easily be bitching about people who use CFLs or other energy efficient devices/appliances because they aren't using enough electricity from the power companies. Should people be punished and called "freeloaders" for installing solar water heaters or build a home that uses a thermal envelope instead of a heating/cooling system at all?
12/8/2013 10:13:29 AM
lol, just lol.
12/8/2013 10:21:21 AM
^^^ technically the person with the solar panels is paying for them by providing extra electricity to the grid in the sunny weather when it would most likely be peak usage and the power company might have had to increase power output to meet peak demand.
12/8/2013 10:44:28 AM
^^^Exactly.It's not like these people are building a house in the middle of nowhere, putting panels on it, then demanding the electric company hook them up.The vast majority of people are normal electric customers, who pay to have a meter installed that lets them send power back to the grid. Charing people extra in that situation to do this is idiotic.Maybe the article is not correctly portraying what ALEC is trying to do, but based on their track record, it's most likely something degenerate to society.
12/8/2013 12:03:44 PM
this is why electric vehicles pay a special permit fee
12/8/2013 12:48:00 PM
am i the only one itt who understands the concept of stand-by power and the costs associated with it?
12/8/2013 4:14:41 PM
am i the only one itt who understands the concept of peak power usage and the costs associated with it?in the summer, power companies have to start up less efficient generators or run the larger ones at a less efficient, higher rate to keep up with all the air conditioners running on a sunny day. Having some extra generation from some solar panels would help reduce that amount and would make up for any stand-by power the people with solar would use on cloudy days.
12/8/2013 4:26:50 PM
12/8/2013 4:35:28 PM
Set em up ------------->
12/15/2013 12:50:49 AM