Baldwin Votes Against Internet Free Speech
Tammy Baldwin voted
against internet free speech yesterday [The House voted 225 to 182 on the Online Freedom of Speech Act (H.R. 1606) -- a majority but less than the two-thirds required for a "suspension" bill to clear the House. via
instapundit]. An explanation would be useful. Jim Abrams has
more. There's certainly growing activism online. Adding complexity via more and more laws will be a loss for everyone (which is, perhaps one perspective of Baldwin and others who voted against H.R. 1606). Google News has
more. As is typical, the small players get screwed in these deals, while the special interests on both sides spend money to get around the legal spaghetti, as we saw in the last national elections.
Ed Cone says "Email your congressman and tell him you want to blog without Federal regulation."
Wisconsin's House delegation voted as follows: Mark Green (R) voted Yes along with Ron Kind (D), Jim Sensenbrenner (R) - (I agree on something with Sensenbrenner???) and Mark Ryan (R).
Voting No with Baldwin (D) were Petri (R), Obey (D) and Moore (D).
Send Tammy Baldwin a note with your views on this important, local issue.
California Democrat Zoe Lofgren's
supportive comments on this bill.
Slashdot and
Declan have more.
Posted by James Zellmer at November 3, 2005 6:59 AM
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