A daily dose of philosophical food for your noodle... bacon for your brain!
Showing posts with label Activism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Activism. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 7, 2012

100th Lucidicus Kit Awarded!

By Diana Hsieh

I'm rather late in reposting this January 17th announcement from Jared Rhodes of The Lucidicus Project... but this milestone is fantastic, and I wanted to publicly applaud Jared's work to promote free markets among our future doctors!

I'm proud to announce that today The Lucidicus Project hit a nice milestone: we've awarded our 100th kit! The 100th kit went to Alexander G., a third-year medical student at Boston University.

You can read about Alexander and all the other recipients here.

The Lucidicus Project is a student outreach program that I started in 2005. We give out a "self-defense kit" of books and essays to medical students who are interested in learning about the moral and economic case for capitalism in medicine.

I think it's great that there is a popular movement brewing against Obamacare, but I believe it is absolutely critical to have doctors on board, too. We're cultivating that by reaching out to tomorrow's healthcare leaders--namely, medical students--while they are young and still open to new ideas.

Our next goal is to reach recipient number 200 a lot faster. I'd like to thank everyone who has donated or supported the project in the past in any way. And for anyone interested in doing so now, just go to Support The Center. Or, if you can't help out financially, then just spreading the word online and offline is extremely helpful, too. You never know who is listening!

Cheers,

Jared Rhoads
Center for Objective Health Policy
http://ohpcenter.org
Congratulations, Jared!

Read more...

Friday, January 20, 2012

Hsieh PJM OpEd: SOPA, Guns, and Freedom

By Paul Hsieh

The 1/19/2012 edition of PJMedia published my OpEd, "SOPA, Guns, and Freedom".

I open with the following question:

Q: What does the proposed SOPA (“Stop Online Piracy Act”) legislation have in common with gun control?

A: Both would punish the innocent for the bad acts of a guilty few.
Click through to read more on how this applies to SOPA, gun control, freedom, and limited government.

For more detailed discussion on how SOPA could have "broken the Internet", technically-minded readers might enjoy Paul Vixie's article from 1/11/2012, "Refusing REFUSED". Because of the intense political pressure from anti-SOPA advocates, some legislators have proposed a modified version of SOPA that they claim will avoid some of these technical problems.

Diana has more links and information about SOPA in her recent webcast on this topic, "SOPA and Online Piracy".

(Note: This OpEd was written the day before the 1/18/2012 "blackout" and subsequent political events.)

Read more...

Thursday, January 19, 2012

MPAA on the SOPA/PIPA Blackout

By Diana Hsieh

Senator Chris Dodd, Chairman and CEO of the MPAA (Motion Picture Association of America) released the following statement (PDF) about the blackout of web sites to protest SOPA and PIPA. (Emphasis added by me.)

Only days after the White House and chief sponsors of the legislation responded to the major concern expressed by opponents and then called for all parties to work cooperatively together, some technology business interests are resorting to stunts that punish their users or turn them into their corporate pawns, rather than coming to the table to find solutions to a problem that all now seem to agree is very real and damaging.

It is an irresponsible response and a disservice to people who rely on them for information and use their services. It is also an abuse of power given the freedoms these companies enjoy in the marketplace today. It's a dangerous and troubling development when the platforms that serve as gateways to information intentionally skew the facts to incite their users in order to further their corporate interests.

A so-called "blackout" is yet another gimmick, albeit a dangerous one, designed to punish elected and administration officials who are working diligently to protect American jobs from foreign criminals. It is our hope that the White House and the Congress will call on those who intend to stage this "blackout" to stop the hyperbole and PR stunts and engage in meaningful efforts to combat piracy."
Such words, particularly the paragraph in bold, could be straight from the mouth of that slimy villain Bertram Scudder of Atlas Shrugged. "The gall of these companies to stop offering their free services to the world for so much as a single day! What appalling ingratitude to the state, which is already is so generous in permitting them to operate at all! As for all that disinformation they're spreading... we'll have to do something about that."

Or, as I saw on Facebook:
The MPAA calls the Internet going dark in protest of SOPA and PIPA an "abuse of power." In related news, the Eye of Sauron accuses hobbits of terrorism.
As I stated in my webcast discussion of SOPA and PIPA, to defend intellectual property rights is hugely important. However, such must be done in the context of a general understanding of and respect for individual rights, including rights to property, contract, and free speech.

It's a moral crime to attempt to protect some rights by willfully violating other rights. Alas, the MPAA doesn't or won't understand that.

Read more...

Hsieh RCM OpEd: Why is Creating Value Good, Profits Bad?

By Paul Hsieh

The 1/17/2012 edition of Real Clear Markets has just published my latest OpEd, "Why Is Creating Value Good, Profits Bad?"

It's not directly related to health care policy, but rather the broader theme of defending the virtue of the profit motive in a free, capitalistic society. (I do use insurance as an example of how value is created). Here is the opening:

"Profit" is a dirty word. Profit-seeking businessmen are stock villains in Hollywood movies. "Occupy Wall Street" protestors demand, "People not profits" (whatever that means). Companies reporting healthy profits are automatically assumed to be exploiting customers and can only atone for this by "giving back" to their communities. "Making a profit" has an unsavory, morally suspect taint.

Yet simultaneously, Americans have a far more positive view of the concept of "creating value." The mainstream press lauds visionary businessmen who "create value," such as the late Steve Jobs of Apple. The business literature routinely emphasizes the importance of "creating value." So many organizations wish to be seen as "creating value" that it has become a business cliche, like "best practices" and "thinking outside the box."

But in a free society, "creating value" and "making a profit" are just two sides of the same coin...
(Read the full text of "Why Is Creating Value Good, Profits Bad?")

Those who earn honest profits by creating value should be proud of this fact.

I'd like to thank attorney-blogger Doug Mataconis for providing the Tweet which I cited later in the OpEd, as well as pointing me towards the Wall Street Journal piece on Bain Capital that I cited.

Read more...

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Blackout Your Site for SOPA

By Diana Hsieh

As I explain in this video from Sunday's Philosophy in Action Webcast, the proposed "SOPA" and "PIPA" bills currently under consideration would threaten every web site with shut-down, if that web site contains such much as a single link to copyrighted material anywhere, even if not posted by the owner. These bills, if passed, would break the fundamental architecture of the internet, and enable Chinese-style censorship of the internet.

Tomorrow, a slew of large and small web sites will be blacking themselves out in protest. You can join that by blacking out your own blog -- or, more precisely, redirecting it to a protest page.

SopaStrike offers code that you can add somewhere between the <head> and </head> tags of your blog:

<script>var a=new Date,b=a.getHours()+a.getTimezoneOffset()/60;if(18==a.getDate()&&0==a.getMonth()&&2012==a.getFullYear()&&13<=b&&24>=b)window.location="http://sopastrike.com/strike";</script>
However, that code didn't work for me. Blogger kept giving me errors. So tomorrow, I'm going to manually add the following code between my <head> and </head> tags:
<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="2;url=http://sopastrike.com/strike"> </meta>
That will redirect the page to http://sopastrike.com/strike after two seconds. I'll add it in the morning, then remove it in the evening.

Please consider doing the same -- or at least blogging about the issue. Also, don't forget to e-mail and call your own representatives! You can find their contact information using this form.

Read more...

Video: SOPA and Online Piracy

By Diana Hsieh

In Sunday's Philosophy in Action Webcast, I discussed SOPA and online piracy. The question was:

Should SOPA (Stop Online Piracy Act) be supported or opposed? SOPA was recently introduced to the US House of Representatives, then shelved temporarily, and many people are urging businesses and their representatives to oppose it. Would the bill promote prosperity and creativity by protecting copyright? Or does it justify internet censorship and cripple free access of information through online media?
My answer, in brief:
SOPA and PIPA claim to protect copyright, but in fact, they'd break the fundamental architecture of the internet, subject innocent people to major legal battles, destroy large internet sites, and establish government control over the internet. To top it off, these laws would not stop pirates. They should be opposed.
Here's the video of my full answer:
If you enjoy the video, please "like" it on YouTube and share it with friends in e-mail and social media! You can also throw a bit of extra love in our tip jar.

All posted webcast videos can be found in the Webcast Archives and on my YouTube channel.

Update: While SOPA (the House bill) seems to be comatose, PIPA (the Senate bill) is still alive and kicking. Please call and e-mail your senators! You can also blackout your site, which I'll be doing tomorrow.

Read more...

Why It Doesn't Matter That "Life Begins at Conception"

By Diana Hsieh

In a recent discussion among fellow opponents of "personhood," someone raised the question of how to effectively counter the claim made by "personhood" advocates that "science establishes that life begins at conception [i.e. fertilization]." Here's how I answered... and yes, I did write more than I intended!

Here's my take on these issues:

The discussion of "when human life begins" just isn't relevant to the question of rights in pregnancy or "personhood" for zygotes. Biologically speaking, a zygote is a new human life... but that doesn't imply that the zygote has any rights. The crucial question is philosophical: When does the embryo/fetus become an individual, meaning a person in its own right, such that rights apply to it?

Those questions can (and should) be answered based on a fact-based theory about rights. So to say "God imbues the zygote with the light to life" -- as "personhood" advocates do -- will not suffice. People are entitled to hold that view as a matter of personal faith and practice it in their own lives. Yet for them to attempt to impose it on others by force of law is a violation of our rights, as well as a violation of the proper separation of church and state.

To answer questions about rights in pregnancy, we must first understand the nature and purpose of rights. Rights are not part of our DNA; they're not some kind of organ that develops at some point in fetal gestation. Instead, rights are moral principles that establish boundaries for our social interactions: they permit people to interact only by mutual consent, so that no one is robbed, enslaved, theatened, murdered, and otherwise brutalized by others. Right are -- or should be -- the basic moral principles governing society: by demanding that every person respect the life and autonomy of others, they enable people to live peacefully and happily together.

On that understanding, rights only apply to autonomous beings in society -- meaning to biologically separate individuals. That's why Ari Armstrong and I argue that rights begin at birth -- because only then do you have autonomous individual. The infant is a person, entitled to the full protection of rights. The embryo or fetus is not: it's wholly encased in and hence a part of the pregnant woman. The pregant woman has rights, and her rights protect the embryo or fetus from assault and other harms if she wishes to bring the pregnancy to term -- or permit her to abort, if she doesn't. Any attempt to grant rights to the fetus (even at the point of viability) denies rights to the pregnant woman, including the right to make her own decisions about medical care, giving birth, etc.

Whether you agree with that analysis or not, I'd recommend explicitly rejecting the debate about "when human life begins." That's not the relevant question, and the "personhood" advocates will gain the upper hand by framing the debate in those terms.

Instead, remind them that they're not proposing to write biological textbooks, but to fundamentally change our laws by granting rights to embryos. Insist that they defend that. If they attempt to say -- as they usually do -- that every human life has rights, then you'll have to ask them whether kidneys or lungs have rights. Why not? Because they're not individuals, but just parts of a person. That gets you to the question of what qualifies as a person -- and that's the critical question. Or, you might remind them that all rights are individual rights -- and demand that they explain how the zygote can be an individual when wholly encased in and depending on the pregnant woman.

More generally, remember that our opponents have the burden of proof here. It's clear that infants and onward are persons. We might debate whether viable fetuses are persons. Advocates of "personhood" are making the extraordinary claim that embryos are persons -- before any awareness, before any movement, before the development of functional organs, and even before pregnancy begins at implantation. Such an extraordinary claim requires an extraordinary proof -- meaning a compelling and detailed argument about the nature and source of rights -- not glib assertions about "the tiniest boys and girls." If they fail to provide that proof, then you're entitled to reject their view, even if you're not quite certain of your own.

Moreover, you're entitled to reject "personhood" on the grounds that granting legal rights to embryos would violate the known rights of known persons, such as the right to birth control and in vitro fertilization. (Rights can't conflict -- if they do, then you're not talking about rights but something else like interests or desires.) Hence, to establish that granting rights to embryos would violate the rights of women is to proof enough that "personhood" is wrong.

Whew! I wrote more than expected... but I hope that's helpful!
For further exploration of these issues, I recommend Ari Armstrong's and my recent paper for The Objective Standard: The Assault on Abortion Rights Undermines All Our Liberties, as well as our much longer 2010 policy paper, The 'Personhood' Movement Is Anti-Life.

Read more...

Friday, January 13, 2012

2011 Front Range Objectivism Media Output

By Paul Hsieh

For calendar year 2011, Front Range Objectivism (FRO) members continued their activism and publishing.

In particular, FRO members published the following at the regional and national level:

Articles: 4
OpEds: 73
LTEs: 24
Some of the topics covered include free speech, economics, health care, energy policy and environmentalism, the "Occupy Wall Street" movement, abortion and "personhood", foreign policy, and Colorado politics.

For comparison, our total 2010 output was 5 articles, 68 OpEds, and 27 LTEs. (Basically, we wrote more OpEds, and not quite as many articles and LTEs.)

The majority of this writing was done by people working in their spare time, in addition to their day jobs.

This list does not include numerous TV/radio apperances, talks to community groups, oral and written statements to elected officials, postings to Facebook and Twitter, and blogging.

I'd like to thank my fellow FRO activists for their hard work during 2011. In particular, I'd like to commend Ari Armstrong for being the most prolific writer by a wide margin.

(If I have inadvertently omitted someone's piece, please let me know so I can update this tally.)

The detailed list of our 2011 published output includes the following:

Articles: 4
Paul Hsieh, "Health Care and the Separation of Charity and State", The Objective Standard, Spring 2011.

Ari Armstrong, "Religion in Harry Potter: Do J. K. Rowling’s novels promote religion or undermine it?", eSkeptic, 7/13/2011.

Diana Hsieh and Ari Armstrong, "The Assault on Abortion Rights Undermines All Our Liberties", The Objective Standard, Winter 2011-2012.

Ari Armstrong, Review of "Capitalist Solutions" by Andrew Bernstein, The Objective Standard, Winter 2011-2012.
OpEds: 73
Paul Hsieh, "Will the GOP Walk the Walk on the Constitution?", PajamasMedia, 1/4/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "Best Health Care Political Pull Can Buy", Washington Times, 1/6/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "A Defense of High-Frequency Trading", RealClearMarkets, 1/7/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Resolve to expand, use and produce", Grand Junction Free Press, 1/7/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "Ritter’s “New Energy Economy” Based on Old Fallacies", Independence Institute, 1/11/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "'Citizens' Budget' points toward a wiser, more frugal government", Grand Junction Free Press, 1/21/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "How About School Choice For Everyone?", Grand Junction Free Press, 2/4/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "America's Other Drug Problem", PajamasMedia, 2/5/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "What Kind of Health Care Competition Do We Want?", Liberty Ink Journal, February 2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "GJ Could Use Some 'Common Sense Economics'", Grand Junction Free Press, 2/18/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "The Wisconsin Protests and the New Medical Ethics", PajamasMedia, 2/21/2011.

Brian Schwartz, "How to Insure Americans with Pre-Existing Conditions", PajamasMedia, 2/24/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "Law should protect wanted fetuses while allowing abortions", Denver Daily News, 3/1/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Guarantee to unions the same rights the rest of us have", Grand Junction Free Press, 3/4/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "Socialized Medicine: Theory Versus Practice ", Liberty Ink Journal, March 2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Stripper welfare illustrates why charity should be voluntary", Grand Junction Free Press, 3/18/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "TV reporters to register with the federal government", Grand Junction Free Press, 4/1/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "The Homer Simpson Approach to Social Security", PajamasMedia, 4/12/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Walter Walker opposed Grand Junction's socialists", Grand Junction Free Press, 4/15/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "We Call It 'Rationing,' Obama Calls It 'Medicare Independent Payment Advisory Board'", PajamasMedia, 4/22/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Films Show Fight Against Tyranny", Grand Junction Free Press, 4/29/2011.

Brian Schwartz, "Don't get mugged by a politically controlled insurance exchange", Denver Post, 5/6/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "Massachusetts: The Canary in the Coal Mine for ObamaCare'", PajamasMedia, 5/12/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Colorado's Campaign Laws Throw Common Sense Out the Window", Grand Junction Free Press, 5/13/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "Public's 'right to know' can clash with right to free speech", Colorado Springs Gazette, 5/14/2011.

Brian Schwartz, "Parents should value children's health more than sweets and booze", Health Policy Solutions, 5/17/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "How many criminals has Colorado use tax created?", Salida Mountain Mail, 5/25/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Channel 11 piece peddles economic nonsense", Colorado Springs Gazette, 5/28/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "Here comes Obamacare's Big Brother: Accountable Care Organizations", Christian Science Monitor, 6/2/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Spending limits protect against factions", Grand Junction Free Press, 6/10/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "Dude, Where's My Freedom?", PajamasMedia, 6/11/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "A Doctor Exposes Obama's Health Care Fallacy", TownHall.com, 6/20/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Colorado Slips In Freedom Index", Grand Junction Free Press, 6/24/2011.

Brian Schwartz, "The poor keep their money for luxuries", Boulder Daily Camera, 6/26/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "Why the 'Unexpected' Keeps Happening", PajamasMedia, 6/29/2011.

Brian T. Schwartz, "Gov. Hickenlooper's Veto of SB 213 Insults Low-Income Parents", Huffington Post, 7/6/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "Harry Potter explores life's big questions", Boulder Weekly, 7/6/2011

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Stop the hatchet job on medical marijuana shops", Grand Junction Free Press, 7/8/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "The Coming Collectivization of American Health Care", PajamasMedia, 7/11/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Left and right assault free speech", Grand Junction Free Press, 7/22/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Corporations aren't people, so stop taxing them", Grand Junction Free Press, 8/5/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "Reaction to Lamborn's "tar baby" comment is typical GOP-bashing", Denver Post, 8/7/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "Don’t Shoot the Downgrade Messenger", PajamasMedia, 8/9/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Rights violations, nihilism underlie today's bad news", Grand Junction Free Press, 8/19/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "How ObamaCare Plays Games with Your Life", PajamasMedia, 9/1/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Our nation needs shared liberty, not sacrifice", Grand Junction Free Press, 9/2/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "Let's Model ObamaJobs After ObamaCare!", PajamasMedia, 9/7/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "My iPad and My Hip Fracture", KevinMD.com, 9/12/2011.

Paul Hsieh and Michelle Minton, "Durbin's Bill is Dietary Paternalism", Human Events, 9/13/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Obama's unprincipled class warfare endangers the nation", Grand Junction Free Press, 9/16/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "Health Insurance and Personal Responsibility", PajamasMedia, 9/24/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "Elizabeth Warren's 'Social Contract' an Ideological Fantasy", PajamasMedia, 9/28/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Prop. 103 would hurt working families, kill jobs", Grand Junction Free Press, 9/16/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "'Fair Tax' Looks Ugly in the Details", Objective Standard Blog, 10/1/2011.

Brian Schwartz, "Proposition 103 is about more money for the teachers union", Denver Post, 10/2/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "Don't Blame Capitalism for High Health Insurance Costs", The Undercurrent, 10/4/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "Fuel Controls Violate Rights and Stifle Markets", Objective Standard Blog, 10/7/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "How to Actually 'Separate Government from the Corporations'", Objective Standard Blog, 10/11/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Parable of shoe stores, bureaucrats", Grand Junction Free Press, 10/14/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "The Justice of Income Inequality Under Capitalism", Objective Standard Blog, 10/19/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "Yes, President Obama, We Can't Wait...", Objective Standard Blog, 10/25/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "Student Loan Scheme Just Another Rights-Violating Bailout", Objective Standard Blog, 10/28/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Thank the Industrial Revolution for longer life", Grand Junction Free Press, 10/28/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "In Praise of Capitalist Inequality", PJ Media, 11/6/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Listeria outbreak cries for changes, not hysteria", Grand Junction Free Press, 11/11/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "Call It Exuberant Friday, Not 'Black Friday'", Objective Standard Blog, 11/23/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Offer Gifts of Liberty This Season", Grand Junction Free Press, 11/25/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "Screening for Terrorists vs. Screening for Cancer", PJ Media, 11/30/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "Contra Occupiers, Profits Embody Justice", Objective Standard Blog, 12/2/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "To Protect Rights, Phase Out Payroll Tax Completely", Objective Standard Blog, 12/9/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Gessler Emerges as the Free Speech Secretary of State", Grand Junction Free Press, 12/9/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "Obama's Osawatomie Shakedown: Critics' Roundup", Objective Standard Blog, 12/15/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "Tebowmania isn't just for Christians", Denver Post, 12/19/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "Would a President Gingrich Ban The Birth Control Pill?", PJ Media, 12/21/2011.

Linn and Ari Armstrong, "'Twas the night before they occupied the North Pole", Grand Junction Free Press, 12/23/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "Who Will Your Doctor Work For Under ObamaCare?", TownHall.com, 12/30/2011.
LTEs: 24
Brian Schwartz, "How to Keep New Years Resolutions", Boulder Daily Camera, 1/1/2011.

Brian Schwartz, "Colorado Medicaid reform: federal matching funds promote waste", Boulder Daily Camera, 1/15/2011.

Santiago Valenzuela, "Gun-clip capacity and the availability of firearms", Denver Post, 1/28/2011.

Brian Schwartz, "Education needs freedom, not phony 'investments'", Boulder Daily Camera, 1/29/2011.

Brian Schwartz, "Public-sector unions: Two wolves & a sheep vote on what’s for lunch", Boulder Daily Camera, 2/26/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "Questioning the savings under health reform", Denver Post, 3/3/2011.

Justin Blackman, "Are regulators lax about hydraulic fracturing?", Denver Post, 3/11/2011.

Brian Schwartz, "Repeal the federal gas tax, regardless of oil prices", Boulder Daily Camera, 3/17/2011.

Tobin Spratte, "Ayn Rand's Aims in 'Atlas Shrugged'", Denver Post, 5/1/2011.

Brian Schwartz, "Hickenlooper's veto of bill to hike CHP+ fees", Denver Post, 6/4/2011.

Ari Armstrong, "Lawsuit against Gessler over campaign finance", Denver Post, 6/17/2011.

Martin Buchanan, "Ayn Rand's Ideas About Charity", Denver Post, 6/23/2011.

Brian Schwartz, "Red-light cameras can blame drivers for poor traffic engineering", Boulder Daily Camera, 7/2/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "Liberator, Not Thief", Boston Globe, 7/12/2011.

Brian Schwartz, "Debt ceiling & reducing deficit without raising taxes", Boulder Daily Camera, 7/16/2011.

Brian Schwartz, "Colorado Sex Offender Act imposes excessive penalties, more economical alternatives exist", Boulder Daily Camera, 7/30/2011.

Paul Hsieh, "Thank You, Steve Jobs", American Thinker, 8/25/2011.

Brian Schwartz, "My advice to college students", Boulder Daily Camera, 8/27/2011.

Brian Schwartz, "Paul Krugman’s space aliens won’t create jobs, repealing health control law will", Boulder Daily Camera, 9/10/2011.

Brian Schwartz, "Occupy Wall Street", Boulder Daily Camera, 10/8/2011.

Brian Schwartz, "Prop. 103 supporters: You can still donate more of your own earnings to tax-funded schools", Boulder Daily Camera, 11/5/2011.

Brian Schwartz, "Consumers Have a Right to the Incandescent Bulb", American Physics Society News, November 2011. http://www.aps.org/publications/apsnews/201111/letters.cfm

Diana Hsieh, "Reforming Colorado's campaign finance rules", Denver Post, 11/29/2011.

David Weatherell, "In defense of the GOP", Denver Post, 12/2/2011.

Brian Schwartz, "Privatize USPS", Boulder Daily Camera, 12/3/2011.

Read more...

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Hsieh PJM OpEd: The Truth About RomneyCare

By Paul Hsieh

PJMedia has published my latest piece, "The Truth About RomneyCare".

Here is the opening:

Now that Mitt Romney has shown himself politically vulnerable after Iowa, more people are taking a closer look at his claims about the "RomneyCare" health care plan he helped create as Massachusetts governor. In this interview from April 2010 which recently recirculated last month, Romney attempts to draw some distinctions (as well as acknowledge similarities) between his RomneyCare plan and the national ObamaCare plan.

One of the alleged virtues of RomneyCare over ObamaCare is that Romney's plan does not contain "price controls," whereas ObamaCare does. But how does this stack up against reality?
I then discuss several forms of price controls that have already been (or will soon be) implemented in Massachusetts, and their consequences.

(Read the full text of "The Truth About RomneyCare".)

Read more...

Thursday, January 5, 2012

Remembering John Lewis

By Paul Hsieh



I remember many things about John Lewis.

I remember his excellent lectures on ancient Greece at the OCON summer conferences. I remember a wonderful impromptu jazz piano performance he gave one evening at the Seaport Hotel in Boston. I remember when he was our house guest in Colorado raking horse manure, while telling fascinating tales about the battle tactics of the mounted Mongol archers.

But what I remember most about John was how he helped me regain my will to fight for my values back in 2009. At that time, the battle over ObamaCare health legislation was in full swing and I had become deeply discouraged. It seemed that despite all my blogging and letter writing, I wasn't getting anywhere. My efforts seemed futile and pointless, like someone trying to fight a raging forest fire armed only with a tiny squirt gun. I was on the verge of quitting health care activism altogether.

But then one of John's articles on ObamaCare got picked up by Rush Limbaugh.

Rush quoted extensively from John's piece on his radio show, sending John's words to millions of Americans. John's example showed me that a single man, armed with the right ideas -- and willing to articulate them with clarity and conviction -- can indeed make a difference.

Fans of Ayn Rand's book The Fountainhead may remember the scene when a young man is struggling to find his purpose in life after graduating from college. He finally finds his inspiration after seeing the recently completed Monadnock resort built by architect Howard Roark. For that young man, seeing another man's achievement gave him "the courage to face a lifetime".

John did the same for me. Seeing John's ideas reach millions of eager Americans helped rekindle my enthusiasm to continue my own personal activism. His success gave me a spiritually vital "shot in the arm" at a time I needed it the most. John helped me understand that one is most alive when one is working to make one's values real. In other words, John helped me understand what Ayn Rand meant when she said, "Anyone who fights for the future, lives in it today."

Thank you, John, for helping me find my courage for my lifetime.

Read more...

Friday, December 30, 2011

Hsieh: Who Will Your Doctor Work For Under ObamaCare?

By Paul Hsieh

The 12/30/2011 TownHall.com has published my latest OpEd, "Who Will Your Doctor Work For Under ObamaCare?"

The theme is that ObamaCare will pressure doctors to sacrifice their individual patients' welfare for a collectivist concept of "social justice".

Here is the opening:

Suppose you move to Las Vegas, and you hire a real estate agent to help you buy a house. She returns with several inappropriate choices -- all too expensive and too far from your work. She explains, "I know these aren't what you wanted. But you'd really help the struggling Nevada housing market by purchasing one of these."

Most people would fire her on the spot. Your real estate agent has a professional obligation to look out for your individual interests, not some nebulous "Nevada housing market." Yet under ObamaCare, your doctor will be increasingly pressured into sacrificing your individual medical interests for a nebulous "social justice"...
(Read the full text of "Who Will Your Doctor Work For Under ObamaCare?")

I'd like to thank Diana for her assistance editing an early version of this piece.

I'd also like to thank Dr. Hal Scherz, Dan Rene, and Docs4PatientCare for helping to arrange its publication!

Read more...

Monday, December 26, 2011

News Media on Colorado's Campaign Finance Reforms

By Diana Hsieh

The December 15th hearing on campaign finance reform attracted a fair bit of news coverage.

(1) An AP story by Kristen Wyatt was published in the Pueblo Chieftain and the Aspen Times so far. I'm quoted in it:

"They will be helpful for people like me, who are part-time activists, so they don't lose their shirts in a campaign-finance lawsuit," said Diana Hsieh, who campaigned last year against an unsuccessful ballot measure that would have banned abortion.
I'd hoped to see the article appear in more venues -- not just because I'm quoted -- but because the article was a good and fair account of the debate over the proposed rule changes. But alas, that seems unlikely to happen now.

(2) In an article in the Durango Herald, Ari Armstrong was quoted (although wrongly identified), followed by that horrid quote from Senator Morse:
"I think it's a travesty and a mockery of the First Amendment that Colorado citizens are being dragged into court for daring to engage in the political process," said Ari Armstrong, a libertarian activist from Grand Junction.

But state Sen. John Morse, D-Colorado Springs, said people who want to run campaigns that persuade others how to vote need to follow the rules of transparency. "Turns out that complying with these things is complicated and does take a lawyer, but that's the price of transparency," Morse said.
(3) The article in the Denver Post focused on the very confusing debate about the filing deadlines.

(4) Also, since I don't think that I blogged about it before, but in early December, Vince Carroll penned an excellent op-ed in support of Colorado Secretary of State Scott Gessler. It's worth a read.

If you want to keep up with the news on this topic, you can follow the Facebook page that I've created:

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Saturday, December 24, 2011

November 2011 OActivist Compilation

By Tammy

Here is a list of items published by members of OActivists list for November 2011:

Op-Eds

1. Paul Hsieh, M.D., "In Praise of Capitalist Equality" PJMedia, November 6, 2011.

2. Linn & Ari Armstrong, "Offer gifts of liberty this season, Grand Junction Free Press", November 29, 2011.

3. Paul Hsieh, M.D., "Screening for Terrorists vs. Screening for Cancer", PJMedia, November 30, 2011, and Instapundit, November 30, 2011.

Letters to the Editor

1. Amesh A. Adalja, M.D., "End state store system", Butler Eagle, November 4, 2011.

2. Jordan McGillis, "Why I Won't Occupy", The Setonian, November 10, 2011.

3. Amesh A. Adalja, M.D., "Government's Fault", Pittsburgh Tribune Review, November 13, 2011.

4. Rob Abiera, "Boundary issues", Oklahoma Gazette, November 16, 2011.

5. Dr. Diana Hsieh, "Reforming Colorado's campaign finance rules", The Denver Post (published 11/29/11), and Denverpost.com, November 28, 2011.

6. Amesh A. Adalja, M.D., "Right reading", Baltimore City Paper, November 30, 2011.

Articles

1. Linn and Ari Armstrong, "Listeria outbreak cries for changes, not hysteria", Grand Junction Free Press, November 11, 2011.

Non-Objectivist Blogs

1. Joshua Lipana, "Islamist terror a big political issue in the Philippines", American Thinker Blog, November 4, 2011.

2. Charlotte Cushman, "Should Churches Be Helping Occupy Wall Street?", American Thinker Blog, November 21, 2011.

Quote / Mention

1. Kelly Valenzuela and Diana Hsieh, "Coloradans Share Their Experience with Protests, Free Speech", Colorado Public Radio, October 26, 2011. Kelly's remarks are on the web page, and Diana's are on the audio segment.

2. Dr. Diana Hsieh quoted by Dr. Milton R.Wolf, "WOLF: My Challenge to Occupy Wall Street", The Washington Times, November 1, 2011.

3. Nathan Fatal's New England Objectivist Society was introduced to UMass, "Student creates New England Objectivist Society", The Collegian, November 13, 2011.

This compilation does not include personal or Objectivist blog posts, web comments, letters to politicians, radio show call-ins, videos, etc., all of which actively spread our message and advance our goals. Please contact me privately if your published item was inadvertently left off the compilation, or if you have any administrative questions or issues.

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Wednesday, December 21, 2011

My Updated Testimony on Colorado's Campaign Finance Rules

By Diana Hsieh

Last week, I posted my testimony on the proposed changes to Colorado's campaign finance rules. But based on the discussion at the hearing, I realized that I was wrong on certain points. So on Tuesday, I revised and re-submitted that testimony. That's below.

You can find all of the testimony submitted so far on the Secretary of State's website. I plan to blog some of the better testimony over the next few weeks.

Remember, you have until this Friday, December 23rd, to submit testimony in defense of free speech. You can submit it by e-mailing Andrea Gyger at andrea.gyger@sos.state.co.us. (Reference "8 CCR 1505-6," and please indicate if you want your e-mail address and any other personal information submitted included in or omitted from the published version of your testimony.)

My testimony is also available as a PDF.

Comments on the Secretary of State's Proposed Rules Concerning Campaign Finance

Diana Hsieh, Ph.D
diana@dianahsieh.com
Coalition for Secular Government
http://www.SecularGovernment.us
December 20th, 2011


My name is Diana Hsieh. I'm a philosopher by trade, writing and speaking on the application of philosophy to the challenges of everyday life. I'm not particularly active in politics, except on the issue of abortion rights. In 2008 and 2010, I worked with Ari Armstrong against the proposed "personhood" amendments to our state constitution. We didn't just want to see these measures defeated: we wanted to explain and defend our view of the proper basis of abortion rights. The "personhood" ballot measures were a prime opportunity for us to do that.

Unfortunately, our efforts were seriously hampered by Colorado's onerous and intrusive campaign finance laws. The same will happen in the upcoming 2012 election, despite the proposed rule changes. As a citizen activist, that's extremely frustrating and disheartening. Nonetheless, I support most of the proposed rule changes as an important step in the right direction. They clarify the demands on people who choose to speak about Colorado elections, and they limit the legal risks of doing so. Activists like myself still won't have anything close to free speech, but we'll have slightly freer speech.

To explain why I support most of the proposed rule changes, I'd like to briefly recount my experiences in the 2008 and 2010 elections. Then I'll explain my reasons for supporting the proposed rule changes pertaining to issue committees, albeit with some reservations. (I described my experiences in complying with Colorado's campaign finance laws in more detail in the May 3rd, 2011 hearing on raising the reporting threshold for issue committees from $200 to $5000. That testimony is included below.)

My Experiences, In Brief

In 2008, Ari Armstrong and I wrote a policy paper against Amendment 48, the proposed "personhood" amendment to Colorado's constitution. I published it under the auspices of the "Coalition for Secular Government," which was then and still is now, little more than me and a blog. Ari and I wrote the paper without compensation, and I spent a few hundred dollars of my own money to promote it.

Only by happenstance, I learned that I was obliged to file campaign finance reports. With my first non-zero report, the hassle of typing in the names and addresses of Office Max, The UPS Store, and the Post Office (where I spent just under $200 in total on office supplies, photocopies, and stamps to distribute the paper) convinced me that to spend any money to promote our paper was too much trouble. I felt that chilling effect on my speech very keenly.

In 2010, Ari Armstrong and I revised and expanded our paper to oppose Amendment 62, the next "personhood" amendment on the ballot. This time, the work was funded by generous donors, in the form of 63 pledges ranging from $4 to $300 for a total of $2795. These people, most of whom I knew personally, wanted Ari and me to speak for them, to explain and defend our common view of abortion rights, and we were eager to do that.

When I reviewed the campaign finance regulations, I was appalled to discover that I was required to report the name and address of any contributor giving $20 or more, plus the occupation and employer for any donation over $100. Why was I so upset? First, the process of compiling and filing the reports was extremely burdensome, eating away hours that I could have spent opposing Amendment 62. Second, my contributors were entitled to privacy, particularly on a controversial topic like abortion. Third, I feared that even a trivial error in a report could result in massive fines, plus attorney fees to defend myself. The little money that I'd reserved to promote the paper, plus my own payment for writing the paper, would quickly vanish: I'd be forced to sacrifice my personal savings just to exercise my right to free speech. Ultimately, the result was basically the same as in 2008: I was unwilling undergo the troubles and risks of filing more reports, and so I opted not to raise any funds for our work beyond those 63 pledges. Again, I felt the chilling effect of these campaign finance laws.

Based on these experiences, I know that Colorado's campaign finance laws constitute a major violation of free speech rights. First and foremost, free speech means that people are entitled to express and advocate their ideas without forcible inference from the government or anyone else. Second, free speech means that people are entitled to join together in their speech: they have a right to pool their resources and their talents so as to more effectively express and advocate shared values and ideas. Third, free speech means that people are entitled to say as much or as little as they please, including speaking (or funding others' speech) anonymously.

Here in Colorado, we do not have free speech in elections. We the people cannot join together to express our views on upcoming elections--not unless we register with the government and submit regular reports disclosing our identities and minute details of our finances. Any failure to do so--even if only some trivial error--can result in being dragged to court by our political opponents and then being forced to pay hundreds if not thousands of dollars in fines. In essence, we speak about elections not by right, but by government permission.

Moreover, to obtain that government permission to speak on elections, people must be willing and able to navigate a labyrinth of red tape and paperwork. They must be willing and able to pay thousands of dollars in attorney fees and fines. Progressive activists and politicians demand even more "transparency" (i.e. more burdensome and intrusive disclosures) and more "accountability" (i.e. more hefty fines for errors). They know that the current rules stifle speech--particularly the speech of small groups with little money. Their lack of concern for this repression of citizen activists reveals that their goal is not a more informed electorate. Instead, these progressives seek to expand their own political power by any means, including forcibly silencing their opponents. That's disgraceful.

Free speech requires nothing less than repealing or overturning all of Colorado's campaign finance laws. In the meantime, however, the campaign finance rules can be made less confusing, less onerous, and less risky. For the most part, the proposed rule changes are a huge step in that direction, and that's why I support them. Here, I'd like to discuss four proposed changes: (1) the definition of an issue committee, (2) privacy for contributors worried about safety, (3) penalties and waivers, and (4) aggregating contributions and expenditures.

(1) The Definition of an Issue Committee

As I understand the current rules, any group of two or more persons qualifies as an "issue committee" if the group (a) works for or against a ballot measure as a "major purpose" and (b) spends or receives more than $200.

Proposed Rule 4.1 affirms that the $200 reporting threshold is raised to $5000, although litigation is pending. I support that change: small groups with limited resources should be able to advocate for or against ballot measures without incurring the onerous burden of registering, opening a new bank account, and then reporting their finances. As I said in the May hearing, however, I'd like the reporting threshold to be raised even higher, at least to $10,000.

Proposed Rule 1.12.3 defines a "major purpose" as meaning that more than 30% of the group's spending concerns a ballot measure. That test seems reasonable in the abstract, yet in practice, that would disproportionately burden small activist groups. Instead, I propose that the $5000 reporting threshold should be used for the "major purpose" test too: if a group spends $5000 or more on a ballot measure, then they should be required to report as an issue committee, whether that spending constitutes 5% or 95% of their total spending.

Mostly, however, the campaign finance rules should clearly identify which groups qualify as issue committees, so that people can know whether they're obliged to report or not. Under the current rules, where "major purpose" is left undefined, groups doing any work related to ballot measures must file purely as a defensive tactic.

However, I'm doubtful that any bright line test for "major purpose" could be applied to my own ever-expanding work against the "personhood" movement. In the 2012 election season, the Coalition for Secular Government won't be narrowly focused on defeating Colorado's likely "personhood" amendment: we plan to work against "personhood" measures on the ballot in other states, as well as against the "personhood" movement and for abortion rights more broadly. Any attempt to estimate what spending concerned Colorado's ballot measure would be arbitrary. Hence, I'll have to register and file reports as an issue committee, even if only as self-defense. I don't see any way to apply the "major purpose" criterion objectively in a case like ours, where work on the ballot measure is part and parcel of a much larger and broader advocacy effort. Nonetheless, I support a clarification of this rule. The current language can be interpreted any which way, and the proposed definition of a "major purpose" would clarify the criterion for many groups.

(2) Privacy for Contributors Worried about Safety

By the current rules, reports must include personal information about contributors, such as names and addresses (if the contribution is $20 or more) and occupations and employers (if the contribution is $100 or more). That personal information is then published on the internet for anyone to review. The publication of sensitive personal information about contributors has been of particular concern for me, given the harassment and even violence perpetrated by some anti-abortion activists against abortion rights supporters. In 2010, I called the Secretary of State's office to see whether the home addresses of my contributors could be kept private based on such concerns, and I was told "No." That was false, as I learned at the December 15th hearing. (The policy is included in the 2010 manual, but I missed it.)

The current rules permit people who fear for their own or their family's safety due to information disclosed on any campaign finance report to request that such information be redacted. Proposed Rule 20 would extend the protection offered to redacted information: it would not be "subject to disclosure under the Colorado Open Records Act." That's good, but I would suggest instituting a well-defined and speedy process for redacting such information, so that sensitive information is not ever released on the web. Otherwise, the protection is basically worthless, and people who fear for their safety will not donate to political causes. I would suggest that the group filing the report should be able to flag certain records as private, and those records would not be published unless the application for privacy from the contributor (perhaps required to be submitted at the same time as the report, or within a few days thereof) was denied by the Secretary of State's office.

Moreover, if possible, I would recommend allowing the redaction of information for more reasons than just "safety." People have a variety of perfectly valid reasons for wishing to contribute to causes anonymously, such as wishing to avoid unpleasant conflicts with co-workers, clients, or neighbors over politics. A person with unpopular opinions should not be forced by law to risk ostracism or unemployment to support a political cause. More broadly, a person should have the right to speak anonymously, and, by extension, the right to enable others to speak for him while remaining anonymous. That's not possible under Colorado's campaign finance laws, and it's just another way that they violate free speech rights.

(3) Penalties and Waivers

Under the current rules, failures to comply with the campaign finance rules can incur fines of up to $50 per day per violation, without limit. Fines have often grown far beyond a group's ability to pay. According to the 2010 manual, the Secretary of State's office grants waivers and reductions of fines at their discretion using the vague "good cause" standard. That makes the process ripe for abuse, including partisan favoritism and other forms of bias.

In addition, fines for campaign finance violations are used to silence speech. Groups (usually on the left) can and do sue over minor errors in order to drain the resources of political opponents (usually on the right) by forcing them to spend limited funds on fines and attorney fees rather than advocacy. That's not just dirty politics: it's a violation of the free speech rights of the people who contributed those funds.

As far as I understand, proposed Rule 18 would establish clear standards for penalties and waivers. Waivers would be granted for specified good causes, penalties would start small then increase with successive offenses, penalties would be limited based on the resources of the group, and mistakes would be penalized far less than willful failures to comply. Also, total penalties would be limited to $50 per day per report for 180 days, i.e. $9000 per report.

These changes are hugely important, in my opinion. The possibility of incurring hundreds if not thousands of dollars in fines for failing to comply with wildly confusing campaign finance rules should terrify any sane person. More than anything else, the current possibility of ridiculously large fines, totally disconnected from any intentional wrongdoing and out of proportion to the group's ability to pay, silences political speech in Colorado.

The current rules, in fact, make election speech into a privilege of the wealthy, for only they can afford to pay the current fines. That's terribly unjust: the poor should have just as much right to speak as the rich. That's why I'd recommend limiting the fines even further to at most $1000 per report. I'd rather see a thousand well-funded groups pay fines for campaign finance violations as "cost of doing business" than silence one ordinary citizen activist.

(4) Aggregating Contributions and Expenditures

By the current rules, contributions of $20 or more must be itemized on reports, including the name and address of the contributor. The rules don't say any more than that, and hence, a person can give multiple donations of less than $20, and those donations are never itemized. The same applies to expenditures.

Rule 10.1 changes that policy: if contributions from a given source for a given reporting period total $20 or more, then they must be aggregated and itemized on the report, even if each individual contribution is less than $20. (The same does not apply to the $100 threshold for occupation and employer, however.) Rule 10.2 does the same for expenditures: for each reporting period, expenditures to the same source must be aggregated, then itemized if over $20.

I'm partly sympathetic to the goal of this rule change. The current rules are unclear, and to allow many donations under $20 from the same source without itemization seems like a "loophole" that should be closed. However, to close this "loophole" entails dramatically increasing the burdens imposed on issue committees, such as myself. How so?

Under the current rules, I need only collect personal data about a contributor if he contributes $20 or more. That's a ridiculously low threshold, but at least it's a bright line for data collection. Under the new rule, however, I'd have to collect personal data from every contributor, even from someone who just gives me a $1 bill. Why? That person might give me twenty such bills over the course of the reporting period, and in case that happens, I need to identify all donations from that person in my records, add them up for the reporting period, and then itemize them in my report if they total $20 or more. At that point, I might as well just itemize every contribution (and every expenditure too), whatever the amount, just to be safe.

The burden of complying with this rule change would be enormous for many groups, particularly those of us who rely on small donations. Oddly, the rule change would encourage groups not to accept donations smaller than $20, simply for the sake of clarity in disclosure requirements, which would effectively silence people unable or unwilling to donate so much. Moreover, contributors would be burdened too, as they'd be obliged to give their name and address with every contribution. Also, the names and addresses of donors giving less than $20 would likely become part of the public record in any lawsuit. In effect, this rule change would make small anonymous contributions impossible, and that might deter many people from contributing any dollar amount. Finally, the unscrupulous political opponents of an issue committee could easily abuse this new rule. A person could make a few small contributions to an opponent over the course of a reporting period, some in cash or otherwise anonymously, in the hope of entrapping the group in a campaign finance violation. And then, if his name and address wasn't listed on the report, he could sue.

Also, proposed Rule 10.1.2 says that any contribution from an LLC must be itemized, whatever the amount. According to the 2010 manual, that's not currently required for issue committees, but only for political committees. Extending the rule to issue committees would impose a serious burden. In my own case, I'd have to inquire with every contributor to ensure that the funds are not from an LLC, for if so, I'd have to somehow flag that contribution in my records to remind myself to itemize it on the report. For me, simply refusing contributions from LLCs might be easier. If so, the rule would have the effect of stifling the speech of people who choose to organize themselves in a corporate form.

For these reasons, I strongly oppose these rule changes on contributions and expenditures. The new rules seems easy, simple, and fair in the abstract. Yet in practice, they would impose a major burden on issue committees and become fodder for partisan abuse. I urge the Secretary of State to reconsider these changes.

Summary

In summary, I support most of the proposed changes to Colorado's campaign finance rules. The changes would make the rules less confusing, less onerous, and less risky. That's good for free speech and good for fair elections. However, our ultimate goal must be fully free speech in Colorado's elections--and that requires the elimination of all campaign finance laws. Mandatory disclosures do not make elections "transparent," and hefty fines do not make groups "accountable." Disclosures and their associated penalties only silence people, particularly ordinary citizens seeking to speak their minds.

Contact Information

Diana Hsieh, Ph.D
diana@dianahsieh.com

Coalition for Secular Government
http://www.SecularGovernment.us
P.O. Box 851
Sedalia, CO 80135

Links

Coalition for Secular Government

Coalition for Secular Government on Amendment 48 (2008)

Coalition for Secular Government on Amendment 62 (2010)

Addendum: My Experience with Colorado's Campaign Finance Laws

The following testimony was submitted for the May 3, 2011 hearing concerning raising the reporting threshold for issue committees.

My name is Diana Hsieh. I'm an ordinary citizen, albeit with a Ph.D in philosophy. I earn my living my writing and speaking on applying ethical principles to daily life. I'm not a political activist by trade. I have strong views on politics, but I'm not terribly interested in engaging in the rough and tumble of politics.

On occasion, however, I jump into the fray, usually because I care about some issue so deeply that I just can't stand to remain silent. That's almost always some issue local to Colorado. That happened in 2008, with Amendment 48, then again in 2010 with Amendment 62. Those were the "personhood" amendments, and I opposed them vehemently.

Here, I wish to recount how the existing campaign finance rules impaired my ability and willingness to speak against those amendments. Then I will explain why the proposed revisions will have the very same chilling effects on the speech of ordinary citizens like me. Finally, I will suggest changes to the current system that would substantially protect freedom of speech within the constraints of Colorado's constitution.

In 2008, Ari Armstrong and I wrote and published an 18-page policy paper against Amendment 48. We didn't merely want to oppose the advocates of "personhood," we also wanted to offer an alternative to the major pro-choice coalition, which we regarded as compromising on the moral issues. They didn't speak for us; we wanted to speak for ourselves.

Ari and I published that 2008 policy paper under the auspices of the "Coalition for Secular Government." That's a nonprofit corporation registered in Colorado, but really, that's just me and a blog. The Coalition for Secular Government didn't solicit or accept donations, and I paid for its few expenses personally. Consistent with that, Ari and I wrote the paper without any compensation whatsoever: it was purely a volunteer effort. After we completed the paper, I spent a few hundred dollars of my own money to print and mail copies of the paper to media and activists in Colorado.

At the time, I didn't imagine that these activities would be subject to any campaign regulations. After all, I was just exercising my right to speak freely on an issue that I cared deeply about -- or so I thought. However, just to be sure, I checked the web site of Colorado's Secretary of State. I found nothing relevant to my activities, so I thought I was in the clear.

However, I was very wrong in that. A friend knowledgeable about Colorado's campaign finance laws told me about the regulations for "issue groups." So I went back to the web site of Colorado's Secretary of State, searching for information. Even once I knew what to look for, it took me over an hour to find the relevant regulations. Even after I read them again and again, I was still quite confused about how to comply with the law.

More importantly, I was appalled that my home state forbade me from speaking freely on an ballot issue that I cared deeply about -- even just to spend a few hundred dollars of my own money promoting a paper that I wrote with a friend. Even worse, I could be subject to hefty fines for failing to comply with laws that I could neither find by diligent searching, nor understand by careful reading.

In addition, I found complying with the regulations -- entering store names, addresses, and amounts for my few purchases of photocopies, envelopes, labels, and stamps -- to be so onerous that, after filing my first report, I swore that I'd not promote the paper in any way that required money thereafter. Hence, the burdens of complying with the law -- even just to spend a few hundred dollars -- were sufficient to silence me, in part.

The same problems arose in 2010 when Ari Armstrong and I wanted to significantly revise and expand our paper for Amendment 62. Instead working for weeks on the new paper for free, we used a new business model that I'd developed in the meantime to solicit pledges to fund the project. People who supported our work could pledge to fund it in any amount they chose. If $2000 or more was pledged in total, we would update and expand the policy paper. People would only pay their pledges if we completed the work by the deadline. Much to our delight, we received 63 pledges, ranging from $4 to $300, for a total of $2795. These contributors agreed with our position, and they wanted us to speak for them in defense of abortion rights.

Ari and I were enthused and motivated by these pledges. They were concrete proof that we weren't alone: other people cared about what we were doing and supported us with their own hard-earned dollars. Plus, we were very grateful to be able to pay ourselves for the many hours of work required to revise, publish, and promote the new paper. With these funds, we could also buy Facebook ads to promote the paper.

Alas, my enthusiasm wore off quickly when I remembered the reporting requirements for "issue committees." Once again, I had trouble finding the rules: I had to call the office of the Secretary of State to be pointed to their location on the web site. When I realized that I'd have to report the names and addresses of most of our contributors, I was deeply distraught. That reporting of personal information was required for any contribution of $20 or more. For contributions of $100 or more, I had to report the person's employer and its address too.

I was upset because such reporting violated the privacy of my contributors. As part of their right to free speech, people should be able to speak anonymously -- or fund the speech of others anonymously. These campaign finance regulations forbid that for any contribution of $20 or above, and that's wrong. Voters do not have a right to know the sources of funding for other people's political speech, any more than your neighbor has a right to know what you got for your birthday or what you buy at the bookstore.

Moreover, I feared serious harm might come to my contributors from this invasion of their privacy. Due to the furor over abortion in some quarters, the publication of personal information about my contributors made them easy targets for harassment or even violence by anti-abortion activists. Would you be willing to risk your life or your job in order to donate $25, $50, or $100 to a political cause? That's what my contributors were asked to do, and that's not reasonable.

On a more personal level, I was disheartened by the prospect of compiling and filing the reports. I knew that process would be far more onerous this time than in 2008. It was even worse than I expected, however, for reasons that I will explain shortly.

For a while, I considered canceling the project entirely. However, I couldn't stand the thought of being silenced by these campaign finance regulations. Instead, I decided to inform every pledger of the reporting requirements, then allow them to cancel or decrease their pledges, if they wished to preserve their privacy. Most were shocked and angered that the state of Colorado required me to gather and publish their personal information in order to accept their support for my work. Some reduced their pledges to be below the $20 and $100 thresholds. Most didn't want to be silenced, so they reaffirmed their commitment to pay what they'd pledged. A few were even so angry that they increased their pledges.

Consequently, Ari and I went forward with the project, revising and expanding the paper into a robust 43-page defense of abortion rights titled "The 'Personhood' Movement Is Anti-Life: Why It Matters that Rights Begin at Birth, Not Conception." I was -- and still am -- extremely proud of that paper. Yet the burden imposed on me by these campaign finance regulations was almost too heavy to bear.

To comply with the law, I spent hours filling out and faxing paperwork to open bank and PayPal accounts for the Coalition for Secular Government. Then, once contributors began to pay their pledges, I had to compile and submit reports to the state every two weeks. Each report required a few hours of my time, and each was due a mere two to three business days after the close of the reporting period. To file the reports, I had to keep an extra set of books in an Excel spreadsheet, just so that I could track my contributions and expenditures in the format required for the reports. Of course, the reports for the state never quite matched my own records on the first try, so I'd have to double-check and triple-check every entry. I had to e-mail contributors for their addresses, and sometimes for places of work. Sometimes, finding the address of a business was a difficult chore: I was in a panic at 11:30 pm on the night that a report was due, desperately trying to find a physical address for Facebook. Even once I'd gathered all that information, the process of inputting it into the system -- typing in address after address -- was a major chore.

To add insult to injury, I was petrified of making a mistake with every report I filed. Too much was unknown to me -- for example, the Facebook ads for the paper were paid for on my personal credit card, so should I report that as an expenditure when that credit card was billed, when it was paid, or when I reimbursed myself? When should I report contributions sent as checks -- when I picked them up from the post office or when I deposited them in my account? If a person wrote two checks for $19, would I have to report his name and address if I received and/or deposited them on the same day? I didn't know the answers to those questions, and I couldn't afford to consult a lawyer. I could only try to be careful -- and hope for the best.

However, I forgot to file my first report for a few days, due to a mess of other pressing problems in my life from a backed up septic pipe in the house to scheduled travel to the east coast. In addition, I didn't have all the information that I needed for that report, including the addresses of many contributors. On realizing my error, I was in a state of dull panic for days, worrying that the $1000 I'd earned for writing the paper -- if not more from my personal funds -- would vanish in a puff of $50-per-violation-per-day fines. So I begged for a waiver. That was degrading, but I was desperate, particularly because I had no idea how some unknown state employee would judge my failure to file the report on time. Much to my relief, the waiver was granted some weeks later.

Those experiences strongly discouraged me from raising and spending more money to oppose Amendment 62, as I would have done otherwise. I could have asked for contributions to fund more Facebook ads, for example, but I didn't want to have to file more reports. I was simply weary of and disgusted by the whole process.

In short, compliance with the campaign finance laws consumed hours of my life -- hours that I could have spent promoting the paper, writing op-eds, working on other projects, or even just watching a movie with my husband. With every dollar contributed or expended, I risked fines that I couldn't afford to pay. I was unable to speak as a matter of right, but rather only by government permission. I felt the pressure to just give in and give up -- to say nothing -- very keenly.

How many other ordinary citizens decline to speak out on ballot measures due to these regulations? I can't give you numbers, but as one of those ordinary citizens, I can tell you that the chilling effect is very real.

Now, I'd like to turn to the proposed revisions to these regulations, whereby the reporting threshold would be increased from $200 to $5000 for total expenditures or contributions. By that new standard, the Coalition for Secular Government would have been exempt from filing in 2008 and 2010. As far as I'm concerned, that's not good enough: you're tacking up curtains on a house too ugly for anything but the wrecking ball.

Unfortunately, our state constitution forbids full recognition and respect for free speech rights in its demand for campaign finance regulations. However, the Secretary of State can and ought to make those regulations minimally intrusive and minimally burdensome. The proposed revisions do not do that: the reforms must go deeper.

So what's wrong with the proposed revisions?

First, the proposed threshold of $5000 in total expenditures and contributions is far too low. A grassroots group without any resources or employees -- such as the Coalition for Secular Government -- could easily exceed that amount in contributions or expenditures, just to expose a few thousand voters to its message.

Second, the threshold will burden even groups who never e.xceed it Groups under the threshold will be obliged to monitor total contributions and expenditures on work related to ballot measures just to ensure that they're not obliged to report -- or risk huge fines.

Third, such a threshold would encourage small groups not to collect or spend more than $5000, so as not to be burdened by onerous and invasive reporting requirements. As such, their speech would be silenced, as if by a glass ceiling set at $5000.

Fourth, once a group reaches the $5000 threshold, the reporting requirements are just as intrusive and onerous as they are now -- meaning far too intrusive and onerous. Every $20 contribution will have to be reported, as well every $20 purchase at Office Depot. That is not required by the Colorado constitution, and it ought to stop.

Instead of the proposal made, I ask the Secretary of State to reject the whole notion of a threshold for reporting based on total contributions or expenditures. Instead, to comply with the Colorado constitution, only require the reporting of single donations and expenditures when over some significant amount, say $5000. Moreover, full addresses should not be required for either contributions or expenditures. Instead, groups should only report names and perhaps cities.

Moreover, people attempting to speak out should not be subject to fines beyond their ability to pay -- as with the current system of $50 per day per violation. Instead, fines should be proportional to the actual expenditure or contribution -- and require deliberate fraud, not mere mistake or ignorance.

Finally, a group's political opponents should not be able to drag them into court before an election over alleged campaign finance violations in order to silence them, as happened to the proponents of Amendment 48, and surely happens to others routinely.

With such changes to the campaign finance regulations, ordinary citizens in Colorado would be far more free to speak out on political issues than they are now. Under the present system, only large groups with millions of dollars -- armed with lawyers to advise them on the law and assistants to compile and file reports -- can afford to speak freely. The rest of us -- ordinary citizens like me -- are burdened and intimidated into silence. That flatly contradicts the stated purpose of campaign finance regulations in the Colorado constitution -- and the changes proposed by the Secretary of State would only perpetuate that wrong.

Hence, I urge the Secretary of State to reform the current system of campaign finance regulations for "issue groups" in a substantial way, not merely as proposed. If these regulations must exist, make them minimally intrusive and burdensome so as to protect the free speech right of ordinary Colorado citizens.

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Tuesday, December 20, 2011

Noodlecast #111: Testimony on Campaign Finance

By Diana Hsieh

Last Thursday, Ari Armstrong, Paul Hsieh, and I testified at the Secretary of State's hearing on the proposed changes to Colorado's campaign finance rules. Ari was kind enough to record and post video of that testimony. (That's a huge amount of work, so thank you, thank you, Ari!)

I've compiled our testimony into a single podcast, and you'll find the videos below too. (I didn't include Matt Arnold's testimony for Clear the Bench Colorado in the podcast, but the video is at the bottom of this post.)

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My testimony for the Coalition for Secular Government:



Paul Hsieh's testimony for Freedom and Individual Rights in Medicine (FIRM):

Ari Armstrong's testimony:



Again, although I didn't include it in the podcast, here's Matt Arnold's testimony for Clear the Bench Colorado:

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Colorado Senator Morse: Election Speech Requires Lawyers

By Diana Hsieh

Here's a short but hugely revealing segment of video by Ari Armstrong from last Thursday's campaign finance hearing.



Here's Ari's summary:

On December 15, 2011, Colorado State Senator John Morse spoke about the state's campaign finance laws at a Secretary of State hearing.

He said, "What we were selling there, if you will, was that people will comply with the law, and there won't be many fines. I think what your experience is showing is that... turns out that complying with all this is complicated, and really does take a lawyer. But that's the price of the transparency, to be able to have these kinds of reporting things."

But Senator, if you have to hire a lawyer or risk hefty fines or lawsuits in order to spend resources speaking out for or against any ballot measure or candidate, that's not free speech.

The proper term for it is censorship.
In other words, the campaign finance laws so vigorously supported by progressives entail that only wealthy people can afford to speak, because only they can afford the lawyers and/or the fines. And they're fine with that.

I don't know any words strong enough to express my disgust with that.

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Thursday, December 15, 2011

Testimony: December 15th Hearing on Campaign Finance

By Diana Hsieh

This morning, I'll be attending and testifying at the Secretary of State's hearing concerning the proposed changes to Colorado's campaign finance rules. The audio from the hearing will be live streamed here. We'll be in the "Blue Spruce Room" from 9 am to 12 pm MST.

I plan to speak, of course, and my written testimony is below. I will be giving the first half, up through the contact information, in person at the meeting. Written testimony by others can be found here. (I'm so grateful to everyone who submitted testimony in favor of greater freedom of speech! That's hugely important, and much appreciated!)

Comments on the Secretary of State's Proposed Rules Concerning Campaign Finance

Diana Hsieh, Ph.D
diana@dianahsieh.com
Coalition for Secular Government
http://www.SecularGovernment.us
diana@dianahsieh.com
December 15th, 2011


My name is Diana Hsieh. I'm a philosopher by trade, writing and speaking on the application of philosophy to the challenges of everyday life. I'm not particularly active in politics, except on the issue of abortion rights. In 2008 and 2010, I worked with Ari Armstrong against the proposed "personhood" amendments to our state constitution. We didn't just want to see these measures defeated: we wanted to explain and defend our view of the proper basis of abortion rights. The "personhood" ballot measures were a prime opportunity for us to do that.

Unfortunately, our efforts were seriously hampered by Colorado's onerous and intrusive campaign finance laws. The same will happen in the upcoming 2012 election, even with the proposed rule changes. As a citizen activist, that's extremely frustrating and disheartening. Nonetheless, I support the proposed rule changes, with one exception. They clarify the demands on people who choose to speak about Colorado elections, and they limit the legal risks of doing so. We won't have fully free speech, but we'll have somewhat freer speech.

To explain why I support most of the proposed rule changes, I'd like to briefly recount my experiences in the 2008 and 2010 elections. (I described these experiences in more detail in the May 3, 2011 hearing on raising the reporting threshold for issue committees from $200 to $5000, and that's included in my written testimony.) After that, I'll explain my reasons for supporting the proposed rule changes pertaining to issue committees, with one exception.

My Experiences, In Brief

In 2008, Ari Armstrong and I wrote a policy paper against Amendment 48, the proposed "personhood" amendment to Colorado's constitution. I published it under the auspices of the "Coalition for Secular Government," which was then and still is now, little more than me and a blog. Ari and I wrote the paper without compensation, and I spent a few hundred dollars of my own money to promote it.

Only by happenstance, I learned that I was obliged to file campaign finance reports. With my first non-zero report, the hassle of typing in the names and addresses of Office Max, The UPS Store, and the Post Office (where I spent just under $200 in total on office supplies, photocopies, and stamps to distribute the paper) convinced me that to spend any money to promote our paper was too much trouble. I felt that chilling effect on my speech very keenly.

In 2010, Ari Armstrong and I revised and expanded our paper to oppose Amendment 62, the next "personhood" amendment on the ballot. This time, the work was funded by generous donors, in the form of 63 pledges ranging from $4 to $300 for a total of $2795. These people, most of whom I knew personally, wanted Ari and me to speak for them, to explain and defend our common view of abortion rights, and we were eager to do that.

When I reviewed the campaign finance regulations, I was appalled to discover that I was required to report the name and address of any contributor giving $20 or more, plus the occupation and employer for any donation over $100. Why was I so upset? First, the process of compiling and filing the reports was extremely burdensome, eating away hours that I could have spent opposing Amendment 62. Second, my contributors were entitled to privacy, particularly on a controversial topic like abortion. Third, I feared that even a trivial error in a report could result in massive fines, plus attorney fees to defend myself. The little money that I'd reserved to promote the paper, plus my own payment for writing the paper, would quickly vanish: I'd be forced to sacrifice my personal savings, just to exercise my right to free speech. That fear stays with me, even now, and gnaws at me. Ultimately, the result was basically the same as in 2008: I was unwilling undergo the troubles and risks of filing more reports, and so I opted not to raise any more funds for our work. Again, I felt the chilling effect of these campaign finance laws.

Based on these experiences, I know that Colorado's campaign finance laws constitute a major violation of free speech rights. Free speech means that people are entitled to express and advocate their ideas without forcible inference from the government or anyone else. Free speech also means that people are entitled to join together in their speech: they have a right to pool their resources and their talents so as to more effectively express and advocate their common ideas.

Here in Colorado, we do not have free speech in elections. We the people are not entitled to join together to express our views on upcoming elections, unless we register with the government and submit regular reports disclosing minute details of our finances. Failure to do so--even if only some trivial error--can result in being dragged into court by our political opponents and then being forced to pay hundreds if not thousands of dollars in fines. Here in Colorado, we speak about election issues not by right, but by government permission.

Free speech requires nothing less than repealing or overturning all of our campaign finance laws. In the meantime, however, the campaign finance rules can be made less confusing, less onerous, and less risky. The proposed rule changes are a huge step in that direction (with one exception), and that's why I support them. Here, I'd like to discuss four proposed changes: (1) the definition of an issue committee, (2) privacy for contributors worried about safety, (3) penalties and waivers, and (4) aggregating contributions and expenditures.

(1) The Definition of an Issue Committee

As I understand the current rules, any group of two or more persons qualifies as an "issue committee" if the group (a) works for or against a ballot measure as a "major purpose" and (b) spends or receives more than $200.

Proposed Rule 4.1 affirms that the $200 reporting threshold is raised to $5000, although litigation is pending. I support that change: small groups with limited resources should be able to advocate for or against ballot measures without incurring the onerous burden of registering, opening a new bank account, and then reporting their finances. As I said in the May hearing, however, I'd like the reporting threshold to be raised even higher, at least to $10,000.

Proposed Rule 1.12.3 defines a "major purpose" as meaning that more than 30% of the group's spending concerns a ballot measure. I support that change too. The campaign finance rules should clearly identify which groups qualify as issue committees, so that people can know whether they're obliged to report or not. Without clear criteria, any group doing work related to a ballot measure must file, purely as a defensive measure. However, for the sake of greater freedom of speech, I'd like to see the term "major" in "major purpose" interpreted more narrowly as meaning that over 50% of the group's spending concerns the ballot measure.

As much as I appreciate the bright line created by this rule change, I'm doubtful that it can be applied to my own ever-expanding work against the "personhood" movement. In the 2012 election season, the Coalition for Secular Government won't be narrowly focused on defeating Colorado's likely "personhood" amendment: we plan to work against "personhood" measures on the ballot in other states, as well as against the "personhood" movement and for abortion rights more broadly. Any attempt to estimate what percentage of our spending concerns Colorado's ballot measure would be arbitrary. Hence, I'll have to register and file reports as an issue committee, even if only as self-defense. I don't see any way to apply the "major purpose" criterion objectively in a case like ours, where any work concerning the ballot measure is part and parcel of a much larger and broader advocacy effort. Nonetheless, I support the rule change. The current language can be interpreted any which way, and the proposed definition of a "major purpose" would clarify the criterion for many groups.

(2) Privacy for Contributors Worried about Safety

By the current rules, reports must include personal information about contributors, such as names and addresses (if the contribution is $20 or more) and occupations and employers (if the contribution is $100 or more). That information is then published on the web for anyone to see. That has been of particular concern for me, given the harassment and even violence perpetrated by some anti-abortion activists against abortion rights supporters.

Proposed Rule 20 would permit people who fear for their own or their family's safety due to information disclosed on any campaign finance report to request that such information be redacted. That's definitely an improvement over the current rules, for the change would permit people to donate without fearing that they risk life and limb in so doing.

Once again, however, I worry that the rule change is too modest, meaning that "safety" is too high a bar. People have a variety of perfectly valid reasons for wishing to contribute to causes anonymously, such as wishing to avoid unpleasant conflicts with co-workers, clients, or neighbors over politics. A person with unpopular opinions should not be forced by law to risk ostracism to support a political cause. Also, I regret that this option for privacy requires more paperwork for what ought to be protected as a right--namely, the right to speak anonymously, and, by extension, the right to enable others to speak for you while remaining anonymous.

(3) Penalties and Waivers

Under the current rules, failures to comply with the campaign finance rules can incur fines of up to $50 per day per violation, without limit. Fines have often grown far beyond a group's ability to pay. According to the 2010 manual, the Secretary of State's office grants waivers and reductions of fines at their discretion using the vague "good cause" standard. That makes the process ripe for abuse, including partisan favoritism and other forms of bias.

As far as I understand, proposed Rule 18 would establish clear standards for penalties and waivers. Waivers would be granted for specified good causes, penalties would start small then increase with successive offenses, penalties would be limited based on the resources of the group, and mistakes would be penalized far less than willful failures to comply. Also, total penalties would be limited to $50 per day per report for 180 days, i.e. $9000 per report.

These changes are hugely important, in my opinion. The possibility of incurring hundreds if not thousands of dollars in fines for failing to comply with a mess of confusing campaign finance regulations should terrify any sane person. More than anything else, the current possibility of ridiculously large fines, totally disconnected from any intentional wrongdoing and out of proportion to the group's ability to pay, silences political speech in Colorado. The current rules, in fact, make election speech into a privilege of the wealthy, for only they can afford to pay the current fines. That's terribly unjust: the poor should have just as much right to speak as the rich. That's why I'd recommend limiting the fines even further.

(4) Aggregating Contributions and Expenditures

Now, I turn to my sole major objection to the proposed rule changes--and it's significant. By the current rules, contributions of $20 or more must be itemized, including the name and address of the contributor. The rules don't say any more than that, and hence, a person can give multiple donations of less than $20, and those donations are never itemized. The same applies to expenditures.

Rule 10.1 changes that policy: if the total contribution from a given source for a given reporting period is greater than $20, then it must be itemized on the report, even if the individual contributions by that source are always less than $20. (The same does not apply to the $100 threshold for occupation and employer, however.) Also, any contribution from an LLC must be itemized, regardless of size. Rule 10.2 does the same for expenditures: for each reporting period, expenditures to the same source must be aggregated, then itemized if over $20.

I'm partly sympathetic to the goal of this rule change. The current rules are unclear, and to allow many donations under $20 from the same source without itemization seems like a "loophole" that should be closed. However, to close this "loophole" entails dramatically increasing the burdens imposed on issue committees, such as myself. How so?

Under the current rules, I need only collect personal data about a contributor if he contributes $20 or more. That's a ridiculously low threshold, but at least it's a bright line for data collection. Under the new rule, however, I'd have to collect personal data from every contributor, even from someone who just gives me a $1 bill. Why? That person might give me twenty such bills over the course of the reporting period, and in case that happens, I need to identify all donations from that person in my records, add them up for the reporting period, and then itemize them in my report if they total $20 or more. At that point, I might as well just itemize every contribution (and every expenditure too), whatever the amount, just to be on the safe side. Plus, I'd have to inquire with every contributor to ensure that the money doesn't come from an LLC, for if so, I'd have to flag that in my records to report it, regardless of its size.

The burden imposed by this rule change would be enormous for many issue committees. Contributors would be burdened too, as they'd be obliged to give their name and address with every contribution. That information would likely become part of the public record in any lawsuit. In effect, this rule change would prohibit even small anonymous contributions, and that might deter many people from contributing any dollar amount. Moreover, the unscrupulous political opponents of an issue committee could easily abuse this new rule. A person could make a few small contributions to an opponent over the course of a reporting period, some in cash or otherwise anonymously, in the hope of entrapping the group in a campaign finance violation. And then, if his name and address wasn't listed on the report, he could sue.

For these reasons, I adamantly oppose this rule change. The new rule seems easy, simple, and fair in the abstract. Yet in practice, it would impose a major burden on issue committees and become fodder for partisan abuse. I urge you to reconsider this change.

Summary

In summary, I support most of the proposed changes to Colorado's campaign finance rules. The changes would make the rules less confusing, less onerous, and less risky. That's good for free speech and good for elections. However, our ultimate goal must be fully free speech in our elections--and that requires the elimination of all campaign finance laws. Mandatory disclosures do not make elections transparent: they only silence people, particularly ordinary citizens seeking to speak their minds.

Contact Information

Diana Hsieh, Ph.D
diana@dianahsieh.com

Coalition for Secular Government
http://www.SecularGovernment.us
P.O. Box 851
Sedalia, CO 80135

Links

Coalition for Secular Government

Coalition for Secular Government on Amendment 48 (2008)

Coalition for Secular Government on Amendment 62 (2010)

Addendum: My Experience with Colorado's Campaign Finance Laws

The following testimony was submitted for the May 3, 2011 hearing concerning raising the reporting threshold for issue committees.

My name is Diana Hsieh. I'm an ordinary citizen, albeit with a Ph.D in philosophy. I earn my living my writing and speaking on applying ethical principles to daily life. I'm not a political activist by trade. I have strong views on politics, but I'm not terribly interested in engaging in the rough and tumble of politics.

On occasion, however, I jump into the fray, usually because I care about some issue so deeply that I just can't stand to remain silent. That's almost always some issue local to Colorado. That happened in 2008, with Amendment 48, then again in 2010 with Amendment 62. Those were the "personhood" amendments, and I opposed them vehemently.

Here, I wish to recount how the existing campaign finance rules impaired my ability and willingness to speak against those amendments. Then I will explain why the proposed revisions will have the very same chilling effects on the speech of ordinary citizens like me. Finally, I will suggest changes to the current system that would substantially protect freedom of speech within the constraints of Colorado's constitution.

In 2008, Ari Armstrong and I wrote and published an 18-page policy paper against Amendment 48. We didn't merely want to oppose the advocates of "personhood," we also wanted to offer an alternative to the major pro-choice coalition, which we regarded as compromising on the moral issues. They didn't speak for us; we wanted to speak for ourselves.

Ari and I published that 2008 policy paper under the auspices of the "Coalition for Secular Government." That's a nonprofit corporation registered in Colorado, but really, that's just me and a blog. The Coalition for Secular Government didn't solicit or accept donations, and I paid for its few expenses personally. Consistent with that, Ari and I wrote the paper without any compensation whatsoever: it was purely a volunteer effort. After we completed the paper, I spent a few hundred dollars of my own money to print and mail copies of the paper to media and activists in Colorado.

At the time, I didn't imagine that these activities would be subject to any campaign regulations. After all, I was just exercising my right to speak freely on an issue that I cared deeply about--or so I thought. However, just to be sure, I checked the web site of Colorado's Secretary of State. I found nothing relevant to my activities, so I thought I was in the clear.

However, I was very wrong in that. A friend knowledgeable about Colorado's campaign finance laws told me about the regulations for "issue groups." So I went back to the web site of Colorado's Secretary of State, searching for information. Even once I knew what to look for, it took me over an hour to find the relevant regulations. Even after I read them again and again, I was still quite confused about how to comply with the law.

More importantly, I was appalled that my home state forbade me from speaking freely on an ballot issue that I cared deeply about--even just to spend a few hundred dollars of my own money promoting a paper that I wrote with a friend. Even worse, I could be subject to hefty fines for failing to comply with laws that I could neither find by diligent searching, nor understand by careful reading.

In addition, I found complying with the regulations--entering store names, addresses, and amounts for my few purchases of photocopies, envelopes, labels, and stamps--to be so onerous that, after filing my first report, I swore that I'd not promote the paper in any way that required money thereafter. Hence, the burdens of complying with the law -- even just to spend a few hundred dollars -- were sufficient to silence me, in part.

The same problems arose in 2010 when Ari Armstrong and I wanted to significantly revise and expand our paper for Amendment 62. Instead working for weeks on the new paper for free, we used a new business model that I'd developed in the meantime to solicit pledges to fund the project. People who supported our work could pledge to fund it in any amount they chose. If $2000 or more was pledged in total, we would update and expand the policy paper. People would only pay their pledges if we completed the work by the deadline. Much to our delight, we received 63 pledges, ranging from $4 to $300, for a total of $2795. These contributors agreed with our position, and they wanted us to speak for them in defense of abortion rights.

Ari and I were enthused and motivated by these pledges. They were concrete proof that we weren't alone: other people cared about what we were doing and supported us with their own hard-earned dollars. Plus, we were very grateful to be able to pay ourselves for the many hours of work required to revise, publish, and promote the new paper. With these funds, we could also buy Facebook ads to promote the paper.

Alas, my enthusiasm wore off quickly when I remembered the reporting requirements for "issue committees." Once again, I had trouble finding the rules: I had to call the office of the Secretary of State to be pointed to their location on the web site. When I realized that I'd have to report the names and addresses of most of our contributors, I was deeply distraught. That reporting of personal information was required for any contribution of $20 or more. For contributions of $100 or more, I had to report the person's employer and its address too.

I was upset because such reporting violated the privacy of my contributors. As part of their right to free speech, people should be able to speak anonymously--or fund the speech of others anonymously. These campaign finance regulations forbid that for any contribution of $20 or above, and that's wrong. Voters do not have a right to know the sources of funding for other people's political speech, any more than your neighbor has a right to know what you got for your birthday or what you buy at the bookstore.

Moreover, I feared serious harm might come to my contributors from this invasion of their privacy. Due to the furor over abortion in some quarters, the publication of personal information about my contributors made them easy targets for harassment or even violence by anti-abortion activists. Would you be willing to risk your life or your job in order to donate $25, $50, or $100 to a political cause? That's what my contributors were asked to do, and that's not reasonable.

On a more personal level, I was disheartened by the prospect of compiling and filing the reports. I knew that process would be far more onerous this time than in 2008. It was even worse than I expected, however, for reasons that I will explain shortly.

For a while, I considered canceling the project entirely. However, I couldn't stand the thought of being silenced by these campaign finance regulations. Instead, I decided to inform every pledger of the reporting requirements, then allow them to cancel or decrease their pledges, if they wished to preserve their privacy. Most were shocked and angered that the state of Colorado required me to gather and publish their personal information in order to accept their support for my work. Some reduced their pledges to be below the $20 and $100 thresholds. Most didn't want to be silenced, so they reaffirmed their commitment to pay what they'd pledged. A few were even so angry that they increased their pledges.

Consequently, Ari and I went forward with the project, revising and expanding the paper into a robust 43-page defense of abortion rights titled "The 'Personhood' Movement Is Anti-Life: Why It Matters that Rights Begin at Birth, Not Conception." I was--and still am--extremely proud of that paper. Yet the burden imposed on me by these campaign finance regulations was almost too heavy to bear.

To comply with the law, I spent hours filling out and faxing paperwork to open bank and PayPal accounts for the Coalition for Secular Government. Then, once contributors began to pay their pledges, I had to compile and submit reports to the state every two weeks. Each report required a few hours of my time, and each was due a mere two to three business days after the close of the reporting period. To file the reports, I had to keep an extra set of books in an Excel spreadsheet, just so that I could track my contributions and expenditures in the format required for the reports. Of course, the reports for the state never quite matched my own records on the first try, so I'd have to double-check and triple-check every entry. I had to e-mail contributors for their addresses, and sometimes for places of work. Sometimes, finding the address of a business was a difficult chore: I was in a panic at 11:30 pm on the night that a report was due, desperately trying to find a physical address for Facebook. Even once I'd gathered all that information, the process of inputting it into the system--typing in address after address--was a major chore.

To add insult to injury, I was petrified of making a mistake with every report I filed. Too much was unknown to me--for example, the Facebook ads for the paper were paid for on my personal credit card, so should I report that as an expenditure when that credit card was billed, when it was paid, or when I reimbursed myself? When should I report contributions sent as checks--when I picked them up from the post office or when I deposited them in my account? If a person wrote two checks for $19, would I have to report his name and address if I received and/or deposited them on the same day? I didn't know the answers to those questions, and I couldn't afford to consult a lawyer. I could only try to be careful--and hope for the best.

However, I forgot to file my first report for a few days, due to a mess of other pressing problems in my life from a backed up septic pipe in the house to scheduled travel to the east coast. In addition, I didn't have all the information that I needed for that report, including the addresses of many contributors. On realizing my error, I was in a state of dull panic for days, worrying that the $1000 I'd earned for writing the paper--if not more from my personal funds--would vanish in a puff of $50-per-violation-per-day fines. So I begged for a waiver. That was degrading, but I was desperate, particularly because I had no idea how some unknown state employee would judge my failure to file the report on time. Much to my relief, the waiver was granted some weeks later.

Those experiences strongly discouraged me from raising and spending more money to oppose Amendment 62, as I would have done otherwise. I could have asked for contributions to fund more Facebook ads, for example, but I didn't want to have to file more reports. I was simply weary of and disgusted by the whole process.

In short, compliance with the campaign finance laws consumed hours of my life--hours that I could have spent promoting the paper, writing op-eds, working on other projects, or even just watching a movie with my husband. With every dollar contributed or expended, I risked fines that I couldn't afford to pay. I was unable to speak as a matter of right, but rather only by government permission. I felt the pressure to just give in and give up--to say nothing--very keenly.

How many other ordinary citizens decline to speak out on ballot measures due to these regulations? I can't give you numbers, but as one of those ordinary citizens, I can tell you that the chilling effect is very real.

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