"Undermining my electoral viability since 2001."

Iran, Gold and the Big D

John Robb thinks it's on with Iran. His commenters run through the fallout, and one mentions that gold is at a 25-year high.

It just reminded me that if this goes down -- and I'm less certain that it will -- that this would provide the kind of economic shock that would bring on the Big D. If the cost of oil were to go up by 100% (which happened in '79) that's the kind of thing that could shake loose all sorts of secondary effects. The impact would be global.

Well, it wouldn't be the end of the world. I don't dig the doomsayers. A big slowdown might not be the worst thing for us, you know?

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Net Neutrality Goes Down In House Committee

The Markey Amendment (which would affirm the principle of Network Neutrality in new Telco Regulations) was defeated in a House committee today, but the vote was much closer than it was previously. Stoller explains:

Ok, so the vote on the Markey amendment to protect the internet has happened, and it was voted down, 34-22. That is a big deal. It's too bad we lost the vote, but we expected that loss. What we did not expected was the narrow margin. By way of comparison, the subcommittee vote was 23-8, which means we should have gotten blown out of the water. We did not. All four targeted Dems by McJoan on Daily Kos flipped to our side, and many of the Congressmen both for and against this campaign mentioned the blogs and angry constituents.

There's a white hot firestorm on the issue on Capitol Hill. No one wants to see the telcos make a radical change to the internet and screw this medium up, except, well, the telcos. And now members of Congress are listening to us. The telcos have spent hundreds of millions of dollars and many years lobbying for their position; we launched four days ago, and have closed a lot of ground. Over the next few months, as the public wakes up, we'll close the rest of it.

I watched the markup and the voting, and there was noticeable defensiveness among Congressmen on the wrong side of this. They are wrong, they know it, and they are ashamed. Now they know people are watching. So we didn't win this vote, but this close margin was nonetheless a smack to the jaw of the insiders, and a clear victory for the people. Now the battle moves out of the Energy and Commerce Committee, and onto more favorable terrain.

The action now will be in the Senate, which is indeed more friendly terrain for our interests here. Let's keep the pressure on.

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Net Neutrality Goes Down In House Committee

The Markey Amendment (which would affirm the principle of Network Neutrality in new Telco Regulations) was defeated in a House committee today, but the vote was much closer than it was previously. Stoller explains:

Ok, so the vote on the Markey amendment to protect the internet has happened, and it was voted down, 34-22. That is a big deal. It's too bad we lost the vote, but we expected that loss. What we did not expected was the narrow margin. By way of comparison, the subcommittee vote was 23-8, which means we should have gotten blown out of the water. We did not. All four targeted Dems by McJoan on Daily Kos flipped to our side, and many of the Congressmen both for and against this campaign mentioned the blogs and angry constituents.

There's a white hot firestorm on the issue on Capitol Hill. No one wants to see the telcos make a radical change to the internet and screw this medium up, except, well, the telcos. And now members of Congress are listening to us. The telcos have spent hundreds of millions of dollars and many years lobbying for their position; we launched four days ago, and have closed a lot of ground. Over the next few months, as the public wakes up, we'll close the rest of it.

I watched the markup and the voting, and there was noticeable defensiveness among Congressmen on the wrong side of this. They are wrong, they know it, and they are ashamed. Now they know people are watching. So we didn't win this vote, but this close margin was nonetheless a smack to the jaw of the insiders, and a clear victory for the people. Now the battle moves out of the Energy and Commerce Committee, and onto more favorable terrain.

The action now will be in the Senate, which is indeed more friendly terrain for our interests here. Let's keep the pressure on.

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Drupal Camp NYC

My friend Aaron Welch and I will be doing a two-day training on Drupal development at DrupalCamp NYC. This training is free, and we're going to be encouraging people to bring in real-world problems they're trying to solve. Could be a good resource for folks looking to build skills or just score from free consulting.

I suppose this makes me some kind of expert. Doh.

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