Since when was the rule passed in Congress that whoever lobbies hardest gets to determine the content of U.S. legislation?
When a U.S. Congressman can agree that "the software industry won!" — as Mr. Holt admitted at the July meeting, we have a critical problem that threatens the foundation of our Democracy.
This bill is no longer the Holt bill...he said so himself. Clearly, the bill is now 'Microsoft 811!'
When Congressman Holt — the election reform leader in Congress — puts his trust in an audit that many experts say is inadequate, when he advocates for questionable paper trails linked to secretly programmed machines and then adds " I don't care what Microsoft does with their electronics in there" (as he did), it begins to look like our elections are a game of Russian roulette.
Where once the bill called for complete openness, full public disclosure of all software used to count OUR votes, now we have the opposite. 'Microsoft 811' enshrines in LAW the right of corporations to privatize our election through control of programming secrecy, prohibiting public disclosure of what's inside OUR voting machines! Only under strict conditions, people selected for very specific purposes can review the software, but only after signing non-disclosure agreements. Thus, what should be a contractual agreement is enshrined in federal law.
When you vote on Election Day you will not know what is happening inside that electronic machine. Under 'Microsoft 811', on Election Night the results reported will be generated from those secretly programmed electronic bytes….from the very machines that top security experts have labeled "fatally flawed." Can we trust the results? How will we know?
A few months ago in New York State, during the hectic closing days of the legislative session, Microsoft along with other software vendors/lobbyists tried to sneak through provisions to destroy some of the strictest, hardest won, voting security legislation in the country by attaching those provisions to another bill which was simply about a minor change in the primary. Fortunately activists were vigilant and raised an alarm. Thousands of New Yorkers called their legislators in the next two days and the vendors' effort was defeated. Citizens can win if they speak out.
Now we have a far bigger challenge. Microsoft and other software companies are trying to get another bill passed that would protect their rights over the rights of the public. It is up to We the People to say "No" … say it loud and clear till OUR VOICES – not the corporations' – are heard and heeded.
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