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Commentary, sarcasm and snide remarks from a Florida resident of over thirty years. Being a glutton for punishment is a requirement for residency here. Who am I? I've been called a moonbat by Michelle Malkin, a Right Wing Nut by Daily Kos, and middle of the road by Florida blog State of Sunshine. Tell me what you think.

Thursday, December 22, 2005

Florida the rules are different here Chapter XII

You have to love Florida Politicians. Our Attorney General Charlie Crist is a crusader for anti-spam laws. Guess what? Crist has been acquiring Floridian's emails so as to tout his gubenatorial campaign and ask for campaign contributions. The campaign manager for Crist says its freedom of speech.

Nikita Kruschev was right. Politicians are all the same. They're hypocrites, never practicing what they preach.

Open Post- Basil's Blog, Bright & Early, Right Wing Nation, Is it Just me?, TMH's Bacon Bits,

As attorney general, Charlie Crist rails against spam e-mails.

"Spam is an annoying, intrusive form of e-mail that almost all of us receive but few of us want. Much of it is just clutter, but some of it can be downright offensive," the attorney general declared in a May press release heralding his efforts to fight unwanted e-mail.

But as a Republican candidate for governor, Crist is annoying Floridians himself by obtaining people's addresses and sending them unsolicited e-mails touting his gubernatorial candidacy and asking for campaign donations.

"It's not spam," insisted Arlene DiBenigno, Crist's political director. "It's political speech. We're not selling anything, we're not being deceptive. We love the First Amendment, and there's nothing more powerful than political speech."

But don't tell that to Dorothy Butler, a 59-year-old postal worker and ardent Democrat from Land O'Lakes.

She had signed up for the attorney general's official e-mail newsletters, but was none too pleased when she started receiving Crist's gubernatorial campaign pitches.

"He's not living up to his own standards. To me that is spam because I never asked for any of his political stuff," Butler said.

"My first reaction was, why am I getting this? I'm not a Republican. My second reaction was aggravation because the only place I could think of where he got my e-mail address was from the state Web site," Butler said.

The Crist campaign built a campaign e-mail list in part by filing public records requests for e-newsletter requests sent to the attorney general's office and governor's office.

On Wednesday, state employees received Crist campaign e-mails on their state e-mail accounts: "I need your help to spread our message of consistent conservatism - less taxes, less government and more freedom," Crist wrote. "Your donation of $500, $250, $100 or $25 will go a long way toward supporting our efforts."

One employee with the Pinellas Health Department e-mailed the St. Petersburg Times Wednesday complaining that Crist was misusing state property and resources.

Crist campaign staffers said they recently filed a public records request for the e-mail addresses of people who subscribe to the governor's e-newsletter.

The campaign tried to scrub all the state employee addresses but apparently missed some.

The Crist campaign e-mails, they noted, prominently show people how to unsubscribe.

That didn't work so well for Joe Spooner, a 41-year-old investment adviser from Brandon. He has no idea how the Crist campaign got his e-mail address, but repeatedly tried to unsubscribe.

After the fifth request to be removed, a frustrated Spooner fired off an e-mail reminding the Crist campaign how Crist touts his fight against spammers:

"The irony and hypocrisy amazes me. Do I need to file a complaint with the Attorney General's office? Anybody have the number for the Fraud Hotline?" wrote Spooner, a Republican.

Ultimately, Spooner did get removed from Crist's e-mail list.

Crist is running for the Republican gubernatorial nomination against chief financial officer Tom Gallagher.

The Gallagher campaign said Tuesday it uses no state e-mail databases for its campaign.

"This is the season of giving, and I guess Charlie felt what Floridians needed most this Christmas is more spam," quipped Gallagher campaign spokesman Albert Martinez.

 
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