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In response to [livejournal.com profile] auros' detailed analysis of the ballot measures, I have some last-minute comments. You can assume that if I don't comment on something here, I more or less agree with [livejournal.com profile] auros's position.

For my own later reference, and for yours as well if you want to take a look, I will mention the CalVoter.org website, which has several useful resources. The most cogent of them at this point is a link (2nd from the bottom) to the CA Secretary of State's well-designed website which lets you find out who's contributed how much for and against each of the ballot measures. So if you're hurting for an opinion, go find a donor that you don't like and vote the other way. (Gotta like those ad hominem arguments.)



75: mixed feelings. I've certainly been a member of unions that have used my dues for political purposes that I disagreed with, plus I tend to prefer "opt in" rather than "opt out" in most cases. On the other hand, as a practical matter, I recognize the utility in having a force available to oppose Our Corporate Masters. On the other other hand, unions themselves have taken on more characteristics in common with corporations than I'm really comfortable with. Anyway...a few points of note:

  1. It's been my experience that if certain jobs require you to pay a fee to the applicable union (for negotiation services, I assume) whether you're a member or not. While the "no on 75" campaign website says that you can't be forced to contribute, I'm not sure what the import of that is, and what options non-union-members really have in practice to keep their contribution from being used for political purposes. (Yes, you could join the union to get a voice...which means that your contribution goes up. This makes me itch.)
  2. quoth [livejournal.com profile] auros: "A 10k-member union which wanted to make a $5k donation to a candidate would have to get permission for each 50-cent unit." I've read the ballot measure and I don't see a requirement that the union ask its members about each individual expenditure.
  3. The actual form strikes me as weird and impractical, in a few regards. When you fill it out you have to say, not what percentage of your dues can go to political purposes, but what amount. That is, there's no way to just say "use it all, if you want/need to". Nor is it clear what happens if you specify more than the actual amount of your dues: does that invalidate the authorization? And what happens if your paycheck varies from month to month (many do, I expect)?
  4. 5.9(f) seems like a hidden grenade that could be used to prevent increases in dues.
Overall, I think I'm going to say no on 75, but I do feel that there is something to be said for the basic idea that _any_ organization should have to ask its members (or shareholders!) for permission to use their money for political purposes.


77: One of [livejournal.com profile] auros' arguments against this is that it doesn't place rigorous restrictions on how boundaries can be drawn. While I like this idea, I'm not really convinced that this is practical. What are you going to do, require that each border have fractal dimension < 1.5 or something? :) At some point, I think that the correct answer is to try your best to come up with a process that should select for fair-minded individuals with no particular axes to grind--or at least that minimizes the probability that people can manipulate the selection process--and hope that they behave reasonably.

That said, I'm not sure what a good approval process for a given map looks like. The argument that you could have a screwy map that gets approved because the screwyness is limited to one region is cogent, but while in theory I like the idea that each individual should be able to approve the boundaries of the region they've been placed in (plus the adjacent ones) in practice this sounds like an organizational problem that the state would spend a lot of money on doing poorly.

Finally, the argument that we ("we" meaning people that don't want increased GOP representation in California and by extension the US Congress) should vote this down because it might help out the GOP in 2006 leaves a very bad taste in my mouth. David Brin has suggested that states whose redistrictings are likely to have complementary effects should arrange to "pair" their redistricting proposals; this strikes me as unrealistic, as does [livejournal.com profile] auros' suggestion that this should be a US Constitutional amendment. IMO, the mechanism for drawing districts does not belong in the US Constitution, so it's just as well in this case that the Constitution is hard to amend.
(Personally, I'm generally of the opinion that allocating representatives geographically in this way is fundamentally flawed (esp. because I live in RepublicanLand, aka Orange County), but that's another discussion.)

A brief perusal of the contributors toward the passage of this measure suggests that they are probably people who are hoping that it will push the state more Republican. Which is not what I'd prefer...but that's not a reason to vote against it. If the reform needs to happen, then I'm willing to fight those battles if necessary rather than maintain the status quo of untoppleable incumbents, which I think qualifies as a cancer eating at our country's bowels in a way that a slightly more Republican California is not.

I think I'm going for a tentative yes on 77. I may change my mind; if I do soon enough, I'll post an update here.


80: [livejournal.com profile] auros is inclined to "no" on this as well, partially on the strength of a friend's quoting of a couple of alternate energy advocates' opposition. Their arguments are convincing in spots...but I'm not sure that they've carefully read the new law, and I'm not totally sure that I agree with their conclusions: in particular, I don't see how the law would make it harder to go greener, and in fact it mandates a faster move in that direction than current law does.

So again, I followed the money. In this case it was pretty clear: the only entities that are opposing this measure in a big way are energy companies, plus a couple of other heavy-industry-type companies (cement, steel). Not one conservation-minded organization has put its money on opposing this.

So while I doubt this law is perfect, I'm inclined to give it a yes.



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