Monday, June 30, 2014

Spend that Bloomberg Money! Then Check the Names.

Wait a sec: If "more than 625,000 people 'signed on to support the postcard campaign,'” how did they wind up with "2.5 million postcards"? [More]

Anybody check those names? How many are unique? Any limits on how many one person can sign? Any schools exploiting child labor in the form of class assignments to provide uncompensated benefits for billionaire Bloomberg's 501(c)(4) corporation?  Any "prohibited persons" sign any cards?  Any fictitious persons? Etc.?

How many like "Jeffrey Dahmer" are there (directed to SF reps, so no harm done as they're all anti-gun anyway)? 

Sorry Richard Martinez. My sympathy has been almost completely replaced with opposition, so the gloves are off. Too bad you chose to attack my rights, and those of my sons.

3 comments:

ted said...

Not sure but I thought I read somewhere that one "sign-up" would generate a card for every representative you had in D.C.(whether you supported them or not!) So in this case 1=x?

MrApple said...

The only way the numbers work is if the 625,000 people each sent 4 postcards.

Unknown said...

Political campaigns often have parties where people sit around and sign stacks of cards.
Been there, done that.
Alinsky would agree.