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Wired Magazine's Mr. Know-It-All Takes On Political Robo-Calling
Sunday, June 1, 2008
(Wired Magazine)June, 2008.
Brendan I. Koerner, AKA "Mr.
Know-It-All"
Question: I've
been getting lots of calls from political
pollsters, both human and robotic. I'm on
the National Do Not Call Registry and resent
the intrusions. How can I get them to
stop?
Answer: Sorry to be the
bearer of bad news, but political pollsters are
exempt from the Do Not Call restrictions -
something that fewer than a quarter of
registrants realize. The exemption
includes those weaselly push pollsters who ask
questions along the lines of "Would you vote
for Candidate X if we told you he hunted
orphans for sport?" Now matter how
odious, such calls are considered political
speech and protected under the first
amendment.
As a result, there is not
much you can do to frustrate the pollsters
except hang up. However, you should sign
up for the National Political Do Not Contact
Registry, operated by a Washington-based
non-profit called Citizens for Civil
Discourse.
The organization is asking
politicians not to robo-call people on the
registry; as of this writing, just two members
of Congress - Nancy Boyda, a Kansas Democrat,
and Virginia Foxx, a North Carolina Republican
- have made that pledge.
The
bottom line is that between now and election
day, you're certain to get many more
calls. Do your best to remain
philosophical about the nuisance: there
are people in North Korea and Myanmar who'd
give anything to be polled just once.
