Here's another interesting little piece that has far reaching implications beyond the marriage equality movement. It poses some interesting question: Are the names of individuals who sign a petition to put an initiative on ballot public data? Should those names be readily available to anyone on the Internet?The question that comes to my mind is this: if the roles were reversed, and it was a group of religious conservatives asking for the names of individuals who signed a petition in favor of a marriage equality ballot initiative so they could post it on a website, would the parties involved still be okay with the practice? Would it still be about "fostering communication"? Is it okay to use such database to publicly "shame" those who disagree with them? Would they be okay if others tried to "shame" them with the same approach?Then again, there is something to be said about making a public declaration. If you're going to put your name to ink, you should be ready to defend your decision to the public even if its unpopular.The other annoyance is that marketers can buy these petitions too for marketing purposes. http://www.nytimes.com/2009/11/01/us/01petition.htmlKnowTheyNeighbor.org's response is linked here:http://knowthyneighbor.blogs.com/home/2009/06/whosignedorg-refutes-intimidation-charges-will-post-names-of-petition-signers-as-planned.html
11/2/2009 6:12:19 PM
what?! you mean the citizens may actually be held accountable for the government and institutions that they vote for???god... our democracy may be irreparably harmed!!!!
11/2/2009 6:20:24 PM
The difference is that when you and I vote, who we actually vote for is anonymous unless we decide to consciously declare it in public. As it stands now, the same right does not exist for those who sign petitions for ballot initiatives. The question is whether or not such protections exist, or should exist beyond the minimum needed to verify a signature.
11/2/2009 6:44:12 PM
seems to me that when you sign your name, you are making a public statement. That's kind of why you are signing your name
11/2/2009 7:11:11 PM
It's an interesting question. My initial thought is to say that if the petition has a direct legal impact (such as 2,000 signatures gets a bill or proposition on a ballot) then yes, absolutely every one of those signatures should be public record. But otherwise, no I don't think it should be public record any more than the letters and phone calls a politician receives from their constituents should be public record (of course, they may be public record, in which case the petition should follow).However, I can easily both sides of the argument and both have very valid concerns.
11/2/2009 7:47:54 PM
while I can see both sides of this issue, my problem with making the names public is that the only reason its requested is to make those signing social pariahs. citizens of this country should not be afraid to participate in the democratic/legislative process.
11/2/2009 7:50:33 PM
maybe they shouldn't be afraid, but they should have a healthy respect for their responsibility and for the consequences of their political participation.votes should remain confidential. political campaigning and participation (which is what signing a petition is), should not have any special protection.
11/2/2009 8:29:59 PM
11/2/2009 9:10:12 PM
exactly... just like the arguments against gun laws, hate crime laws, and general over-regulation of the markets, the same applies to this situation. There are already laws on the books to handle intimidation and threats to someone's safety. No need to create a new class of laws for this.
11/2/2009 9:37:26 PM