I just found this article in the NY Times and wanted to share it with everyone. What Gillibrand is doing is revolutionary, and I'm glad she's in the spotlight for her committment to transparency. A little sunlight goes a long way...
Editorial
CONGRESS AND THE BENEFITS OF SUNSHINE
At first, the innovation sounds simple enough: Representative-elect Kirsten Gillibrand has decided to post details of her work calendar on the Internet at the end of each day so constituents can tell what she is actually doing for their money.
In fact, it is a quiet touch of revolution. The level of transparency pledged by Ms. Gillibrand, Democrat of New York — down to naming lobbyists and fund-raisers among those she might meet with — is simply unheard of in Congress. The secrecy that cloaks the dealings of lawmakers and deep-pocket special interests underpinned the corruption issue that Ms. Gillibrand invoked as voters turned Republicans from majority rule last month.
For all the worthy proposals for ethics reform being hashed out by the incoming Congress, a heavy dose of Internet transparency should not be overlooked in the effort to repair lawmakers’ tattered credibility. The technology is already there, along with the public’s appetite for more disclosure about the byways of power in Congress.
The Web is increasingly wielded by both campaign donors and bloggers clicking and tapping as wannabe muckrakers. Politicians would be wise to catch up. Local citizens were enlisted to track pork-barrel abuses in the last campaign by a new watchdog organization, the Sunlight Foundation, which enlisted Ms. Gillibrand’s disclosure pledge. It aims to have voters use the Internet as an engine of political information.
Much more than disclosure is needed to cure the Capitol’s ills — particularly some sort of independent agency to prod Congress to fully investigate corruption allegations. But prompt, searchable postings of basic data — from lobbyists’ itineraries and expenses to incumbents’ donor ties and legislative labors — should be part of any corruption cure. In the information age, this amounts to a modest proposal for a Congress truly intent on reform.


Comments: 2
I don't think transparency would make too much of a difference, complete removal of all career politicians would be a much better fix. Maybe something would get done.
Watchdogs are only as good as the trainer's morality and allegiance.
Career politicians definitely were never in the 'original plan' for America....as a matter of fact, that is what the 'original plan' was all about - eliminating the lifelong leaders and allowing the people to change leaders as necessary every 2-4 years!
The purpose was to get rid of "lords" Kings and tyrant/dictators and maintain control over our own destiny as a country.
Of course, with everyone sitting in front of TV sets, video games and DVD players...who's running the country?
The answer is "the people who got you to watch TV, DVD's and play video games".
Subversion can change a country without a single constituent realizing it, and the people making it happen know that it can happen if they have the patience to bend your perception of "wrong and right"...we now have 'tolerance' and 'zero tolerance'
It all falls into things like NASCAR, for example.
'Winston Cup' becomes 'Nextel Cup' - why? because cigarettes are 'bad' for you....
However, it's ok to advertise Beer, liquor, Viagra - a great way to introduce our young to the wonderful world of alcoholism and medicine dependancy.
Bottom line is, Big Alcohol and Big Medicine have taken over as the most powerful advertisers - they got the money - they get control. Big Tobacco lost it's leverage in the public eye, yet they are doing more business than ever simply on the basis that tobacco has fallen into the 'taboo zone' - it makes people want it MORE!
Psychology and manipulation are a marvelous thing, eh?