GhaleonEB said:Fair enough.
On a different note, Obama is apparantly going to release a statement about FISA today.
A reader emailed half an hour ago that the operators in Obama's call center (Who knew that he had a call center?) had been offering a scoop on his position on the wiretap bill known as FISA. I called the campaign's (800) number to check, and a woman with a British accent answered that Obama has "opposed this legislation and stood with Senator Dodd, cosponsoring his amendment to remove this special interest provision from the bill that came before the Senate."
Dodd opposes the compromise, so that sounded like an answer.
But on spokesman Bill Burton's urging, I called back and asked more narrowly about today's compromise on the Hill, and a second operators said he didn't know, but could read the past statement.
Given the hype about Obama's operation, I imagined the call center as a complicated system in which volunteers all over the world, including apparently England, were dialing in to a switchboard in Southern California to answer the enormous flood of calls, all under the control of a 17-year old Obama staffer who who also owns 20% of Google.
Apparently, not so much: The call center is made up of about a dozen volunteers in Chicago. And after I asked, Burton walked down the hall and told them to change the message.
And so when I called a third time, about two minutes later, I got a much smaller scoop from a third volunteer, who told me that Obama will be releasing a statement later today.
All in all, reassuringly low tech, though I'm still not sure how Obama feels about the NSA listening in on the calls.
:lol at Obama having a call-center. That's awesome.
Also, bigger :lol at Kossers wanting Obama to filibuster to prevent FISA. You think that's really a good use of a Presidential Candidates time? The Republicans wouldn't even bother trying to break the filibuster, they'd let him go on as long as he wants.