Assuming you accept K1VR's argument, you could do one of two things:
1. You could ask the Congressperson to vote against the bill (e.g. phone
or email). This is what "just say no" means in this context.
2. You could simply fail to support it. We have seen, this year more than
most, that politicians are interested in whether the people (especially
those affected by a measure like this) care enough to contact them about
it. If one sits on one's hands, the message is a bit muddled, but it at
least communicates lack of support (even if based on uncertainty). The
support for this year's bill will certainly be compared to last year's
bill; that's pretty elementary politics.
I hope this is "bottom-line actionable" enough to be of assistance.
Larry WO7R
On Sun, Aug 13, 2017 at 2:52 PM, Richard (Rick) Karlquist <
richard@karlquist.com> wrote:
> A great deal has been written about this bill. However, there
> is nothing actionable in all the verbiage. "Just say NO" is
> way too simplistic. I have no idea what I am supposed to say
> to the politicians. K1VR's legal brief is great work, but
> no one in the senator's office is going to read it AFAIK.
> No hams to my knowledge have posted a copy of what they
> sent to their senators.
>
> Rick N6RK
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