More Liberal Fascism
They will do what we let them do.
Do Not Let Them.
Two callers in particular supported this theory. One gentleman told me he’d emailed Rep. Melissa Bean (D-Ill.) to register opposition to the House health care bill. He received an email response from Bean's office the next day (entirely appropriate), followed by the Axelrod email a few days later. Another caller said she'd contacted Sen. Debbie Stabenow's (D-Mich.) office for a similar reason. She, too, heard first from Stabenow's staff, then from Axelrod. Again, neither caller had ever been in touch with the White House. The suggestion I raised above merits further scrutiny. Could the aforementioned "outside groups" include the political offices of elected Democrats? It stands to reason: If the White House set up a (now defunct) email account asking average Americans to inform on one another regarding health care "misinformation," wouldn't constituent correspondence sent directly to elected representatives serve as a natural gold mine for culling opponents' arguments against the president's plan? One wonders if certain Democratic members chose to pass along this information on their own initiative, or if they were responding to encouragement (read: following orders) from the White House to do so. As others have pointed out, this story would be a behemoth of a scandal if, say, Republican members had forwarded anti-Iraq War emails to the Bush administration, which then blasted out unsolicited pro-war talking points from Karl Rove to thousands of unaware or unwilling recipients.