MS attacking government use of open source
Gerry Creager N5JXS
n5jxs at tamu.edu
Mon May 27 19:53:23 PDT 2002
In a recent discussion with a professional lobbyist, I asked the
question of how to get the highest probability of a response from your
congressman/senator. I was told that a conventional letter is 2-3 times
more effective than e-mail, and almost as likely to get a response as a
personal visit to the office. Phone calls, telegrams are essentially
lost causes, unless you're on the short list to always get the
politician. E-mail and form letters are somewhat successful; at least
they are usually seen by a human and logged. Personal letters,
handwritten being best, or typed, virtually always get a human answer.
That said, in my last official gripe with a Senator, my e-mail to James
Sensenbrenner was answered twice: once obviously by a staffer, and the
second, a letter that had the appearances of Sensenbrenner's personal
touch (a rather sincere apology and explanation of statement in
question) by posatl mail; the first in 12 hours, the second in 3 days...
gerry
Texas A&M University
Alan Scheinine wrote:
> David Edwards gave advice about writing to your representatives. Let me
> add one point. Someone with experience in this suggested to me to
> always put a question in the letter because it increases the chances
> that you will receive a reply.
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