Looks to me like what you stated and what you linked have only the most tenuous of similarity.
If only we knew how they defined "Republican Advocacy Group", from the examples they gave anything that ran counter to the Incumbent Democrat was a "Republican Advocacy Group", I guess by those standards, NPR is a "Democrat Advocacy Group".
TheRiov wrote:
and just for good measure I went back and actually read this now (since I didn't really have time to originally)
a) The article you cite referrs to contributions specifically the the canidate campains, not to so-called third-party groups who dont have to declare a political leaning -- so called "issue ads" and the like (generally attack ads) Contributions directly to campains I seem to recall are still capped, but anyone can buy ad space now and say what they want.
Ummm, that's what PACs are. You know from your statement about...PACs.
TheRiov wrote:
Now all that said, pro-democratic spending DID pick up in the last weeks before the election (sorry, btw I was off by 2 weeks on the date) but there was still a large disparity. I think it ended up more like 2:1 but (and I'm sure you'll insist on it) I'll try to find the cite for you.
Go for it, I have a feeling it won't support your statement either.
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"Dress cops up as soldiers, give them military equipment, train them in military tactics, tell them they’re fighting a ‘war,’ and the consequences are predictable." —Radley Balko