lawyers

Lawyers Gear Up for an Election Day Fight

Monday, October 6th, 2008

As the American public ponders who they’ll vote for in the 2008 presidential election, lawyers behind the scenes are gearing up to ensure that everyone’s vote counts.

In the battleground states like Florida, Ohio, Colorado, Virginia, and Nevada, the Democratic and Republican parties are deploying teams of lawyers at the polls to ensure that bureaucracy and voting violations don’t take place on Nov. 4.

The Ledger.com of Lakeland, Florida reported Oct. 5:

“In the past, the Election Day process wasn’t considered to be as crucial as the campaign that led up to that,” said Republican Party of Florida Chairman Jim Greer. “Now we see that the Election Day process is equally as important, or more so.”

Since the historic 2000 election between Al Gore and George W. Bush, voting will never be the same. Many people still remember the notorious “hanging chads” in Florida and going to bed on the eve of the 2000 election thinking Al Gore had won the presidency bid. Since this debacle, Help America Vote Act (NAVA) of 2002 was passed to nix punch card (read: chads) voting systems, create the Election Assistance Commission to watch over Federal elections, and  establish minimum election administration standards. Thus, lawyers are showing up at the polls, especially in key swing states, to ensure NAVA is followed to the letter.

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No-grownups nation

Friday, August 24th, 2007

kidnation.jpg

In my new neighborhood today, someone in an old Ford threw something wrapped in blue plastic onto my porch at like 4:30 in the morning. Terrorist? Turns out it was a rolled-up paper item with words and images somehow pasted all over it. Gotta be the most elaborate welcome-to-the-neighborhood prank ever.

How is the CBS “Kid Nation” contract even legal? Here’s how the paper-thing on my stoop put it:

“As is standard in such agreements, the parents and the children agreed not to hold the producers and CBS responsible if their children died or were injured, if they received inadequate medical care, or if their housing was unsafe and caused injury.

“But while such agreements might be standard for adult participants in a reality show, it also takes on a different tone when the minor and the parent are being held solely responsible for any “emotional distress, illness, sexually transmitted diseases, H.I.V. and pregnancy” that might occur if the child “chooses to enter into an intimate relationship of any nature with another participant or any other person.”

WTF? Lawyers are actually allowed to write this kind of thing and parents allowed to sign it? Is that the ironical Hollywood subtext of the title “Kid Nation”? The show features forty kids, eight-to-fifteen years old, living on their own, Lord of the Flies-style, in the New Mexico desert. HIV? “Sexual relationship of any nature with… any other person”?

Of course I wanted to read the whole “Kid Nation” contract, to get to the part where no one was going to be held responsible for the kids killing and eating each other or, in lieu of that, for boring viewers to death, but the paper-news-thing had no way to link to the original document… what a drag. Turns out some websites are run like that too, as if they were part of some hyper-primitive reality TV experiment.