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by indymike 2084 days ago
If you want them to care, stop by their offices and have a really rational talk with their staffers and the representative. If you can explain things with stories (for example, where a backdoor was used to crack ___ resulting in very personal damage to ____), you will change minds. Get 20-30 tech leaders to go meet with Feinstein and discuss how this will affect them. If she won't budge at that point, then maybe y'all need to vote for someone else. Encryption is easy to explain: if the good guys can use the backdoor, the bad guys will use the backdoor, to. The cops don't get keys to your car, safe, or home for the exact same reason.
1 comments

You're assuming good faith in elected representatives and their staff.

I wonder if anyone in the last decade has _ever_ walked into their rep's office, talked to them, and changed their vote on a key issue. I really doubt it.

I have. Multiple times, but not every time. Reps get close to zero direct interaction with constituents. It's usually filtered by a group with an agenda (petitions, campaigns). When you go as a citizen and talk (not scream or debate) about an issue that really matters, you will get their ear. You may not get the vote you want, but you will be take seriously, and the staff and rep will discuss what you are bringing to them. If you have 2-3 people approach your rep with the same problem it will have the same effect as a petition with thousands of signatures.