Amazingly, not a single one of the 25-30 people we tried to interview would speak to us about who they were, how they got invited, what the party's purpose was, why they were attending, etc. One attendee said he was with an "energy company," and the other confessed she was affiliated with a "trade association," but that was the full extent of their willingness to describe themselves or this event. It was as though they knew they're part of a filthy and deeply corrupt process and were ashamed of -- or at least eager to conceal -- their involvement in it. After just a few minutes, the private security teams demanded that we leave, and when we refused and continued to stand in front trying to interview the reticent attendees, the Denver Police forced us to move further and further away until finally we were unable to approach any more of the arriving guests.The video includes Denver police repeatedly asking accredited press to move away from a public sidewalk.— AT&T thanks the Blue Dog Democrats with a lavish party, Glenn Greenwald, Salon, Monday Aug. 25, 2008 11:15 EDT (updated below (with video added) - Update II) Thursday, Aug 28, 2008
At another party,
an ABC News reporter was arrested while "attempting to take pictures on a public sidewalk of Democratic senators and VIP donors leaving a private meeting at the Brown Palace Hotel."
Parties like this are part of the lobbying revolving door that
makes the U.S. look like a banana republic.
I'm picking on Democrats, here, but at least 75% of Senate Democrats
(including Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden, but not Barack Obama)
voted against the recent bad FISA bill.
A much higher percentage of Republicans voted for it.
If he were alive today, Robert Burns would say:
-jsq
'We are bought and sold for telecom gold'
Such a parcel of rogues in a nation!
Comments