back to article Republican pol rips online piracy bill, defends Google

At least one powerful Republican member of the US House of Representatives takes a dim view of the Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA) wending it way through the House. "The bottom line is you've got to throw it away," said Darrell Issa (R-CA), an 11-year veteran of the House Judiciary Committee, chairman of the House Oversight …

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  1. lglethal Silver badge
    WTF?

    A politician with sense?!?!?

    Surely not!!!

    1. Turtle

      No, but rather...

      No, not a politician with sense but rather a politician who numbers Google among his constituents and is certainly expecting a large pay-off from them. Or, perhaps we could say, Yes, a politician with sense enough to know on which side his bread is buttered.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        @Turtle

        Precisely, American politicians in general and Republicans more so never do anything without consulting their corporate pay masters first.

        That would be like the tea boy trying to fire a board member.

      2. JEDIDIAH
        Mushroom

        The MP from California...

        California is a big place with lots of content creators and lots of high tech companies.

        Of course he should seek to protect the interests of his constituents in either case. Anything else would be fundementally undemocratic.

        What I find peculiar is when congressmen that have no apparent link to content creation try to subject us to further attempts to distort copyright law in Hollywood's favor.

        The guy from Cali should not be the one schooling the guy from Texas about the proper ideological focus of a member of the GOP. That's just sad.

    2. David 164

      Of cause not but he happens to take orders from people who knows how the internet is run because they run and control much of it.

    3. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      No

      It just confirms that even a stopped clock is right twice a day.

      1. Anonymous Coward
        Anonymous Coward

        Except for

        We moved to a the digital error and these politician just seem to be flashing err. Look at the The party .

    4. SDoradus
      Black Helicopters

      Issa does know tech and business, but his main motive is money

      Heaven only knows what that man did it for, but he does actually have a technical education.

      On the other hand he's been caught so many times in deeply suspicious circumstances doing firearms and insurance offences he can't be called an honest man. Except perhaps by the standards of Congress.

      I don't believe he's taking money from anyone, if only because he wants to be in the position of giving other people money to do what HE wants.

  2. Jay Clericus
    Happy

    hope it fails

    Have to admit going after the site payment options will hurt sites more than banning them will, one of the problems with non technical politciians making up laws is that they do not consider all the effects of the laws.

    Switzerland has stated that file sharing is not a crime for them, sweden does not seem to care all that much and most p2p sites have multiple domains to guard against the .com domain being removed.

  3. WanderingFool

    Other side of the coin

    They're all bought and paid for. Issa by Google and Lamar by the Hollywood studios. You can't get elected in America without hundreds of millions in campaign contributions. The only place to get that is big corporations. If you don't do what they tell you to, then that money goes to their opponent in the next election. The lesson gets learned quickly!

    SOPA is a dangerous, and worse, ineffectual bill. But have no doubt, they'll push it thru and then come back for more power when it fails too.

    1. poeg

      Wot?!?

      I thought Barack Obama said his projected war chest of 1.2 billion is to be from individual 3-5 dollar contributions from the average yank citizen?

  4. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Issa one of the best politicians you can buy...

    Sorry, but Californian politics is a mess.

    Guys like Issa can be bought cheap. Interestingly enough... I guess since the movie makers are just north of his district and are mostly democrats.. you really have to wonder what motivates him.

    My money is on the $$$ that Google and others can push in to his coffers.

    Its a sad day but what do you expect when there's no cap on what PACs and Super PACs can pour in to these guys' hands.

    1. Anonymous Coward
      Anonymous Coward

      Re: Issa one of the best politicians you can buy...

      But Issa is as rich as Croesus ...

    2. Daniel 4

      Actually, not all monetary concerns are that simple. Issa probably CAN'T be bought quite that simply, he has too much money of his own. On the other hand, NO ONE with that much money doesn't have his own vested interests. It would take someone with the virtues of a saint to ignore those interests, and I've never really noticed a tendency for saints to get elected to high public office.

      -d

  5. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    So ...

    a Congressman gets it right and he gets pounded for it here.

    Equal opportunity bashing, I suppose.

    1. Paul Shirley

      Up till now the backers thought they'd bought the vote without the public waking up. The the word got out to enough of the public that astroturfing became necessary... well, it's a theory.

      It's a lot easier to spot when Microsoft do it because they never stop ;)

    2. poeg

      There are real human beings on both sides in Yankville. Unfortunately they hardly get the podium or the cameras what with the nutters having setup permanent dwellings therein. Too bad that. America needs that third party to represent the majority of them stranded in the middle who see it all as Shakespear did... to be an arse or not to be an arse.

  6. Pete Spicer

    Once, just once...

    Once, just once, I'd love someone like this to be promoting sanity in the legal arena not because their paymasters dictate it (as I think the case is here) but simply because it's what he/she actually believe.

    If only it were possible to get elected without having to have vast paymasters in the first place. The internet proves it's possible for ordinary people to be propelled to previously-unheard of fame or infamy. Maybe it's time we really started using these tools in a way to make another change for the better.

    1. Figgus

      Issa is actually tech-savvy and he sits on the Judiciary committee, so he will recognize a fustercluck even when many of his colleagues won't.

      How do you know that's not simply what he believes?

  7. Anonymous Coward
    Anonymous Coward

    Anti-SOPA blackout day

    Just to say that some sites (the largest being Reddit.com) are planning an anti-SOPA 'blackout' day for the 18th of January. This is to show what effect such legislation would have on many sites. If Google themselves were to consider the same and, say, just show some text saying why they have blocked their site that day and how to contact the user's local politician, then I'm sure the garbage that is SOPA and PIPA would get attention even from news outlets owned by supporters of it.

    Both SOPA and PIPA are very, very nasty bits of legislation, being pushed entirely by corporate greed.

  8. Andy Fletcher

    I honestly don't get it

    I couldn't give a fig what his motivations are and can't really understand why anyone else would either. Or are we saying we'd rather sit on a high horse than have someone, anyone, oppose this crappy bill.

  9. Anonymous Coward
    Alert

    Oh nasty man!

    He's doing the right thing, but for all the wrong reasons! Aargh!!!

  10. DanceMan
    WTF?

    Separate the issues

    The money that runs US politics is a serious issue, but SOPA needs debate on its lack of merits. Surprised to hear it from a Republican rep, even more so from one who appears to understand how things actually work. Give the man a break.

  11. tom dial Silver badge

    A simple question

    Why is there a cynical assumption that because Congressman Issa opposes a position that Google's apparent enemies support it so follows that he is on Google's payroll. A quick search does not show Google among his most generous 39 donors? Is it possible that he understands that SOPA (and PIPA) are blatant rent seeking aimed at perpetuation a technologically obsolescent and ultimately failing business model? Just asking.

  12. T J
    Thumb Up

    There are smart Republicans ?????

    OMG, a Republican with a Brain that Works !!!!! Is he just an extremely rare abberation .... or a genetic experiment?????

  13. bsder
    Stop

    The wonder of redistricting ...

    Californians yanked the redrawing of the district boundaries away from the legislature and gave it to a citizen elected committee.

    Lots of previously heavily gerrymandered districts got cleaned up, and suddenly congresscritters who were safe now need to pay attention to the other side. The only districts that look kinda screwy to me are Bakersfield/Fresno, and I suspect that Federal rules might have driven that.

    Issa now suddenly has a bunch of Democrats in his district that had been surgically removed before. I don't think he's in trouble, but his "red" (safe Republican) district is now quite a bit more "purple" (mixed Republican/Democrat). I suspect he's trying to position himself better toward independents.

    And that's exactly what the redistricting was supposed to do--make candidates more responsive to the center.

  14. MacGyver
    Unhappy

    I'm worried..

    Imagine how bad his competing C.A.R.E. bill must be if he is willing to fight S.O.P.A. for it.

    Probably has something about Reps getting first dibs at your new bride if you're caught sharing music.

  15. (AMPC) Anonymous and mostly paranoid coward
    Gimp

    All they do is complain and complain....

    Bob Roberts, great film download it...

    Seriously folks, ONE politician is standing up and protesting against a seriously f*d up bill with sensible arguments. Who cares about his motives? Is it possible he might actually be trying to protect First Amendment rights and the constitution from being permanently fragged for all Internet users? I wish there were a few more like him

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