Check out the site - http://www.testpacpleaseignore.org
From one of the pages on the site
What we aim to do is simple: use Texas’ semi-open primary system to edge Smith out in favor of another Republican candidate. When voters identify themselves to the election officials, they must request a party’s specific ballot.
More below the fold
This means that Republicans, Independents and Democrats can participate in the choosing of either party’s candidate in the primary election. While Democrats who choose to participate in the Republican primaries are exempt from also voting for their own party’s candidate, it is important to note that their actions would speak volumes in regards to changing the political landscape in their district. Keeping in mind the fact that Smith has enjoyed comfortable margins of victory over the years in a district that heavily favors Republican candidates, a vote for another candidate in Texas’ open primary would possibly have a greater effect than simply voting in the Democratic primary and ultimately losing the race.
There is also a link on the same page to contribute to unseat Lamar.
Meanwhile Chris Dodd hasn't given up his dream to censor the internet. He says in an interview that the debate is still not over.
I'm confident that's the case, but I'm not going to go into more detail because obviously if I do, it becomes counterproductive.
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An ArsTechnica article wonders if Dodd is a slow learner.
Asked whether the White House's decision to oppose SOPA had created tensions with Hollywood, Dodd insisted that he was "not going to revisit the events of last winter," but said he hoped the president would use his "good relationships" with both Hollywood and the technology industry to broker a deal.
The chances of SOPA-like legislation passing Congress in the near future seems slim indeed. Indeed, SOPA is now so widely viewed as a fiasco on Capitol Hill that some pols have turned it into a verb: to "get SOPA'd" is to push legislation that sparks a major Internet backlash. Dodd has already retired from Congress, so he he doesn't personally need to worry about "getting SOPA'd." But his former colleagues who are still in Congress are likely to be more gun-shy.
The latest version of SOPA is called
CISPA
Accord to the EFF, the bill contains “sweeping language [that] would give companies and the government new powers to monitor and censor communications for copyright infringement. It could also be a powerful weapon to use against whistleblower websites like WikiLeaks.”