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RoboCops Needed for Political Robocalls?

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Monday, July 16, 2012   

YANKTON, S.D. - Robo-call season is under way in South Dakota, along with election season. Political robo-calls are exempted from National Do Not Call Registry regulations, and some families have been targeted for several calls a day.

Shaun Dakin founded the National Political Do Not Contact Registry in 2007, hoping that candidates would use the list to refine their calling logs. He describes robo-calls as "disrespectful" of voters because they're one-sided conversations.

"Robo-calls are kind of the perfect example of a marketing political machine with no civil discourse, no debate, no democracy. It's phone spam. You can't have a debate with a robo-call."

Many times, he says, a call sounds as though it's coming from a candidate - but it's really from a political action committee, and the "disclaimer" is impossible to understand unless the call is recorded and listened to several times.

Dakin says the calls are more than an annoyance. He's collected stories from around the nation about how the calls tie up lines being kept open for emergencies, disrupt the sleep of night-shift workers and cause disturbances for people with mental-health issues.

"Senior citizens answer the calls, they have dementia, they get confused, they get agitated, the adult children have to leave their jobs and have to come home, and they have to take care of their parents."

Some research, Dakin says, shows that the calls are ineffective and can alienate voters who support the particular cause.

More information is online at StopPoliticalCalls.org.


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