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Stamp-o-rama
Move to Amend comes to Santa Fe
Ashley Sanders calls me from somewhere near Flagstaff, Ariz. She and Renae Widdison, organizers for the Move to Amend Coalition, are on their way from California to Florida, piloting a truck loaded with a giant money-stamping machine that labels bills with big, red slogans like “A corporation is not a person; money is not speech” and “Not to be used for bribing politicians.”
They call the machine the “Amend-o-Matic”—a visible manifestation of Move to Amend’s underlying goal of limiting the power of money in politics. Specifically, they’re raising awareness about the push for a Constitutional amendment stating that “1) A corporation is not a person; and 2) Money is not free speech.”
“People have been really excited when we explain it to them,” Sanders says. “Everyone we talk to says this is either the No. 1 or one of the biggest problems in our world right now.”
The tour started earlier this month in Los Angeles, where Sanders says people wandered up and, upon learning about the project, asked to have their bills stamped.
“We’ve had the whole range,” she says—from the people who run into a store to get as many $1 bills as they can, or the guy in LA who “had 50 $100 bills, and he stamped them all.”
Sanders will be in Santa Fe this Wednesday, Oct. 17, to hold a money-stamping event and a workshop on “stamping out corporate rule.”
Kaitlin Sopoci-Belknap, a former Santa Fean who now works out of California as Move to Amend’s national field organizing director, says she expects a big turnout in Santa Fe, whose City Council voted unanimously in January to approve a resolution opposing corporate personhood and the US Supreme Court’s 2010 decision in Citizens United v FEC. Still, she warns that the movement is just the beginning of what may be a long, slow process.
“We’ve been focusing not on Congress, because the current Congress—or even the next Congress—is not who we can depend on to see this through,” Sopoci-Belknap says. “This is definitely a long-term effort, and we’re in the phase of building support from the ground up.”
While the New Mexico Senate also approved a memorial opposing Citizens United earlier this year, Sopoci-Belknap says Move to Amend’s goal is a broader one.
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