Scoop’s Ad Campaign for U.S. Electronic Election Integrity

I am writing to ask for your help and support for someone and something of great importance to me.

Alastair Thompson, General Manager of Scoop Independent News, has just announced the launch of a pro bono Advertising Campaign for U.S. Electronic Election Integrity.

Will you help? Words cannot express how much I would appreciate your support of Scoop and this campaign.

Here are seven actions you can take to make a difference:

ACTION #1: CONTRIBUTE FUNDS FOR ADVERTISING

Your contribution will help cover Scoop‘s costs of providing free advertising to organizations that are working for election reform and to spread the word about election integrity issues.

You can contribute online at:

Pro-bono Advertising Campaign For U.S. Electronic Election Integrity

http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0809/S00159.htm

Financial support is critical to make this campaign successful.

Are you short on funds? Cancel your subscriptions to media that failed to tell you what you really needed to know over the last decade, and instead support Scoop because they have offered you free access to the truth about what has been happening for years and will continue to do so.

While you are at it, tell the corporate media why you are canceling your subscriptions.

ACTION #2: PASS THIS MESSAGE ON

Pass this link on to those in your networks who want to see honest elections in the United States and who appreciate and support independent media.

ACTION #3: CONNECT WITH GROUPS

Do you know groups working for U.S. election integrity who need media exposure? This is a unique and free opportunity for election reform news websites, documentary makers, authors and activist groups to raise the profile of their activities and publications by placing free ads on Scoop’s website  Please let them know about this campaign and Scoop‘s powerful audience in this space.

ACTION #4. BLOG IT

If you are a blogger, post links to Scoop‘s incredible archive of U.S. election fraud stories, American Coup II – 1999 to 2008 , as well as to this campaign.

If you are not a blogger, post links when you comment on blogs or forums with readers who would be interested.

ACTION #5. SEND IDEAS

Do you have ideas on how Scoop can make a difference to voting and election integrity in this election cycle?  E-mail Scoop at the campaign contact e-mail – usacoup@scoop.co.nz – or post your suggestions on my blog and I will forward them to Scoop.

Scoop‘s Ad Campaign for U.S. Election Electronic Integrity

ACTION #6. GIVE THANKS

The truly great reporters of our generation could use an infusion of good old-fashioned appreciation. Take a moment to thank Alastair and the journalists at Scoop for their extraordinary accomplishments on our behalf over the last decade. Feel free to post at my blog, if you like.

If you are not familiar with Scoop, you may want to check out their website and see how many U.S. journalists and commentators who, like me, have come to rely on Scoop to publish and build a global following after being censored by the corporate media.

ACTION #7. PRAYERS AND MEDITATIONS

Pray and meditate – according to your practice – for the team at Scoop and all those who are working to ensure honest elections in the United States during this critical period.

For example, here is what I posted recently in my “9-11 Anniversary Prayer”.  I had in mind Scoop’s accomplishments in supporting the Unanswered Questions effort to organize citizens in support of holding government accountable to investigate the events of 9-11:

We give thanks for independent media;
We give thanks for independent journalists and investigators;
authors, engineers, and scientists, concerned citizens;
Lord, protect them, encourage them, lift them up and let them feel today
our appreciation and our admiration;
They have stood between us and the abyss:
They are “the repairer of the breach, the restorer of paths to dwell in.”
Let our resources gather to replenish and refresh them—
their best is yet to come.

To learn more see Why is Scoop and Their Campaign So Important to Me?