I urge my fellow Americans to join with me on this action. You can
find your state's senators here and
find your district's representative here.
I dashed this off myself in a minute. You can copy it if you'd like, but I encourage you to come up with your own words, too.
Dear $TITLE $LASTNAME:
I urge you to oppose the proposed $700 billion bailout of foundering financial companies through a massive federal purchase of bad mortgages and other assets.
I am dismayed and disgusted at the idea of using, all told, $1.8 trillion dollars[1] of taxpayer money in order to rescue private-sector firms from their own greed-driven mistakes, and hope that you consider this issue worth fighting.
I look forward to learning of your position and actions regarding this matter.
Sincerely,
Jason McIntosh
Somerville, MA
[1] Source:
http://www.cnbc.com/id/26808715 Conventional wisdom is that email, while it does have mass, still carries a fraction of the weight of snailmail or phone calls, so I plan on printing these out and mailing them to the same folks' offices.
Honest question: what is the experience of phoning your senator or representative like? I'm not sure that I want to have a two-way conversation with someone about this - I just want to make my stance and desires known, and then get out. The one time I phoned a senator's office, like four years ago (I don't even really recall what the issue was), I called off-hours and left a voicemail. That was OK. Rattling off a screed to a live human would be a tad more awkward, though.