What really happened in 1992 – Not Perot or Clinton - but PhoneVoter and the power of Volitional Science
by Melinda Pillsbury-Foster
A small group of Voluntarists were persuaded by Brock d’Avignon,
another Volitional Scientist, to spend time working feverishly on a plan to
persuade candidates for President of the United States to sign up for FREE
satellite time and participate in a Presidential Debate Tournament. Sixty-fpur Americans had signed up to run for
president in 1992 and most of them remained unknown then and now.
These stalwart Voluntarists included Samuel E. Konkin, III, Bill Cousert, Ron Fink, Howard Hinman,
Robert d'Avignon and Lawrence Samuels and Kent Hastings.
PhoneVoter was a business plan aimed at inserting interaction
and dialog into political action and so catapulting candidates, and their
ideas, characters, values and such, into public view.
Of the 64 presidential hopefuls only four candidates responded
to multiple offerings of the proposals and the determined calls made by Brock d’Avignon,
who at first had focused on Libertarian
and other minor party candidates.
All were offered the same services, worth between $$400,000 a
month, or $500,000 - $800,000 in total for the campaign period. Keystone Satellite Communications, Inc., was
the generous donor for satellite time. Their
hope was to elicit more purchases of satellite time for all sixty-four political
candidates.
Videos of candidates who did participate were Uplinked from Keystone’s
Technological HQ at 6430
Sunset Blvd, Los Angeles, 6th Floor.
To a person, everyone who Brock managed to contact claimed
they did not have the money to pay for the satellite time which it was made
clear was being offered free. This did
not change, no matter how carefully Brock explained how easily they could sell
advertising.
Or they did not have a camera, could not make their own video
or, the reasons were many.
Brock explained over
and over how television works, to no avail, even though in some cases he offered
to help sell ads to pay for their shows himself.
Brock called the campaigns for all candidates for the
nomination and only Lee Wrights responded.
Lee was unable to get anyone to believe a real satellite company would
offer free services.
Andre Marrou’s Campaign HQs was called morning, mid-day and in
the evening. Brock or one of the other
Voluntarists faxed and snail-mailed the Marrou HQ and the National Libertarian
Party HQ continuously. Despite the fact
Michael Emerling Cloud will take anything he can get, no one stirred. Brock gave up, focusing attention first on
Perot.
The four candidates who accepted some services were, in order
of their response to the offer: Ross
Perot, Jerry Brown, Pat Buchanan and Bill Clinton.
Ross Perot, unwilling to pay for anything, had the Owners of
America, Inc., running Capitol Calling Card 700 Telepoll. For $.99 for each call participants would
vote AGREE or DISAGREE on the question of the week, which was then sent to the
media and their Congresspersons. Brock
was writing the questions and so included a second option of, “Would you favor force of law as a penalty or
military action?”
Brown decided to use the UneditedPresidential Candidates Speeches Program in March but it took Jerry some
time to get his video tape he owned together.
Brock suggested a visual stunt of having Federal Tax Code Books (70
volumes) tossed into a trash truck. Unfortunately,
the Clinton’s got wind of this exciting event and ensured no trash truck was
available. Undeterred, Brown threw the
books into a trash can as he held up his 1040 Postcard Form.
Bay Buchanan ensured Brock received a copy of an unedited speech
which Pat had made so he also availed himself of this service.
Brock received a call from two voices identified as “Marcus
and Greer”, who identified themselves as “Media Consultants for the Clinton
Campaign” in the third week of March. It was clear they had read the offer made
in detail.
One of the voices, who Brock identified at Frank Greer, asked
about how they could obtain services at a price they could afford. Greer shared that the Clintons were down to
$50,000 and their Bus HQ. The second
voice was not Hillary, but perhaps could have been Bill himself since no one
named Marcus was employed by the Clinton Campaign.
Brock sent on more information, recommending they immediately
rent the only available satellite uplink truck left in the country at a cost of
$35,000 a month. The voice which-was-not-Greer
asked about how they would pay for the gas.
Brock told him with the mass-audience generating money would no longer
be a problem as long as news directors were informed it was available. He told them in detail how to accomplish
this. And so it was.
On another of several calls Brock also advised Greer and Voice
which-was-not-Marcus, that Craig Reese, the Keystone Studio Manager on Sunset
Blvd., said Bill would be better off
handling the mike himself in his jaunts across America. Craig had seen Bill dealing with an MC and
knew he did better when he was in control.
Brock had faxed them, “Do
you want it?” But he never heard from them again.
Brock knew they had
gone around him to get the Uplink truck because he was told by annoyed folks at
Keystone this had taken place.
The advice so provided proved to be true and the insolvent
Clintons were soon rolling in dough and edged out Jerry Brown by about three days. Brown had taken the time to send videos of
the Love Canal, which was a horrible outrage but for which it was not clear he
had the rights.
The Unedited Presidential
Candidates Speeches ran 16 hours a day for six weeks, alternating between
Brown and Buchanan. At the bottom of the screen were AGREE - DISAGREE phone
numbers. This was a TV first.
For the minor candidates the campaign season went as
usual. No one heard anything about them,
saw them, or believed they existed.
Keystone had seen Brock in action, so trusted him to handle
the Master Control Panel for 22 Networks when the regular technician had to
leave the studio. His parting instructions
to Brock were. “If you have to interrupt
programming for some announcement, make sure it is during the programs and not
the commercials. If that happens we will not be paid about $33.000
each if even one second of those is missing.”
On May 1, 1992, Brock was in the studio alone as the Rodney
King Riots mounted. He could see an RV
on fire, pillars of smoke and microwave video feed was coming in from camera
trucks all over Los Angeles. In the
middle of this, it was announced the LAPD was asking Rodney King to address the
city.
Brock knew this was going to be tight timing but
important. This was the feed for the
entire country.
After the commercials ended, to the second, Brock intercut
into the Rodney King’s speech, so the entire country heard, “People, I just want to say, you know, can we all get along? Can we get
along?.....” as the rest of
this important speech continued Brock
watched the commercials approach. The
moment King stopped talking the fastest finger in the west made sure not a
second of commercials was lost.
Visit PhoneVoter.us for more on this story.
Over a quarter century ago, and still ground-breaking!
ReplyDeleteThe truth shines light in all directions. Thanks for the comment.
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