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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
  (5 pp). During the last presidential election, you could almost think that the internet 'e' in email stood for election.  However that is only the surface of the picture, this discussion will look at the myriad of ways that the internet has effected politics in the United States, particularly in the last presidential election.
 Bibliography lists 8 sources
 
                                                
Page Count: 
                                                5 pages (~225 words per page)
                                            
 
                                            
                                                File: D0_BBintrpol.rtf
                                            
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
                                                    
                                                
                                                    internet has affected politics in the United States, particularly in the last presidential election. Lobbyist 	Anyone can "lobby" for almost anything.  That person can be requesting endorsement, or financial  
                                                
                                                    or voting support for an idea or a person.  The issue can be a local one, on a regional level or something that will be relevant to the nation  
                                                
                                                    as a whole. 	What the internet access has allowed, is for you to knock on the lobbyist cyber-door, when you want to know something, rather than them phoning you in  
                                                
                                                    the middle of dinner, or knocking on your door, when the last thing you want to do that particular evening is talk to anybody about anything.  A lobbyist will  
                                                
                                                    want you as a customer or a contributor, and even in the political arena fall in the soup to nuts category.   	If you wanted to know a presidential  
                                                
                                                    candidates position on gun control or his attitude toward the NRA (www.nra.org: The National Rifle Association), Americas biggest nonpartisan lobby with approximately 3 1/2 million members, you could click on  
                                                
                                                    the site and see what they had to say about a given candidate.  Or you might choose to go the presidential web site itself.  There you would be  
                                                
                                                    presented with a list of issues or public concerns, with a pat answer, to allay any doubts you might have. Education 	I find that I put anyone in the "lobbyist"  
                                                
                                                    camp who wants me to do something I have not particularly thought of yet, but that does not mean that lobbyists are all bad (nor that I am prone to  
                                                
                                                    think all the time either).  For example, my mother is sure that her assets and social security will "provide for her just fine."  One does not argue with  
                                                
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