The measure, called Question 3, prompted heated debate in the months leading up to the election. Central Maine Power and Versant Power, the state’s dominant utilities, poured more than $40 million into a campaign opposing the referendum, outspending Pine Tree Power advocates 34 to 1. Political groups funded by the utilities and their parent companies mailed flyers and aired ads on TV, radio, and social media, urging Mainers to reject the measure, which would have effectively put the two companies out of business.

  • emizeko [they/them]@hexbear.net
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    poured more than $40 million into a campaign opposing the referendum, outspending Pine Tree Power advocates 34 to 1.

    boy that sure sounds democratic and not just bourgeois power

  • ArsenLupin [comrade/them, he/him]@hexbear.net
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    And that’s while living literally one step away from one of the best state own power utility in the OECD, providing the cheapest electricity of the “western” world. Americans are a lost cause. 🤦

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    On one hand I have an impulse to call the voters morons but it can’t be right, this level of propaganda is ungodly. What exactly does a power company’s propaganda even look like?

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      One of their arguments I believe was that it would actually be more expensive under public, because the cost of the buyout would be passed on to customers’ bills. That probably resonated even though the cost of the buyout was overinflated by them.

    • Dimmer06 [he/him,comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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      They put a large man in a hard hat and a flannel on TV and in a heavy Central Maine accent he said “Government run power is too expensive for us taxpayers”

      The voters also killed a constitutional amendment to remove a provision that was ruled illegal in federal court 20 years ago and hasn’t been enforced since.

      Edit: They actually voted against two constitutional amendments to bring our laws in line with federal law

  • Dolores [love/loves]@hexbear.net
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    funny how it takes a plebiscite the company is allowed to campaign in to create a public utility, but selling off a public utility never comes with a plebiscite?

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      tbf they did call a plebiscite for a similar thing to sell off the water utility in somerville nj, unfortunately our local DSA chapter didn’t notice it in time and started campaigning against it waaaaayyyy too late so it passed.

          • Preston Maness ☭@lemmygrad.ml
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            This sort of thing makes me more convinced than ever that socialists need a professional, cadre-oriented approach to their work. Relying on volunteers for everything is a recipe for burnout and failure.

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              True, but tbf again I’m def willing to submit to self-critique on this one, I think I had a bit of an ultra-leftist error of trying to focus too hard on making solidarity statements for various events while ignoring local electoral struggles. Definately going to pay harder attention to local referendums next time around

      • stigsbandit34z [they/them]@hexbear.net
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        Hmm I wonder

        Do proponents of a hellfire of propaganda convincing the average American (who is quite uneducated) to behave in a certain way argue “that was their choice” or something

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          People are completely hostile to the idea that their opinion could ever be swayed or manipulated. They alone are the Logical Free Thinker™️ Completely immune to propaganda and manipulation. They voted against their own self-interest because they just felt like it, completely freely of their own volition.

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      People still have agency, you can be scrupulous and skeptical. Stop treating literate adults with access to the internet like literal babies.

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          See right there, you insulted them by calling them “burger brain”, that itself is an example of how we don’t just give people a pass because propaganda exists. We rightfully mock them for stupidly falling for it so blatantly. We don’t treat them like innocent toddlers who believed their parents when they told them a magic fairy leaves them money in exchange for their teeth.

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          No one is completely immune, but that does not mean everyone is equally scrupulous.

          Also we don’t give everyone a pass just because propaganda exists, plenty of racist propaganda exists, but we still mock, condemn and hold to account Klansman and Neo-nazis. We don’t treat them like hapless babes lost in the woods who couldn’t help but fall for it.

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              Accept they aren’t really reachable, focus on reaching the people we can. Don’t infantilize them, insult them, make memes about how dumb they are so they feel shame for being so poorly informed which will discourage them from showing their ass in the future. Seek to dis-empower them, create new political structure that don’t allow them as much of a say in society.

              • danisth [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                The difference between people that vote in favour of shitty policies like this vs people that vote for racist policies is huge. You cannot fault the average person for voting in favour of keeping utilities private the same way you can fault people voting for nazi policies. Understanding why a publicly owned utility is better for any non-capitalist (meaning people that own capital, not people who prefer capitalism) is a matter of political literacy, of which the average American is objectively severely lacking. It’s easy to fall for propoganda (and at a 40:1 ratio there’s no winning here) when there’s no deeper understanding of the implications. Voting in racist policies is totally different imo. It doesn’t require political literacy to understand that racism is bad, if you fall for racist propaganda then more severe measures are needed, something deeper is at play.

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    “We gave you a choice between a good thing and a bad thing. We may have sunk a lot of resources into the bad thing, but the beautiful part about it is that we gave you a choice unlike those authoritarian countries.”

    Fucking love democracy man

  • charly4994 [she/her, comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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    Reminds me of when patient ratios for nurses in I believe Vermont went to a ballot measure and after a massive ad campaign it barely failed. Not like the public really understands what it’s like and what’s cut when you’re understaffed and the slick ads tell them that it’ll make things worse so they believe it. Then you get national professional organizations celebrating the defeat because they’re all ghouls and don’t give a shit about the floor nurse burning out after running with an 8:1 in med surg or 24:1 at rehab where you have 20 minutes to allot each person, good luck actually giving people proper care.

    • Yiazmat@lemmygrad.ml
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      there was a bill in California last year that would have required dialysis clinics to have a doctor/nurse/PA present during patient treatments, and they would have to get permission from the state’s department of health before they could close clinics or reduce patient services, among other things like having to provide the state with a list of people who had more than 5% ownership interest in the clinic. Of course private health companies like DaVita spent more than $75 million buying ads that were just thinly-veiled threats like “hey you love your family members with kidney disease, right? It would be a shame if we just closed all these clinics…” and so of course the bill failed with almost 70% of people voting no.

      idk how anyone can consider this country a democracy

    • frogbellyratbone_ [e/em/eir, any]@hexbear.net
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      there’s a bunch of california local public owned for electricity https://www.cmua.org/members

      i’m pretty familiar with EBMUD and SMUD. Way cheaper electricity, cleaner, local better jobs compared to the poor neighboring souls still stuck on PG&E for electricity.

      i remember SMUD tried to expand into yolo county back in like 2009? and it was copy/paste same from this article with PG&E spending the world to stop it, successfully. those idiot voters got their wish (or more charitably: got manufactured) and have been getting fleeced hard since.