Elvis wrote:operator kos wrote:call your STATE senator
Some would scoff at appealing to elected representatives, but it can make make a difference sometimes. They say writing a letter is taken more seriously than a phone call, and talk to them in their language, i.e. use a business-letter format and make one's point short and clear.
You'd be surprised. Given that few people even know who their state-level representatives are, these guys actually get very few calls (or letters, which are even better, as you said). As I mentioned before, I actually work as a lobbyist for a relatively mainstream enviro group in California, and a state legislator told me once that as few as a dozen calls will make a difference in his vote for a bill he's on the fence about.
Also, it came as a great shock to me to learn that there are actually some altogether decent people in the state legislature, at least in my state. With smaller elections, it's actually possible to get a grassroots, well-meaning person elected. Corporations do still spend money, and there still is fraud and corruption, but not nearly on the endemic level as at the federal level.