

And voters generally don’t call in, so your call can carry quite the advantage.Ī demisexual, dragon-riding warrior woman rescuing an aro ace damsel in distress? A bisexual chef outwitting her alien abductors when they kidnap her to replace the crappy food made by their spaceship’s computer? Jewish holiday celebrations like Purim, Passover, and Shabbat?

“ goes against family values in my church.” - They aren’t going to call your local Pentecostal chapter to fact check this.“I’m concerned that is the government infringing on my personal rights.” - Self explanatory.The intern they have on the other line does not have the resources or the know-how to check that. “I’m a small business owner and is making me lose money!” OR “ is going to cost us millions in taxable sales” - If you talk about how it’s making you personally lose money and absolutely need to bullshit, you run a bar or do freelance photography.Talking points I’ve been using in my blood red state: remember that you gotta make them feel like they’re losing something.


Remember to call because that way their phone is going off and their peers can hear it because their offices are close together (emails and letters don’t work like that), so it can rattle them if they get high volumes. In swing states you’re an undecided voter who’s gonna go blue if they don’t vote how you like.In deep red areas you’re a republican who is thinking of voting for someone else if they don’t vote what you want on this specific bill because it impacts your republican ideals so very much.When you call your reps to ask them to pretty please stop taking away your rights, remember:
