Looking back on Lady Sunlight’s webcasting quest

I’ve already written about one definitive account of the battle to bring webcasting to the New Mexico House of Representatives. Now there’s another, edgier account of the situation.

The Santa Fe Reporter’s Dave Maass, in last week’s edition, took a look at the fight from a fictional, futuristic perspective. The article begins in the year 2059 with an account of what might be: a statue of “Lady Sunlight” in the Roundhouse. It’s “a life-sized likeness of Janice Arnold-Jones, the turn-of-the-century Republican legislator who, through civil disobedience, forced the New Mexico House of Representatives to begin broadcasting its meetings to the public.”

The article goes way in-depth on this topic. And it quotes me. Check it out by clicking here.

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