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Messages worth shouting about.

Amplify Your Voice >

 
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Sponsor an ad to raise your voice.

The majority of political advertising in the US is paid for by corporations and wealthy individuals channeling money to Super PACs. They use this money to run highly targeted, technical and costly campaigns that give them unfair influence. The complexity of creating digital ad placements keeps this kind of political messaging out of reach for most citizens.

We’re giving the power of political advertising back to the people.

Simply choose a message you want to spread from our store, then checkout. We’ll place your ad on social media networks like Facebook and Instagram to reach carefully targeted voters. Once your ad campaign is complete, you’ll receive an update letting you know how many people were reached!

We believe in positive political messaging supported by individuals, not billionaires and corporations.

By sponsoring an ad through AddVoice, you can spread the messages you care about to voters outside your own social network and amplify your voice!

Let’s go >

Super PACs: a big problem.

In the US, Independent Expenditure-Only committees, or Super PACs, raise unlimited sums of money from corporations, unions, associations and wealthy individuals, then spend the money to advocate for or against political candidates.

As of September 2018, 2,113 Super PACs have reported receipts of $700,282,356 and expenditures of $214,421,737 in the 2018 cycle (data here).

That’s big money. And it’s a big problem for the voting public, because it unfairly influences elections and disenfranchises individual voters.

You Can Help >

 
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Everyone says
”we’re divided.”

There’s plenty of political division in the air right now, but the overwhelming majority of Americans believe in things like climate change (data), common-sense gun laws (data) and a livable minimum wage (data). These issues are politicized by partisan media and politicians to make them polarizing.

We think common ground is more important than left or right.

Spread the word >

Simple. Powerful.

Add your voice today >

Pickle
Pioneers

California natives Petra Frenkel and Gordon Byun are passionate about pickles. Gordon was raised on a steady diet of kimchi in a traditional Korean family. Helping his mom make the spice mixture and prepare the vegetables, he learned from the best. Petra blames her pickle obsession on her parents who migrated to SoCal from New York. Dissatisfied with the L.A. pickle ecosystem, her parents made kosher pickles at home. Petra became a bit of a pickle-snob, but thinks that everyone should eat delicious things, so it’s really more of an egalitarian snobbery.