Tag Archive for 'politics'

Teabagged

DSC_0068

Now there’s a subject that will do wonders for my SEO.

I spent lunchtime in White Plains, NY where 250, mostly middle-class and mainly older voters, and a handful of fellow merry pranksters, hovered at the intersection of Route 100 and the Bronx River Parkway.

Note to my right-wing brethren – take it from someone who’s attended his share of rallies. You have to start on time. You have to bring a PA system or at least a bullhorn, especially if you are holding a rally between two major highways. Your first speaker should be someone with something more exciting than how New York funds county governments.

But I digress.

Only in America would middle class folk show up in the middle of the day to support tax cuts for individuals who are far wealthier than they will ever be. I’ve always believed that paying taxes, along with voting and attending baseball games is one of those things that we are privileged, as Americans, to be able to do. To support our neighbors, to educate our children, build roads and bridges and a more just society – these things aren’t abstractions but part of who we are and what makes our society work.

Honestly, I found the whole demonstration to be depressing.

My pictures are here. More thoughts on the rally from A Considered Argument.

Complete coverage from the Huffington Post here.

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Do Republicans Get The Internet?

"Republican Party Elephant" logo
Image via Wikipedia

I’ve writen before about the “Obama won because his team used social media” meme and why it’s wrong. This morning Meghan McCain (of the Arizona McCains) chimes in from the GOP side of the arguement.

You can read the article here.

The money quote is from a Republican strategist who points out that

we have to understand what drives success. In some ways we continue to put the cart before the horse. Technology does not drive success. Message (especially a well crafted one) drives success.

Bingo.

Admittedly the GOP and their amen corner in the conservative blogosphere have been pretty lame in their use of the Internet. But even if they were slick as oil they’d still be nowhere without a compelling message.

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Rachel Maddow on The Daily Show

Rachel Maddow is just about the smartest person working in the cable news business today. One of my favorite features of her show are her verbal jousts with Pat Buchanan – a man who’s politics I detest but I can’t deny his smarts and Rachel is very much up to the task of holding up the left side of any arguement.

I’d like to wish there were more on-air personalities with her brains but I’d also like to wish I could live off of the proceeds from the ads running on this site.

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Finally

You too can obsess about theĀ Minnesota Senate raceĀ 

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Organizational Theory

The “New Organizers” have succeeded in building what many netroots-oriented campaigners have been dreaming about for a decade. Other recent attempts have failed because they were either so “top-down” and/or poorly-managed that they choked volunteer leadership and enthusiasm; or because they were so dogmatically fixated on pure peer-to-peer or “bottom-up” organizing that they rejected basic management, accountability and planning. The architects and builders of the Obama field campaign, on the other hand, have undogmatically mixed timeless traditions and discipline of good organizing with new technologies of decentralization and self-organization.

From The Huffington Post

The world of organizational science has changed dramatically. Witness the decentralized / centralized Obama campaign as it changes the rules of political campaigns across a battleground state near you.

The real change is the lowered cost of participation. Not in the dollars and cents sense of cost but in the effort involved in getting up off of the couch. We don’t have to find our checkbook, an envelope and a stamp anymore to make a contribution to our favorite candidate. We can do it with two clicks of a mouse.

The Obama campaign is at the forefront of this right now. If I want to call voters in swing states, I have an iPhone app that will do the work for me. But pretty soon the rest of the political spectrum will catch up and then watch out.

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