"Undermining my electoral viability since 2001."

In It For The Country?

A bit of a ramble about politics and a little drupalcon... Really just thinking out loud.

Are you in it for the country? I'm kind of wrestling with that right now. You see, I have a pretty solid sense that I'll be allright no matter what happens. I'm not really afraid for my life, and only moderately for my life chances. I'll be fine. Maybe dissapointed, but basically fine.

So that begs the question of why bother, why get into it? Why really give a shit about politics if you know your own life will be ok. The Ameican Dream is a pursuit best undertook in the private sector, son. Pollitics is just bullshit anyway, right?

Well, in a word, no. Because community is life, and community means organizing, and in a networked world organization means scaling and scaling means politics. I mean, the CEO track is similar, just takes seed money.

But are you in it for the country? Really? Do you have a vision for how it might all work? I sort of do, but I don't know how realistic it really is. It's a long game, you know? There was a time, right around the run-up to the Invasion of Iraq, and maybe through the election (or at least democratic primary), where things were really moving fast. The pace will pick up with politics again, but in real terms we're going to be dealing with these problems for a long time thanks to the fact that our country was lead through a terrible crisis by an incompatent bunch of shitheel Republican hacks.

That's something I'm unhappy about, because it could have been really different. They still could be.

I think it's interesting that Al Gore is positioning himself to capture that groundswell of internet support... starting a big media website, making those speeches, privately confessing that he'd only do it if he were drafted. He's setting up dominos, folks. I think that could be interesting to watch.

Draft Movements are a really under-explored tactic. You'd think someone would have realized that fundraising potential alone warrants further exploration. But they're also tricky things. If it's really a Draft, what if the Candidate turns out to be incompatible with the Draft Organization? The big one (Clark) didn't really work because the roots and the pros didn't really connect, and the campaign didn't really hit its stride.

It might work on a more local level, though. Could be a tactic for recruitment: local communities "drafting" their own members into service.

Oooh... what if you had a site which was Digg-like in that it allowed the community moderation system to rate itself up to the top, but rather than Tech News, it would be Political Debate. In order to vote you have to be logged in, and are yourself a potential candidate. You'd organize a good system for new content discovery, make a lot of use out of trackbacks, groups and ratings.

Sites like this are coming, but you have to be careful not to try and build the whole Semantic Web on your domain. Still, I find this idea kind of alluring. Might try it myself. You could use it to raise money for a PAC. Open Souce politics, baby. It's the only way to go.

Drupal is just starting to get organized, and it's pretty cool. It's funny, because we were in there in a session Zack had called for, named "How to make money and help Drupal at the same time," and we're all talking about how the emerging market is looking. Because we're all so politically minded we immediately start thinking about structuring it. Eric Gunderson, from Development Seed, a renegade international economist, sort of pulled us back in to reality: what we need is something simple and open, just a nice little phone book.

But we were all set to start premateurely regulating the market. It happened earlier too, in Greg Heller's talk about how drupal professionals should organize. At one point we got off on a tangent about whether to seek labor union affiliation. Even the person who brought it up originally made the note that it was quite premature, and that she simply recommended taking out the word "Guild" (which has a special meaning in labor lingo) and references to a "Bug" to distinguish Guild-Built websites.

Now, I admit that it's a pretty keen use of the drupal Droop, but I don't think Drupal Guild is quite the banner to push forward under. I don't have any alternate suggestiosn going forward, but I plan to write some stuff down soon and get the conversation going on the blogs.

Actually, that's a good tactic going forward in both cases, start getting some of the mailing list discussion public, draw some pictures.

So we're formin' a club, and lettin' everyone in, and we aint gonna cry no more.

Read More

Tags: 

In It For The Country?

A bit of a ramble about politics and a little drupalcon... Really just thinking out loud.

Are you in it for the country? I'm kind of wrestling with that right now. You see, I have a pretty solid sense that I'll be allright no matter what happens. I'm not really afraid for my life, and only moderately for my life chances. I'll be fine. Maybe dissapointed, but basically fine.

So that begs the question of why bother, why get into it? Why really give a shit about politics if you know your own life will be ok. The Ameican Dream is a pursuit best undertook in the private sector, son. Pollitics is just bullshit anyway, right?

Well, in a word, no. Because community is life, and community means organizing, and in a networked world organization means scaling and scaling means politics. I mean, the CEO track is similar, just takes seed money.

But are you in it for the country? Really? Do you have a vision for how it might all work? I sort of do, but I don't know how realistic it really is. It's a long game, you know? There was a time, right around the run-up to the Invasion of Iraq, and maybe through the election (or at least democratic primary), where things were really moving fast. The pace will pick up with politics again, but in real terms we're going to be dealing with these problems for a long time thanks to the fact that our country was lead through a terrible crisis by an incompatent bunch of shitheel Republican hacks.

That's something I'm unhappy about, because it could have been really different. They still could be.

I think it's interesting that Al Gore is positioning himself to capture that groundswell of internet support... starting a big media website, making those speeches, privately confessing that he'd only do it if he were drafted. He's setting up dominos, folks. I think that could be interesting to watch.

Draft Movements are a really under-explored tactic. You'd think someone would have realized that fundraising potential alone warrants further exploration. But they're also tricky things. If it's really a Draft, what if the Candidate turns out to be incompatible with the Draft Organization? The big one (Clark) didn't really work because the roots and the pros didn't really connect, and the campaign didn't really hit its stride.

It might work on a more local level, though. Could be a tactic for recruitment: local communities "drafting" their own members into service.

Oooh... what if you had a site which was Digg-like in that it allowed the community moderation system to rate itself up to the top, but rather than Tech News, it would be Political Debate. In order to vote you have to be logged in, and are yourself a potential candidate. You'd organize a good system for new content discovery, make a lot of use out of trackbacks, groups and ratings.

Sites like this are coming, but you have to be careful not to try and build the whole Semantic Web on your domain. Still, I find this idea kind of alluring. Might try it myself. You could use it to raise money for a PAC. Open Souce politics, baby. It's the only way to go.

Drupal is just starting to get organized, and it's pretty cool. It's funny, because we were in there in a session Zack had called for, named "How to make money and help Drupal at the same time," and we're all talking about how the emerging market is looking. Because we're all so politically minded we immediately start thinking about structuring it. Eric Gunderson, from Development Seed, a renegade international economist, sort of pulled us back in to reality: what we need is something simple and open, just a nice little phone book.

But we were all set to start premateurely regulating the market. It happened earlier too, in Greg Heller's talk about how drupal professionals should organize. At one point we got off on a tangent about whether to seek labor union affiliation. Even the person who brought it up originally made the note that it was quite premature, and that she simply recommended taking out the word "Guild" (which has a special meaning in labor lingo) and references to a "Bug" to distinguish Guild-Built websites.

Now, I admit that it's a pretty keen use of the drupal Droop, but I don't think Drupal Guild is quite the banner to push forward under. I don't have any alternate suggestiosn going forward, but I plan to write some stuff down soon and get the conversation going on the blogs.

Actually, that's a good tactic going forward in both cases, start getting some of the mailing list discussion public, draw some pictures.

So we're formin' a club, and lettin' everyone in, and we aint gonna cry no more.

Read More

Tags: 

I'd Like to Blog the World a Coke...

Coke has paid for six college students to go to the Olympic Games and blog about it. Interesting idea. Advertisers and marketers realize that the days of being able to push mindshare with a big media buy are coming to a close, and it's interesting to watch as they experiment with new tactics for getting us to consume.

I found this kind of troubling though:

The students have agreed to keep their posts positive, according to a Coke spokesman.

So it's not really a big deal in this context, but this conflicts with one of the core values of what I think makes blogging work: transparency and honesty. I think what makes people interested in tuning in to a blog is that the voice is human; there's a level of reality to it. You run the risk of loosing that when you have a contractual mandate to "keep it upbeat."

There's a tension in there, because you can certainly be a good blogger and still present a point of view. However, much like being a good PR flack, to do this well you have to internalize the values that you're trying to represent. This can be a very persuative (even propagandistic) medium, but doing that really means retaining your humanity and writing skills while still toeing the party line. Tough to do.

Online communication can serve as the interstitial tissue of a new global civil society, and having institutions (businesses, the academy) get behind it will help grow and mature the marketplace. That's all good. But don't confuse corporate-sponsored pep-posts with the revolution. Not that you would. But still.

Read More

PoliticsTV

Hmmm... PoliticsTV. This is pretty cool.

It's also smart for the proprietary shops (Advocacy inc, Blue State) to get into the media game. That gives them something to transition to as the actual building and maintaining of web systems inexorably moves towards open source solutions.

On the other hand, I'd like to give them a whuppin' on the media tip too -- Goddammit, we'll whup 'em. We'll whup 'em all from hell to breakfast -- but that might have to wait a bit.

Read More

PoliticsTV

Hmmm... PoliticsTV. This is pretty cool.

It's also smart for the proprietary shops (Advocacy inc, Blue State) to get into the media game. That gives them something to transition to as the actual building and maintaining of web systems inexorably moves towards open source solutions.

On the other hand, I'd like to give them a whuppin' on the media tip too -- Goddammit, we'll whup 'em. We'll whup 'em all from hell to breakfast -- but that might have to wait a bit.

Read More

Smart Chicks

Word. Ezra sez:

When my friends and I compare notes at week's end, more plaudits are given when the girls are impressive than when they're hot. I became extra-infatuated with my first girlfriend when she used a word I didn't know (phylogeny, as I recall), and I still weed folks out by way of a quasi-intellectually elitist checklist, though what's on it remains proprietary information.

I'll take it a step further and say I've taken home and slept with women, mainly because they were working on their PhDs. It's like big knockers, but different.

There are some generation gaps that are emerging among White Male Americans...

Dudes who are over 35 are roundly terrified of homosexuality and will make a point of saying they didn't see Brokeback Mountain. People in my generation don't give a fuck. Result? The Gays™ will be able to marry when I'm 50.

Dudes from the other generation are more likely to see relationships with women in a compartmentalized fashion, more likely to see their mate as filling a pretty specific niche in life and ergo more likely to value beauty over brains. Not so with my peers, though conversely we're probably better at one-night-stands than older folks.

Read More

Tags: 

Smart Chicks

Word. Ezra sez:

When my friends and I compare notes at week's end, more plaudits are given when the girls are impressive than when they're hot. I became extra-infatuated with my first girlfriend when she used a word I didn't know (phylogeny, as I recall), and I still weed folks out by way of a quasi-intellectually elitist checklist, though what's on it remains proprietary information.

I'll take it a step further and say I've taken home and slept with women, mainly because they were working on their PhDs. It's like big knockers, but different.

There are some generation gaps that are emerging among White Male Americans...

Dudes who are over 35 are roundly terrified of homosexuality and will make a point of saying they didn't see Brokeback Mountain. People in my generation don't give a fuck. Result? The Gays™ will be able to marry when I'm 50.

Dudes from the other generation are more likely to see relationships with women in a compartmentalized fashion, more likely to see their mate as filling a pretty specific niche in life and ergo more likely to value beauty over brains. Not so with my peers, though conversely we're probably better at one-night-stands than older folks.

Read More

Tags: 

Two Parrots

You always think that there might be some way that the hot waitress or bartender girl will really be the one -- ha ha -- and rock youtr world and/or bloe your mind. Never happens. As much a team as nipple play, as fot ronus

Read More

Tags: 

Yeah, Drupal Uber Alles

So it looks like there's momentum for an increasing level of organization within the drupal community. That's a good thing.

And Dries just said that if someone will work out a way for him to pick up an honorary PhD, he'll go to work for them. So there you go, vendors.

Read More

Tags: 

Brokeback To The Future

Read More

Tags: 

Pages