"Undermining my electoral viability since 2001."

Focus and Convergence

Through my various relations and connections, I got a chance to write something a bit more considered about what is going on with this election, this technology, and the rising culture of participation. The work will be posted over on The Blogging of the Predidency in three parts. Part one -- how we got here -- is up now. Check it out and drop a comment over on the BOP site: 21st Century Democracy; my perspective:

The game of 21st Century Participatory Democracy has different rules from what has come before. The people are producers of the political process, not just consumers. You can call it an old thing or you can call it new, but the bottom line is that this time around everyone's a tycoon if they want to be; everyone's a player if they deal themselves in.

But you know I'm no Paul Krugman. Here's the knockout closer from his latest:

The prevailing theory among grown-up Republicans — yes, they still exist — seems to be that Mr. Bush is simply doing whatever it takes to win the next election. After that, he'll put the political operatives in their place, bring in the policy experts and finally get down to the business of running the country... But I think they're in denial. Everything we know suggests that Mr. Bush's people have given as little thought to running America after the election as they gave to running Iraq after the fall of Baghdad.

In the parlance of my youth: burn!

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A Good Day From The Big Ones

Well, it's a good day from the established online players. The Dean Campaign continues to tap my personal zeitgeist. Common Sense For A New Century. I remember ranting at my friends nearly a year ago about the need for a new Thomas Paine. I won't try and claim that this was my idea. I don't own my ideas, even if I suggest them to other people, which in this case I didn't. I'm just super glad this is happening.

Like many of you, I suffer a bit from MoveOn fatigue. What with them and true majority and all the others, I don't take the time to do all their little action alerts. However, their latest is worth hitting up. Not only will defeating it be a slap to Bush, but it's pretty damn important from a policy perspective too. It's a massive $800+ billion spending bill (hello... fiscal responsibility anyone?) which contains massive slabs of pork, re-implements FCC allowances for increased media consolidation that were recently rejected by congress, and slashes overtime pay requirements for nearly 8 million working families. Ayuh; send that damn email.

http://www.moveon.org/looting/

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Are We One Of The Fast 50?

Music For America is in the running for Fast Company Fast 50, an annual contest they have to decide who deserves the hype. In spite of Chuck D's words of wisdom, a little hyping might do our organization some good. Help us out and rate/comment on our entry.

Also, I got the bestest thank-you package from Arielle today. She and Frank are heading up Gear For Dean: A Rally On Wheels, which I did a little webmonkeying for, and will be participating in more in the future; hopefully I'll be able to hit the trail. Thanks for the cookies!

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I got your participation mistique right here...

Check it out; here's a guy from Oregon, just a regular guy, who's decided to run for the state senate house. Participation at the highest level! Go John! Do I have any readers in Southern Oregon? Help this guy out!

Update: since John is running for the house seat, it's even harder. I'd been thinking he'd be able to draw on the Ashland contingent, but apparently not. Help a brother out.

Oregon fucking rules right about now. Portland is teeming with youth and talent, and someone came up with this. And they called it "secretplan.org"! Genius!

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More Dean Things

I know this bores the hell our of some of you, and I promise to talk about my nonexistant sex life as soon as I think of anything interesting to say, but I came up with a decent distilation of the "Dean Thing" while posting on the ol' Kos during my lunch break today.

There are a lot of people who are political vetrans, but still don't "get" why Dean is the frontrunner. Many of these people live in a world of fear, visions of McGovern dancing in their heads. I try and turn them on to the best of my ability. Here's what popped out today. Consider it a counterpart to my ideas about the candidate himself.

  1. The Dean campaign is being run around traditional media. They still pay for ads, but the focus of the campaign is on driving one-to-one interactions. This happens online and offline and includes blogs, letter-writing, door-knocking and a host of other activities. No other campaign has as many volunteer hours to spend or is spending them as effectively.

  2. The Dean campaign is being run as a decentralized network and not as a top-down organization. The dominant message from the campaign is "just do it." There is a hierarchy (multiple hierarchies in fact) but that is not the organizational trope that dominates. Without getting into the math of things, networked organizational models allow vastly greater scalability for participation than hierarchies. Greater participation, which equates to better fundraising and most importantly higher voter turnout, is the single most critical factor in outsing Bush from office and maintaining that momentum to get the US and the world back on track. If we get 60% voter turnout, we win.

  3. Howard Dean as a candidate represents a novel phenomena in that he seems to be less spin-centric than any mainstram candidate in recent memory. The era of heavy spin began in 1992 with Clinton's campaign and has reached an apotheosis -- almost unadulterated doublespeak -- now with Bush in office. A break from this tradition represents a chance to not only bring the national dialogue closer in line with reality, it also represents the best chance to break through the near-50% approval barrier. You cannot always fight fire with fire, and you can never fight it with fire alone.

  4. As a fundraising apparatus, Dean's campaign represents the best chance for fiscal parity with Bush. With point #1 in mind, money still matters hugely in any poltical campaign. No other campaign has as deep a resource pool to draw on or is as thrifty.

  5. By capitalizing on a latent capacity among the body politic for social connections (do you have 150 friends? I don't, and I'm pretty connected), the Dean campaign drives itself with a process which is strengthening communities all across the country. This seems critical if we're to beat Bush and maintain the momentum afterwards to freshen up Congress and generally revitalize this American life. If we play by the standard campaign tactics, I believe we're more likely to loose, and even if we win it will be more difficult to maintain energy after the election.

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A few things

Two good things came my way so far today. First I got word that Dean For Jobs is up for testing. This is a deanspace offshoot that's aimed at getting all the Dean fans out there personally engaged in getting the economy back into high gear. You sign up to teach or learn, or possibly even to employ.

Secondly, I saw this. Nothing like a shot at ol' Ann Coulter to brighten your morning.

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Summit

Just back from the Dean Grassroots Summit here in SF. Good times and good vibes. It's a big tent. I got a few nods for being involved with Deanspace (though I think the real credit belongs to on Neil Drumm, who I'm going to send a fruitcake to for the holidays, and then some) and met with some new allies. I also got to meet in person some people I've only seen online (Steve, Christian, good to meet ya). It was too bad there weren't (girls) more people my age there, but I suppose that's a matter of marketing more than anything else. At least, I hope it is. Don't know what I'll do if it turns out all my peers are apathetic layabouts.

Also, check out DeanPix, which is being run by Christopher Dye, the guy who set up the housecall flash ad on such short notice when I was in Burlington those months ago. He's created a flash information kiosk, which is a pretty innovative use of the tool.

And Deanspace is going 1.0! I have to fix up some database things to go in there so that 1.0.1 is nicer.

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Statue Antics

Just in case you didn't make the connection; try contrasting the statue that went down in London today with another statue that went down a while ago.

The point isn't that Bush is worse than Saddam. He's not. More dangerous to world peace, probably, but Saddam was a very very very very very very very bad man. That being said, the point is that the Bush modus opperandi is falshood, deciet and deception. They made that statue going down in Iraq look like some kind of popular mass rally. They're also pretending an actual popular mass rally didn't happen. From the NYT:

Asked about the protests during the visit, Mrs. Bush said she hadn't really seen any. "We've seen plenty of American flags, we've seen plenty of people who were waving to us," she said. "Many, many more people in fact than we've seen protestors."

And this, of course, has been pretty much ignored or buried by the national press in the US because they've already bought their tickets and now seem unable to jump off the ride. So it goes.

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Dean on Gay Marriage

To the commentor who asked what Dean's position on the recent ruling in MA to allow homosexual partners to marry, here's the word from the horse's mouth.

"There will be those who try to use the decision today to divide Americans. Instead, this decision should be viewed as an opportunity to affirm what binds us together -- a fundamental belief in the equality of human beings, regardless of race, gender or sexual orientation."

Right now it looks like a done deal. Full civil rights in Mass! Unless someone comes up with something that might derail this process, it's unlikely that many politicians will sing its prases too loudly, as Gay Marriage (as opposed to Civil Unions) is statistically unpopular in the US.

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Reeling And Rocking

Moving and shaking, swimming with the sharks, running with the devil; it's been a fun couple of days. I got to have a great dinner and conversation tuesday night with Jonas Luster, Phil Wolff and Rick Klau, the instigator of the whole thing. Talk was mainly of politics (Phil likes Kerry, Jonas Clark, Rick and I are Deanies), and the impact of socially aware design on technology and media; good talk; heady but respectful too.

The thing that struck me most about the politics part was how concialatory everything was. No barbs, just honest discussion. I sense a chance for Dean to start to pull away. I don't want to jinx anything, but people are starting to realize he's probably the guy, and they're thinking it might not be all that bad to get behind him and push. It might even be fun. We are, after all, on the same team, along with most of humanity.

And in answer to a question I got via email from Cian, asking, "What about John Edwards for president, Bitch." I have to say it just doesn't look like his year. He's obviously got something going for him, but I think he's too nice, too pretty, too slick and charming for these times. He doesn't seem well-suited to governing in an era of crisis and strife. I think that's why he hasn't gotten any lasting traction in the media or in many polls. Assuming the world doesn't go to hell in a handbasket, he could be the guy to go with in 2012. Maybe a Veep possibility in the interum?

Speaking of hell in a handbasket, tonight I saw the San Francisco of Uncovered: the whole truth about the Iraq war, an effective piece of documentary filmmaking. It sure made me mad all over again. Then I shot over to the starlight lounge and looked out at the city while the last bits of a Gavin Newsom fundraiser finished; SF mayoral politics: hard to figure. The traditional discourses of right and left simply do not apply here. The thing about looking out at the city from so high, you aren't so assaulted by the logos that dominate the view at street level. It's a beautiful and classy thing, the kind of thing you have to pay to have access to.

But apparently you don't have to pay too much. As we were checking out to go find food, the public was lining up to get in to the lounge at $3 a pop; not for the fundraiser, just regular wednesday night action. It was a pretty blue-collar looking crowd. and good for them for throwing back a cocktail, taking in the view, and standing on the ground of the beautiful people.

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