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I'm trying to figure out if Tom Friedman has been taken in by a too-weird-to-believe stunt, or its a real example of internet governance we've all discussed and by now dismissed as impossible: http://goo.gl/bnvFM
It appears to be a cross between a poll and a grass roots 3rd party. I'm going to try it but I'd like other opinions on this: whether its a goofy stunt, political pfishing, ineffective, or maybe could be real. I'm upset enough about the off-the-charts insanity of the current Debt crisis that just about anything looks better than what I got.
-- Owen
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I suspect it's for real. I answered a lot of their questions, many of which were very unsophisticated. They seem to have no idea that their process, like any process (especially a public one), can be corrupted by big money.
-- Russ Abbott _____________________________________________ Professor, Computer Science California State University, Los Angeles Google voice: 747-999-5105 blog: http://russabbott.blogspot.com/ vita: http://sites.google.com/site/russabbott/ _____________________________________________ On Sun, Jul 24, 2011 at 8:08 AM, Owen Densmore <[hidden email]> wrote:
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In reply to this post by Owen Densmore
Cross-Responding to the Cross-Post
On Jul 24, 2011, at
9:08 AM, Owen Densmore wrote:
> I'm trying to figure out if Tom Friedman has been taken in by a too-weird-to-believe stunt, or its a real example of internet governance we've all discussed and by now dismissed as impossible: http://goo.gl/bnvFM I am a fan of Friedman's commentary in general. I think I understand why he called this out to us. In the spirit of positive divergence from existing limited choices, I understand his not questioning this more critically (which is his penchant). I look forward to him doing a follow up after this gathers a little more momentum, asking harder questions. While his announcement and positive statements may seem like an endorsement, what I think I know of Friedman still leaves lots of room for him to ask them hard questions down the road or better yet, as *us* hard questions. Specifically to the Americans Elect (America Select?) website and organization.
This is the part of their rhetoric that moved me the most. In the 2000 democratic primaries, I watched a group of (8?) candidates, many with very good intentions (best I could tell) chip away at eachother when they should have been building a platform. Kucenich and Sharpton could have been the token tricksters asking the other's the hard questions, yet it felt to me like everyone was asking undermining/hard questions during a phase of the process when they should have been reinforcing common ground and looking for nuanced differences, not trying to kick the legs out from under eachother's stumps. This group (and others that might be inspired by, replaced by or find alliance with) might very well generate a better public debate among candidates and voters alike. The *media* and the standing politicians shape too much of the debate for my taste. In our attempts to make the complex and subtle issues fit neatly into a sound-bite and a simple vote, we do ourselves a disservice. Dream Team That said, I'm willing to play the "dream team" game a little. Ignoring their rule about running mates needing to be from a different party, I'd strongly consider endorsing Kucenich and encouraging him to take on Obama as his running mate. Maybe Kucenich can declare "Independent" or "Radical Centrist" or something to fit their rules. While I'm disappointed in what Obama has been able to achieve and I question a number of his methods and actions to date, I'm not ready to give up on him. His presumed biggest fault going in was a lack of experience with DC... well, now he has it, and Kucenich has been in the fray even longer. Kucenich's questioning of Obama's decisions on many things is healthy... he's been trying to keep him (like everyone else) honest and straight. If Obama can put aside the sting that I'm sure Kucenich's censures must have brought, they might make a powerful *progressive* team despite their roots in the Democratic Party. I started life as a Conservative and still have a soft spot in my heart for some of the *motivations* of Conservatives. I appreciated the Tea Party trying to stand up for what they believe even if there is little of what they believe that I agree with. Right now their best feature is the way they are helping to divide the Republican party. But I don't want to see the other side lose an election, I want to win one. So who do the Conservatives have to offer up in this internet-mediated populist game? Before McCain aborted his assault on Bush in 04 I might have been interested in him... but that plus his abysmal showing in 08 (mostly in his choice of running mate) completely invalidated him in too many ways. I don't trust my intuition about Conservatives... I still have a soft spot in my heart, but I'm not letting that make one in my head. It is not mere political correctness that has me wanting to see a female candidate. Sadly I'm afraid we are still in an era where we will choose a "manly" woman this way. Sarah Palin gets half her credibility (whatever that looks like) from her "bulldog with lipstick" and "I shoot wolves from helicopters" maleness. Hillary *has to* (IMO) put on a mannish/bullish style to be taken seriously (but then dismissed for being such a bulldog)... that may have started in law school for all I know. What I know is that we aren't asking for *feminine* leadership, we are asking for "masculine" leadership in a female body (at best). High Tech So what are we to do, those technophiles among us who want to imagine that sprinkling some high tech pixie dust (a Blog, a Website, is that really all that high tech?) on the problem will fix it. First, I say make sure we have the *big guns* in on it... starting with the likes of EFF, but there are many more serious-minded socially aware/responsible technogeeks out there. We here have our own contingent, so I say let's not be swayed by the natural mistake that technology solves all nor that the first ?serious? example of a new (but overdue) paradigm shift should be the one we expect to take us to the moon. What can *we* do? I'm not sure, but I think efforts like Tom Johnson's and others here to try to develop better analytic tools/understanding, using the ubiquitous access of the internet and the leverage of computation is a good start. These questions here, triggered by Friedman's article, brought to us by Owen and now being bantered about, is a good start. I take (minor) exception to Owen's original statement "a real example of internet governance we've all discussed and by now dismissed as impossible:" but forgive it as perhaps being *challenging rhetoric* rather than truly claiming that "we have all dismissed it" literally. Some things take time to Ripen... those of us (Owen included) who have been part of the Interneterati for decades have seen the *potential* for this practically from the start. I'm tempted to go back to the Usenet archives from the eighties and dig up the discussions (even then) of how the internet would save the world (politically) from itself.. And again during the early public Internet years in the 90's. The internet (or more aptly, global electronic communication... including cell texting,etc) is now a part of the global backdrop, no longer merely a playground for the elite. I don't believe it will fix our problems, but it does change the nature of our problems or more importantly the nature of the solutions we might find to them in some interesting ways. This new crue, AmericansElect, are helping to stir that pot for us. At the very least, I give them credit for that. I look forward to an interesting discussion here (and elsewhere) in response to this new attempt. - Steve BTW for anyone who cares/follows my free-associative ramblings, we retrieved only 2 of the 5 sheets of glass from California last week. The failures did not become square marbles, but rather sharks teeth, now filling a recycle dumpster in Mountain View. Nobody got hurt, and we *did* install a 20ft x 8ft Plexiglass screen (from the same haul) in a location at the Traditions Outlet Mall. If you have an idea for 2 10x10x5/8" glass panels (very fragile)... let me know... right now they are a liability!
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