Politics

Documentary Investors Wanted: Citizen Journalists, Activists and Social Change

Fresh off an Obama Organizing Fellowship in the swing state of Missouri, I am (working...quickly! :-) ) to raise funds to produce a documentary film -- FROM DENVER TO NOVEMBER -- about the netroots, its impact on Presidential politics and the potential for a brand new model of social change under an Obama administration.

http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3107/2740125846_f6dd1fffae_m.jpgEvidence -- plus my own intuition / experience -- suggest an Obama administration can deliver a new model of social change: a parallel path coordinating top-down governmental change with unprecedented community action, efficiently enabled by web technology, social media, and where both citizen activists and citizen journalists play vital roles.


We Are the Change

When Bill Clinton ran for President, he brought Hillary into the equation. Bill's appeal: a "two for one." What's not to like about benefitting from the experience and commitment of two accomplished public servants?

So what might Obama bring to the White House?

How about a critical-mass manifestation of George H.W. Bush's "a thousand points of light"?

It's the perfect storm:

  • a candidate with a community organizing background;
  • expert use of the Internet to efficiently connect and mobilize the masses; and
  • a huge and growing database of Obama activists, most of whom have flagged those issues -- Economy, Education, War, etc. -- that personally matter most.

Never before have we had the means and national motive to engage individuals en masse, after an election to contribute to solving social and environmental challenges.


OBAMA: Because of Hanoi Jane

BarbarellaTwo words make my Dad Arnold Baum, a WW II veteran who served in the Battle of the Bulge, apoplectic.

Jane Fonda.

Years ago we caught a news clip of Jane, tears streaming, pleading her case against war.

"Bullshit!! She's acting! She's an Oscar-winning actress!" Dad barked at the television.

"She's manipulating us!"

I attempted solidarity, chastising Jane for clomping around that canyon waaay too long in those heels in "The Electric Horseman." Dad didn't bite. Once Hanoi Jane...

So when this clip of a more personable, vulnerable, human Hillary aaaaall ferklempt made the rounds, my gut said: acting.

In contrast, Obama shows a consistency of character that's short in most others. His also-ran address last night was as Presidential as in Iowa.

Hillary's transformation from her Iowa to New Hampshire self has been Kamikaze precise. The critics said...


OBAMA: Because of Rodney King

subwayIn 1992 I was living in New York City when the Rodney King verdict and aftermath of riots gave my employer reason to dismiss staff early. The unspoken message: find safe haven, preferably out of dodge.

New York could blow any minute. Unrest was claiming lives and $1 billion in damages from South Central to Las Vegas and Atlanta. Even Seattle.


Huck's Hidden Agenda

Huck EnoughI yearn for even one candidate to change the campaign game. As much as I would like to believe Huckabee is sincere, I can't.

Showing the attack ad he pulled to press proves that Huck only feigns the high road. The tip-off? Huckabee argues that he had to "prove " to press that they actually were going to run an ad.  Then he elaborated, that press could confirm his campaign  already bought media.  Whoops.  Mistake.

That simple, fact-checking mission would supplant screening the ad itself. Instead, we're left with another orchestrated publicity blitz with hidden agenda. No surprise to Huck's campaign managers that citizens -- and journalists -- are flocking to YouTube to see -- spread and discuss -- the ad-we're-not-going-to-see.


MySpace to Hold First Presidential Primary

Social networking site MySpace will hold a Presidential primary on January 1 & 2, 2008, before any official state primaries. Every user will be asked to vote for their favorite candidate.

Publicity stunt? In part, probably.

Will it influence the official primaries? Likely.

What's key now is recognition that MySpace isn't just for kids any more:

  • The majority of MySpace's 165,000+ users are of voting age and have a higher engagement rate for civic and social activity when compared to other Internet users.
  • Nearly 65 million Americans visit MySpace every month
  • More than 85% of them are of voting age. (1)
  • MySpace users 18-years of age or older are nearly three times more likely than average Web users to interact online with a public official or candidate. (2)
  • MySpace users are 42% more likely to view online video relating to politics or public affairs, 35% more likely to research politics and campaign information online, and 44% more likely to listen to online audio/radio related to politics/public affairs. (2)

(1) comScore Media Metrics

(2) Nielsen//NetRatings


The $1 Billion Election Reform Dare: What if One Political Party Were to Cancel All Advertising?

The 2008 U.S. presidential race will be "the most expensive election in American history," according to a statement in January 2007 by Federal Election Commission Chairman Michael Toner.

 

Toner estimated that the 2008 race will be a "$1 billion election," and that to be "taken seriously," a candidate will need to raise at least $100 million by the end of 2007.

One journalist estimates costs have more than doubled in only eight years.

While the U.S. political marketing machine may resist campaign reform on the grounds that it limits to freedom of speech, is it in anyone's best interest to blow such obscene amounts of cash on an election?

There's a second problem: how can the average citizen ever feel adequately educated about the candidates in the age of social media, and the 24-hour news cycle?

Maybe there's a less is more solution.

What if each citizen knew that to do their duty by self-educating, they would need to do just, say, three to five things:

  • Watch 2 to 3 nationally televised town hall meetings among all the candidates (available online following the live event)
  • Read their local newspaper, say, every Wednesday when each candidate woul respond to a single issue facing the country (also archived and available online); and
  • Tackle one key issue in-depth, one day each month via live broadcast (available online following)
  • Visit the web sites or blogs of each candidate between traditional media events for interim updates and information to satiate the more is more crowd.

So as naive and hopeful as this may sound, here's our 6 Point U.S. Presidential Election Campaign Reform Plan, intended as a conversation starter, for whatever political party is gutsy enough to move in this direction:

  1. Self-regulate campaigning across all your candidates. Announce this immediately.
  2. Cut all planned paid political advertising for each candidate (which few citizens believe nor learn from anyway).
  3. Commit to communicating less: let citizens know that they need only pay attention to, say just 3 to 5 media events (see below) to do their duty and be informed.
  4. Enlist the help of journalists to reinforce who is running and which media events citizens should not miss.
  5. Invite constituents to follow their candidates on the campaign trail as often as they like -- and interact with the candidates -- via each candidate's socially suped-up web site, as is being done supremely well now by Barack Obama.
  6. Divert saved dollars to the winning candidate to address real problems, post-election.

So what's better? Reckless burn of $1 billion and overwhelming citizens with so much political rhetoric our heads spin, or a less is more approach in our noisy world?

What do you think?

Qumana


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