Daily Digest: Millennials of the World, Unite!
By Nancy Scola, 07/01/2008 - 12:15pm

[If you haven't yet, be sure to take the TechPres poll Does a Connected World Need a Connected POTUS? and join the discussion in the comments.]

The Web on the Candidates

  • The Center for Community Change's Sally Kohn has a provocative piece calling for millennials -- those born between 1980 and 1995 -- to make their political activism more up close and personal. These younger Americans, writes Kohn, are masters of connective tools (think email, blogs, Facebook, Twitter) but were reared in an age shaped by Ronald Reagan's "lone cowboy" vision of the world and have developed some measure of hyperindividualism. But, she says, from the desegregation fight of the '60s to the anti-apartheid struggle, social change has been rooted in collective action. It's a short, great read. Highly recommended.

  • Focusing on activism of the more virtual sort for a moment, the group on MyBarackObama.com that has been calling on Barack Obama to vote against a surveillance bill that includes retroactive immunity for the telecom companies, has accrued about 3,000 members since this time yesterday, putting it on pace to be the single largest group on the campaign's social-networking site by Thursday. With 7,200 members right now, it's currently in 4th place and trailing the ambitiously named "1,000,000 Americans for Obama" by about two thousand members. Wired's Ryan Singel has more. At what point, if any, does the Obama campaign take public notice of the group? At what point does the "group" not care, as long as its success draws attention to the anti-FISA fight?

The Candidates on the Web

  • As Obama quickly distanced himself from Wesley Clark's questioning of whether whether John McCain's Vietnam service gives him national security chops, Clark found a succinct way to stand his ground: via his Facebook status line: "Wes Clark knows that John McCain is largely untested and untried when it comes to national security matters." (Also worth keeping an eye on: in a recent speech on the subject of patriotism, Obama made special mention of the online-based activist giant MoveOn, though the reference was veiled. MoveOn, which took considerable heat for an ad in the New York Times that used the phrase "General Betray Us" in the context of the congressional testimony of General David Petraeus, was the target of Obama's disapproval: [T]those who opposed administration policy were tagged by some as unpatriotic, and a general providing his best counsel on how to move forward in Iraq was accused of betrayal." No response yet from MoveOn on Obama's criticism.)

  • Speaking of MoveOn, is Newt Gingrich's rather successful Drill Here, Drill Now, Pay Less petition drive, with its 1.2 million signers, poised to blossom into its conservative equal? On the yes side: offshore oil drilling is proving to be an argument that unifies the disparate parts of the political right. Arguments against: beyond maybe reviving the nuclear debate, where does a group named "Drill Now" go from here?

TechCongress and Beyond

In Case You Missed It...

[A note from Micah Sifry] Congrats to Adam Mordecai on the birth of Dean Barack Mordecai, or is it Megatron Fantastico Mordecai? Actually, the name isn't decided yet, but Mordecai, whose firm Advomatic runs the back end of techPresident and PersonalDemocracy.com and many other sites, seems to be crowdsourcing the process of deciding. We lean towards Andrew Micah Mordecai, Adam! Mazel tov!

Local Politics

Thanks for highlighting that article by Chuck Raasch. The next phase in politics and technology will be utilizing internet/mobile tools to bring back civic participation in our local communities wherever we live.

As former eCampaign Director for Ron Paul's presidential campaign, I learned how key it was for our supporters to be involved on the local level of politics and government. If we had a larger base of political support, we could have done better in primaries than we did otherwise. Our supporters would've understood the rules of the game in every state.

Local politics is the vision that our Republic was founded upon, local community control, individuals organizing to make decisions about their communities & their lives, not a strong centralized federal government in Washington, DC making our decisions.

Currently, I work at Politicker.com an online political news site which is dedicated to covering the very local to state level politics in all 50 states (we have 15 states thus far). Our journalists on-the-ground in each state cover the political news and our anonymous "Wally Edge" gives us insider coverage.

Hopefully, we can help to educate and inform a politically passionate citizenry to become more engaged with politics in their different localities -- which will then trickle up in the political system.

Justine Lam
Director of Online Marketing
http://www.politicker.com



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