
Liveblogging from Netroots Nation
Sunday:
12:42 PM -
It looks like other folks are writing about NN08 as well. Here’s a taste:
10:57AM - A friendly-looking, somewhat heavy kid in his late teens, rifle case slung over his back just approached me, asking if I knew if “the gun show were here [at the Austin Convention Center." He said, "I wonder if its down on this level. I asked around but it seems that folks with the orange name-tags [Netroots Nation attendees] don’t know much about it.
10:46 AM - Everyone that hasn’t already left is on their way out of the convention center. On my way in, I passed Jay Rosen, who looked as epically knowledge-filled as always. Here he is on a (very) short video from TheUptake defining citizen journalism:
[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QcYSmRZuep4[/youtube]
10:37 AM - My conversation yesterday with Prof. Lessig was great and I look forward to posting something more substantial about it tomorrow. He discussed how Change Congress plans on employing the carrot model, presentations, and more. I asked him if he thought that Congresspeople on the whole have a sense what’s coming in the context of the ability of constituents to leverage power in a whole new way. He did not, he said, and for him that is part of the reason why the time to act is now
Saturday:
04:44 PM - Lots of milling around going on right now. People are getting end-of-the-conference antsy. I had a great conversation with Colin from ePolitics. His site is a fabulous resource for anyone who is looking for a how-to tool re: the field of political organization on the Internet.
02:06 PM - Blogging Creating Political Community Around Film (with Wendy Cohen of Screening Liberally and Participant Media, Tracy Fleischman of Live From Main Street, Jacob Soboroff of Why Tuesday?, and Jim Gilliam of Brave New Films).
- Great panel - It’s too bad I have to leave early.
- Check out The Uptake - Dude from the site is talking about it from the audience.
- Gilliam also discusses Meet The Bloggers, an interesting Meet The Press style version of a blogger talk show.
- Gilliam discusses Brave New Theaters, an interesting tool that helps folks organize socially conscious film screenings.
- Cohen - We’re into DIY, but we also like DIWP - Do It With Partnerships. We have speakers from NGOs who come to the screenings and discuss issues featured in the film.
- Cohen discusses Screening Liberally, and how they’re informing the public using independent films and documentaries. They have a blog, take action.
12:37 PM - Blogging Lessig’s keynote:
- “In order to solve the climate crisis, we need to solve the democracy crisis.” - Al Gore at TED. The democracy crisis, says Lessig, is an addiction to money. Our system, like the alcoholic is addicted to his drug, is addicted to its drug - Money.
- Lessig worked the video of the O’Reilly freakout into his awesome presentation under the guise of pretending he was having technical difficulties.
- Every contribution you make, add 9 cents to it and so as to puzzle candidates who receive the support.
- Lessig - Join us. Take the pledge. Follow us. Opt in by texting 69866.
- Change Congress is deeply purple (bipartisan), says Lessig.
- When the bloggers brought the issue of Trent Lott being a bigot back to the public attention after the traditional media forgot about it, we realized how powerful citizen media was becoming again.
- Lessig - The press our framers were focused on were pamphlets (like “back-in-the-day” blogs.
- Lessig - Bloggers and net activists are integral to making this democracy.
- Lessig - By 1785, the founding fathers had realized that representatives had become dependent on institutions, which were “constitutions against dependence.”
- The government gets easy questions wrong because of the distortion of the way money plays in Washington.
- Lessig is one of the best performance artists alive.
- Lessig - At 9% of people feeling as though Congress is doing a good job, the people’s feelings about Congress will be within the margin of error.
- Lessig - Why did Democrats change their vote on telcom immunities? The Democrats that flipped received twice the donations as those who did not. Why would we expect the public to believe that these circumstances are unrelated?
- More hissing. Liberals really hiss.
- Lessig - Trust is built by keeping money off the table. Think about Wikipedia. Money poisons trust. It is the key we need to focus on.
- Lessig, black shirt against a black backdrop, looks like a floating head.
- It hasn’t begun yet, but the food’s happening. I’ve heard chatter that indicates that attendees feel as though there was a “screw the vegetarians” memo that went out to the food vendors.
12:07 PM - I am preparing to blog about Larry Lessig’s keynote. We’ll be talking with Lessig later today, and I’ll feature notes based on our conversation later this afternoon. I’ll definitely be posting a larger, more substantial post about our conversation about Change Congress and Internet collective action very soon.
08:02 AM - Blogging Ask The Speaker Pelosi:
- Sorry about the slowing of coverage.
- Gore has trouble discussing the environmental impact of meat-eating.
- Gore has already received 3 standing ovations.
- Gore - The engines of distraction is already hard at work.
- Al Gore just showed up. Obviously.
- Sort of more-meandering answers seem to be losing audience members.
- Pelosi - “If you don’t like abortion, you should love contraception.”
- Pelosi - “Abstinence-only education is dangerous to the health of our young women [...] We should not be holding them hostage to our political considerations [...] We need more pro-choice member of Congress.”
- Pelosi - “Faith and science are compatible searches for truth.”
- Pelosi - Our first step was to win the congress. Now we need to win the White House.
- Moderator Gina Cooper is doing a really good job of challenging Pelosi.
- Audience member screams to Pelosi -”Answer the question [on FISA]!” when she dances around the answer.
- Mention by moderator of arresting Karl Rove gets standing ovation.
- Pelosi, as she has said elsewhere: The philosopher Hannah Arendt once observed that nations are driven by the endless flywheel of violence believing that one last, one final violent gesture will bring peace. But, each time they sow the seeds for more violence.
- Pelosi - Green is an issue of national security. It is a moral issue. We have to pass this planet onto the next generation better than we found it.
- Pelosi - Thank you, Netroots.
- Gina Cooper: Protesters will be kicked out and the event will be halted.
- Code Pink is in the lobby, protesting, calling for impeachment.
07:40 AM - Showering the parties and late-night pizza off of me and heading over to see the Speaker Pelosi event. There has been word of a “very big” surprise guest. Thoughts? I’m not even going to speculate.
Friday:
03:02 PM - Blogging Milblogging: How the Troops’ Writing Affects Our View of the War (with Alex Horton, and Richard Smith and Brandon Friedman of VoteVets.org and moderated by Kevin Maurer, a 5-year embedded AP journalist):
- Q: Our son was serving in Iraq and found that Air America was blocked by the military. Has that happened to you? A: Richard Smith: I tried to get VoteVets in Afghanistan and it was blocked. Brandon Friedman: This was before VetVoice. So we didn’t really have the podium online to tell other people. I verified that with other folks in Afghanistan, too. Vet’s for Freedom is too.
- Brandon Friedman: All you can do is tell people the truth.
- Richard Smith: As bloggers, if you have any questions and you don’t have any experience in this field, please feel free to ask us questions about these issues or if you need any clarification.
- Q: What can the progressive community do to help the VetVoice community? A: Brandon Friedman: Ideally, we would like our site to be the central clearinghouse for all veterans who are blogging. Anything you can do to drive veterans to our site can ultimately help us. Also, if you read something on the site, shoot it around and tell people where you got it. It helps us spread the message.
- Q: What have been some successes with regard to some of the things you’re paying attention to? A: Brandon Friedman: The Fort Bragg barracks disaster. It got onto YouTube, put on by a soldiers dad. Then it hit the wire and didn’t get picked up. We put it on the site and blasted it to everyone then it finally took off. And then there were investigations and people everywhere were paying attention to “Moppergate.” There was also a soldier, Will King, who had PTSD and continued getting denied by the VA. The VA finally said that his involvement with VoteVets suggests that he was fine and they indicated this in his letter, along with the fact that he had suicidal tendencies. We blew this up on VetVoice and published parts of the denial letter. He then got a letter that was dated three days after we put this up and the VA had reversed their decision, explaining they had instated “an administrative review.”
- Q: When you write your blog, who do you have in mind as a reader? A: Alex Horton: It really changed from when we were deployed to writing about the GI Bill, etc. The target audience is anyone who is left off by where the traditional media ends. Anyone who listens. Any civilian or veteran who is paying attention. Richard Smith: If I read something that is wrong, I try to right it. If I read something right, I try to shine a light on it.
- Richard Smith: We can be very critical, but it is more against the civilian leadership than it is about the military leadership.
- Brandon Friedman: It’s very difficult for a regular reporter to get into the weeds, because for someone in the military, it’s their actual living experience.
- Richard Smith: The traditional media can shine a light on something, but we can put a laser pointer on it.
- Brandon Friedman: Our leadership is predominantly military.
- Q: Did blogging push you to be politically active in the way you are now? A: Brandon Friedman: I was always a news junkie, but I was never really into the political side. I eventually came around to it. Now, every progressive organization is trying to figure out how to get military guys involved with them. There are a lot of guys out there who care about this stuff. And now organizations are coming to us and trying to get us to get them involved.
- Q [to audience]: Why do you read these blogs? A: Audience member #1: I read it so that when I go to the VA to volunteer, I will see things that we need and I get in front of politicians all of the time. And reading the blogs, I get a sense of other things that we need. I then read on Military.com that we need training for PTSD issues, and then I got a sense that this is a resource that needs to be addressed. Audience member #2: I pay attention because it helps to fill in a voice that is missing elsewhere.
- Q [to Alex]: How did you feel with Rush Limbaugh’s “phony soldiers” remarks last year? How did it affect you? I really enjoyed your post about it. A: My parents got involved. They are from Dallas and are pretty conservative, but they aren’t really listening so much anymore
- Q: Is there a red/blue division like there is in the civilian blogging world? A: Brandon Friedman: There are a few right-wing military blogs and a few that are a little more normal, like ours. Very few are a-political. It’s still very taboo in the military for troops to maintain being a-political. I left active-duty in 2004, really before blogs exploded. Alex Horton: People in the military tend to be more conservative, but when you talk about national security and veteran issues, it is not really a partisan thing. They want what’s best for the military. Some people may have disagreements on what is best. But it’s not necessary partisan. Alex Horton: There is not really a big rift like in the political world. It is one big small small family.
- Brandon Friedman: A lot of people don’t understand that the military typically supports this. There is a lot of misinterpretation of what the military actually does. Some people think we go overseas and water board people all day long. Or throw rocks at kids. It is in military influence for us to get people to know what’s going on.
- Q: How do you reconcile your voice with the chain of command? A: Alex Horton: Security is important, and you’re supposed to check with the chain of command for this reason, but what I was saying didn’t really go against our stated purpose.
- Horton: Started his blog to better explain to his family what he was doing and how he was involved. The blog went from criticisms of his higher ups to battlefield reporting. He thinks there is a desire for this sort of reporting and a voice that comes from the perspective of the military?
- Brandon Friedman: Read blogs in 2004 but didn’t know what he was really getting into. He had emergency surgery in 2006 for his appendix, then realized how interactive the news could be. “I felt like I could offer something. I started writing on Daily Kos under a pseudonym. I wrote more and more and really got into it. From there, we set up VetVoice, which is set up similarly for Kos, but it is primarily for troops.
- [Milblogs] represents a revolution in the ways that wars are covered.
01:45 PM - Blogging John Hlinko discussing how to connect to blogging/campaign audiences
- Q: What do you consider a good click through rate on an email? A (from audience): It has nothing to do with day or time - It is all about the subject line. If it is really compelling at 4 on a Friday, it is going to get opened.
- The more you personalize, the less you tick people off and the less people unsubscribe.
- Q: When I see what my parents listen to/believe online, it is email/very web 1.0. So is there any value in considering responding in this format? A: One way that we addressed this is by making emails look like they were coming from a candidate’s Blackberry. When you look at what does well at YouTube, it’s never necessarily what looks professionally done.
- Re: “Obama is a secret Muslim” rumors: “A lie gets halfway around the world before the truth has a chance to get its pants on.” - Winston Churchill.
- One of the most exciting things about mobile is that the most exciting things likely haven’t happened yet. Maybe people haven’t put together the peanut butter and chocolate together yet to understand how good it is.
- Q: How do you look for what resonates with people? A: We do message testing. So we come up with the message and then we go through the rather dry act of testing.
- Q: How do you respond when the other side is being funny, viral, and creative? A: The trite answer is to say to do it better and more often. But also, you don’t want to take active steps to give more traction to what they’re doing.
- While promoting a movie called Park, sort of a gay coming of age story, the publicist’s name was James Dobson. They used this to promote the film, writing stuff like, “James Dobson loves this lesbian movie,” and stuff like that. “We didn’t get sued, which was our goal, but it was still very fun.
- Assume your email recipient believes they’re getting 117 emails a day. Imagine yours is number 118. Are they really going to read that?
- “People believe you [a promoter of a message] are full of crap. They do, however, believe their friends. People want to be inspired. See Will-i-am.
- “Take action, Get action” is the motto of his dating site for Democrats. Hilarious. He’s proving that we’re basically advanced monkeys that still act/concentrate on instinct.
01:35 PM - I was struck by something an audience member at the “Working from the Inside Out” said to me. A grassroots activist/organizer in Florida for the Democratic Party and DFA, she talked about the amount of elected representatives she runs into that don’t know about many of the issues, or even how to navigate around on the web. “We need to get to them as soon as they get elected,” she stressed to me, “but a lot of people don’t know how to get in there.”
She went onto make a suggestion that I recognized, as I, too, have been a party organizer. Those who are interested in getting close to a campaign or candidate simply need to volunteer for the campaign, as it gets them close to many future staffers. In my experience, many of the people I worked campaigns with went onto work as staff members. “I know a Republican representative,” she said, “and he’s even said to me, ‘It’s hard to say ‘no’ to someone I have seen licking envelopes at my kitchen table.”
Great point.
12:30 PM - A great note on the lunch with Kos and Harold Ford from Todd Beeton from MyDD:
He then spoke about how ridiculous the traditional media is, especially when he is asked about Obama’s so-called move to the center. It’s clear from what ends up getting written, that what he says goes in one ear and out the other because his response doesn’t fit into their “move to the center” narrative. As Markos says regarding Barack Obama’s FISA vote:
“We weren’t mad at Obama for moving to the center, we were mad at him for NOT moving to the center. There was no popular movement in favor of this bill. If you ask most Americans I think they’d tell us that they do not support the government spying on Americans.”
10:37 AM - Blogging Working from the Inside Out: Success Stories in Netroots Organizing: (with Timothy Karr and Craig Aaron of Free Press, Adam Green of MoveOn.org, Liz Rose of the ACLU, Andre Banks of Color of Change, and Joan McCarter, a Daily Kos blogger):
- Timothy Karr of Free Press: We’ve learned as much from user-generated YouTube videos as we have from high-payed consultants.
- I really love the term “astroturf,” meaning fake grassroots.
- An audience member points out the fact that aiming at Washington is important, but there are 50 other capitols that need our attention at the same time.
- Q: How much coordination is there between big groups/organization [with the grassroots] - How do we learn from the Republicans and create a leaner machine? A: Liz Rose of the ACLU: The groups do work together well. Sure, there is some competition (for resources and some candidates). On Jena 6, we loaned attorneys. As far as duplications, that has something to do with funders, based on where they put their money and why.
- Q: How do you deal with contentions with your own side? Do you ever find yourself disagreeing with an element of what you’re defending and if so, how do you deal with that? A: Andre Banks: What we did know is the [Jena issue] was that there were kids who were involved in a bad case and they needed a fair shake. It wasn’t about whether each of them was a good citizen, or if everything that they had done previously was right. Every person deserves legal recognition and that’s what we’re trying to provide. That’s why we were there. The larger question is something we take into larger consideration. Joan McCarter: For me, its about the issues, so while I disagree with Barack Obama on his stance on FISA now, I realize he will be easier to agree with in the future.
- Adam Green of MoveOn.org: We still need to get as many people on our side by reaching out to them directly.
- Andre Banks: With regard to Jena, this story was a success because it represented to a lot of people in the African American community something that happens a lot there. And the successes keep coming.
- Andre Banks of Color of Change: What we try to do at Color of Change is to figure out if black people are interesting in putting their time and money towards social change and we have found that yes, it is true.
- Joan McCarter: We don’t just need more Democrats; we need better Democrats.
- Joan McCarter: It’s hard to talk about successes with all that’s been going on in FISA in the past weeks. But, we did help propel it into the media and thus we set up a good foundation for the incoming congress. The fight didn’t end ten days ago. It’s going to continue with the ACLU and many of these people who are up here and who are working on it elsewhere.
- Timothy Karr of Free Press discusses the successful netroots fight against anti-net neutrality legislation in 2007.
10:00 AM - A set of notes and observations on Don Siegelman, who spoke at Netroots Nation.
09:15 AM - Blogging From Dean to Obama: Four Years in the Internet Revolution (other observations can be found here):
- Karl Frisch of Media Matters is one funny dude.
- Joe Trippi: We’re at such a ridiculous early stage. We’re all still pioneers. At Dean, we were the Wright brothers and Obama was Apollo 11. You know - Safely launching got you into the White House.
- Q. Why aren’t nonprofits catching on to these technologies quicker? A. Karl Frisch - [To do this] you need to know your audience and make sure that what you’re doing is servicing them. DFA guy - You need to reach out to/be in touch with people who might not feel otherwise empowered.
- Q: How do we convey to politicians that we need they themselves to blog themselves? A: Joe Trippi: “Howard barely used email. He tried really hard to blog and he was basically like, ‘You guys are terrific.’ I would give candidates who are struggling with it/trying to figure it out your attention. Reward the folks who are trying.”
- Q: Because campaigns are working from the bottom up, does it make it hard to form a message? A: Joe Trippi: Obama is a good example of a bottom up campaign where everyone on the bottom doesn’t necessarily agree with Obama (FISA).
- Karl Frisch of Media Matters - “If you call everyone ‘your friends’ and call yourself a ‘maverick,’ the press won’t ask any questions when you mess up.”
- Joe Trippi: In the television age, people could fake it for 30 seconds and then they could make it. Now it’s trickier. The television age came about in ‘60, when Kennedy won, and that’s how it is now. The problem for the candidate is they can’t fake it anymore for 24 hours a day.
- Guy without name tag from Democracy from America - It’s all about authenticity. With George Allen’s case, people were more upset about his comments because it seemed like it really said something about George Allen.
- Joe Trippi: There’s someone out there who will capture McCain, or Obama, [in a Macaca moment].
- Q: What is possible with video inside of campaigns? A: Joe Trippi: With DeanTV, we created YouTube before YouTube created YouTube [...] Then, we never could have predicted YouTube coming up down the road. Now, thinking of what will come up four to eight years down the road, I agree with Karl - It will be mind-blowing.
- Karl Frisch of Media Matters - During the next campaigns, people are just going to be blown away.
- Everyone on the panel is ripping on Trippi in a hilarious way.
- Joe Trippi on what he’s excited about - Pretty soon, these campaigns are going to be completely managed from people involved in Dean-like campaigns, not people like me who really come from a top-down world. And somewhere down the road, we’ll see 40, 50, 60 members of Congress that come from the Dean/Obama model, or who worked for OffTheBus, or whatever.
- Amanda Michel of HuffPost’s “OffTheBus” - “Off the bus wouldn’t work if it wasn’t for the community. We’re completely dependent on our community.”
- Guy without name tag from Democracy from America - DFA came from the Dean Campaign, showing that even if Howard wanted to kill the movement, he couldn’t.
- Amanda Michel of HuffPost’s “OffTheBus” - We focus on the story. All of the ambiguity is removed. Similarly to the way Wikipedia works because everyone knows what an encyclopedia article looks like, OfftheBus works because people know what a news story looks like.
- Karl Frisch of Media Matters - It’s really about the content, while it is nice to be put on the map by O’Reilly and Limbaugh as being “crazy.
8:30 AM - Heading over to “From Dean to Obama: Four Years in the Internet Revolution“
Thursday:
8:58 PM - Howard [!]:
- The end. Time for a drink.
- Dean: “You can never sit back. The lesson we’d like to pass onto you is you can’t ever be absent from politics. Not now. Not later. You can’t. Voting only gets you a D. If you want to nourish democracy, you need to continue doing what you’re doing.”
- Dean: “We reach out to Evangelical Christians, because they believe in alleviating poverty, climate change, and relieving suffering in Darfur. And those sound like Democratic issues to me.”
- Dean: “If you want moral authority, you cannot have torture. You cannot have Guantanamo Bay [...] We need a higher authority than the people attacking us [...] Barack Obama will restore the moral authority of America.”
- Dean: “Won’t it be a pleasure to have someone in the White House who knows the constitution?”
- Dean: “The republicans are exclusive. We are inclusive. It is no coincidence that [the most diverse] members of Congress are Democrats.”
- Dean: “When your average campaign donation is 68 dollars, you are owned by no one but the American people.” And: “Texas is back. The Democratic party here is reborn.”
- Mid-speech, Dean gets his first standing ovation for raising his voice about the 50-state-strategy. People love it.
- Dean: “Barack Obama is the hope of the future of America [...] his job is to heal America.”
- How “netroots,” exactly, is it is to cheer for the chairman of the DNC every half-minute or so? Sure, this was a success for the Netroots, but how critical are the netroots allowing themselves to be?
- Howard Dean is finally out. Is he coloring his hair? He looks good. He thanked Gina Cooper for putting it all together.
08:02 PM - The lead up to Howard:
- Nevermind about Gina Cooper. She was not introducing Howard. That was a tease. But there’s a dude from some sort of Democrat Stonewall organization who says: “I was empowered by Howard.” Amazing. He is asking us for us to go by the DFA booth to go sign the thank you card for Howard Dean.
- Baratunde Thurston: I shouldn’t have gotten interacting you you people. And when I say that, I mean it “that way.”
- Gina Cooper is talking about Netroots Nation on stage, readying to introduce Howard: “With the force of a pixelated tsunami, we put Howard Dean into the position of the chairman of the DNC.”
- There are reportedly 2,000 of us here.
- Audience members hiss — literally make a hissing noise — when Fox News comes up in a speech. Then Clark goes on to talk about how upsetting political name-calling really is when you look at our history.
- Clark is having all public service-people standing up one profession at a time. Will the veterans stand up? The meter-maids! Yes! The meter-maids! Stand up!
- Gosh. I can’t get over how handsome he is.
- Clark: “You all come from every background possible, but you’re all united for good government that takes us in the direction that we must go.”
- Clark: “We started stopiranwar.com and you know what? It’s still there.“
- Clark: “70,000 people on the Internet [through an Internet draft] made it possible for me to run for office.”
- Is Netroots Nation the only place that Gen. Clark continues to get a standing ovation? He is still very attractive.
- Brandon Friedman, editor of Vote Vets, introduces Gen. Wesley Clark. VoteVets, at name, gets an ovation.
- Baratunde Thurston drops some great slavery jokes.
- “If you have a pager, just leave. There’s actually a very short bus waiting outside to take you back to 1994.” -Baratunde Thurston.
05:25 PM - Time for a drink or two with my conference-hopper buddy Alex from Eventful and then on to see Howard speak.
05:25 PM - This is a really great photograph of a conference-goer checking out a hand-written list of all of the US soldiers that have died since the start of the conflict in Iraq. It is just one of very many photographs coming from this dude’s Photobucket feed.
05:03 PM - I spoke briefly with the ever-impressive Michael Silberman of Echo Ditto. He talked briefly about the work he’s doing at present for the 1Sky Education Fund. It is a fascinating organization, well-worth checking out, that is focused on climate change and organizing using the “Internet and old-fashioned neighbor-to-neighbor outreach.”
04:25 PM - A hilarious piece of Kevin Bondelli’s blog post today:
A funny thing just happened. A couple of guys were walking by in the hotel that weren’t associated with Netroots Nation, and one says to the other: “there are a lot of people in this hotel using laptops, huh.” I bet this lobby looks really strange to people that don’t realize that there is a blogger conference going on.
04:16 PM - Netroots Nation is huge. The Austin Convention Center is huge. These people’s ambitions are huge. I saw in the comment section of someone’s blog a joking statement about bumping into all of the wide-eyed newbies. I, indeed, am one of those wide-eyed newbies.
03:02 PM - At a session with Blogs United about best practices, etc.
- “We’re seeing a very interesting moment in politics. The Internet and the field are becoming one. Using a Google Map, people are able to find other supporters of a candidate or an issue. This is something we can take advantage of. It’s a process and a journey. It’s not an either or (online v. “reality”) as it’s evolving.
- “People are now getting involved. This story needs to be told. Nobody is talking about them and these people will ultimately be the heroes. These are good stories.”
- From someone in the audience: “I am a retired AP foreign correspondent, and my old employer is paring down their local coverage. Is anyone here filling in that void?” Everyone seems to have a story about how they have contributed.
- “A well-developed local blog infrastructure is more powerful than Google-bombing.”
- Someone from Roadblock Republicans is here talking about using satire and animation to message accordingly.
- Someone going into a podcasting business says that market research has shown that progressives over thirty prefer to listen rather than watch things online.
- Everyone in this group are all political activists who have come together to promote liberal/progressive causes and politicians. They trade ideas on best-practices with the help of a Google email group.
- It’s interesting seeing this, a community of bloggers who have been in touch for years, come together face to face at the conference. They all feel right at home with each other and it’s interesting to see how much more streamlined online-exclusive communities are becoming.
- “Sometimes blogging is a slog - It’s hard getting that post up every day, or even every other day.”
03:00 PM - Another great piece about Netroots Nation. This one is featured in The Center for Media and Democracy.
01:30 PM - At a Democracy for America training on crafting campaign messaging:
- The next couple of months is the big sweet spot. If you’re trying to get something interesting off the ground in October, you’re probably not going to get very far.
- Q: How did George W. Bush create an imagine in which he was raised in Connecticut in a similar “elitist” way to other candidates, and he could end up passing himself off as an everyman. A: I think history is going to judge us darkly as Democrats.
- If you can make a message a referendum on a particular issue, that is strong for you.
- Kerry, by trying to take “the high road” by not addressing the Swiftboat issue, lost control of his message. “When we take a highroad campaign, we get our ass handed to ourselves.”
- In 2004, the Bush Campaign’s campaign was rock-solid. They suggested that they were strong, consistent, and secure. By default, Kerry was the opposite of each.
- People want to know: Who’s more one of us than the other person? This is why Barack Obama is being painted by the other side as an “elitist.”
- Messaging is not a list of issues. Voters have a sentence or two in their bind on which they base who they vote for.
- It’s not about biography, and this is what is hurting John McCain. If biography was important, John McCain would have gotten the nomination in 2008.
- Experience is not how campaigns are one. If you look at presidential races, those with the least experience usually win. If it’s about experience, look at the president, who had no experience.
01:40 PM - Great article in the Dallas Morning News about Netroots Nation.
01:34 PM - Haven’t eaten in nearly 12 hours, thus I am thankful that Wired For Change was somehow responsible for getting a bag of chips into the free crap bag that you’re given at conferences. I’m also grateful to whoever thought to put a fortune cookie in there, though it was smashed to hell before it got to me. There’s also a condom from Center for Constitutional Rights. I wonder how many folks at this internet and politics event are going to put that to use.
01:00 PM - There was a rally today featuring Howard Dean, who will also later this evening deliver the keynote address. Some reports say that the numbers there were at around 100 people but I got the sense that it was much more than that. He fired up all of the congregating liberals like it was 2003 again. Heeeeya! [A special thanks to Robert Harding from The Albany Project for the photo]
12:43 PM - I am excited for the Dean speech this evening. There’s still a lot of buzzing about Pelosi and how she’ll address the I-word issue. Further, we’re excited that we’ll be talking with Larry Lessig about Change Congress on Saturday. Stay tuned.
12:36 PM - I want a taco.
11:11 AM - It looks like I spoke way too soon. The hotel is standing firmly in my way. The bureaucracy gods are keeping me down.
10:19 AM - After a nearly Homeric trek from Boston, Massachusetts to Austin, Texas, I am finally in town and nearing a place where I might be able to actually get over to the Austin Convention Center — So long as a bank, a Jet Blue flight delay, or a disgruntled hotel employee doesn’t stand in my way, I should be there shortly.
-Filed in Ideas, People
links for 2008-07-18 by Kevin Bondelli’s Youth Vote Blog
[...] Liveblogging from Netroots Nation 2008 | Make Something Happen [...]
July 18th, 2008 at 4:33 pmAlex
Thanks for the nice writeup! I appreciate you getting the world out on our panel since there were about four people in attendance. Take it easy.
Alex
July 18th, 2008 at 6:38 pm