Sunday, September 04, 2005

Landscape Talk



I think DFNYC and the Dean groups across the country are in a unique position to reshape the party so it becomes more a party of near permanent power. We have the disadvantage of trying to lead various powerless groups, which makes the idea of unity rather challenging. There is by definition much infighting among the powerless. If they were to unite, they would not be powerless no more. It is a chicken-egg situation. (See: DFNYC Research And Advocacay Group)

The Democratic party is utterly out of power right now. How to get back to power? We have stuck to old ideas on domestic policy. What holds us back more is we have basically given the foreign policy turf over to the opponents.

The way to morph our weakest link into an unchallenged strength would be to embrace the idea of a progressive way to spread democracy all over the world. And I am in a unique position to help, because I am intimately involved with the ongoing movement for democracy in Nepal. Nepal could be the perfect human laboratory for our idea. (See: The Road To The White House Goes Through Nepal)

I am not big on the idea of spending 200 billion dollars, 2000 American lives, and tens of thousands of Iraqi lives to spread democracy in Iraq: I think it is such a waste of life and resources and half the time is self-defeating. But if it is between progressives doing nothing and the neo-cons waging war on Saddam, I am for war. But it does not have to be that way. $100,000 fed to the democracy movement in Nepal could do the trick. And the movement is being documented in near real time online. So we will have a blueprint for elsewhere in the region and the world. (See: Democracy: The Third Wave)

For now, take a look at this: 5 Steps To Democracy.

We also have to watch out for the internal dynamics within the progressive movement. There has to be zero tolerance for racism and sexism. The white boys who learned to create glass walls and ceilings during potty training will simply have to unlearn a few things, or there is not going to be much of a progressive movement anymore than there is going to be a neo-con movement.

An average white person freezes when having to discuss race relations, whereas dialogue is the most constructive way to make progress on race relations. Race is the most unresolved issue in American politics. And you don't make progress on race relations by talking about the weather, you make progress by bringing race into the dialogue mainstream. The frozen ones are not members of the progressive movement, or any that I recognize.


I have little time for politics in the first place, and that little time has been going to Nepal. I need to be focusing on my business and blogging career more anyways, and the little time I might make to possibly volunteer sure is not going to be spent cheerleading those who are prone to upholding the glass structures, be it in social or more professional settings.

I spent a few years in Kentucky. The Bible is the only book the white boys there read. And they read it every other day. Read a novel for a change: I recommend The Old Man And The Sea. And I read in a journal article once that Wall Street and Capitol Hill are the two most racist and sexist places on earth. So as far as racism and the urban landscape is concerned, as Michael Corleone would say, "It is nothing personal, Sonny. It is strictly business." There is verbal jujitsu.

And there is the internet. And there is globalization. Racists hurt their bottomline, that is all they do.

Thursday, August 25, 2005

DFNYC Research And Advocacy Group


I look forward to our meeting on the 31st. This kind of activism speaks to me. I am not "just a writer," or "just a thinker." I have been at the very forefront of electoral politics at times in the past. But for now all my political energies go to the movement for democracy in Nepal. And my personal career focus is on entrepreneurial stuff. But there is no curing a political animal. And even to entrepreneurship what I take to the table is vision and group dynamics. And the process of crafting legislation is of major corporate interests to me. As you can see, there is a lot of inter-connectedness. And DFNYC has been homebase of sorts to me in this chosen city of mine. The city's social progressive thrust speaks to me very personally. And DFNYC sits atop it.

"Where there is no vision, the people shall perish."

I am really interested in "the vision thing," as Bush 41 puts it. I think there are two aspects to it: the vision, the tools.

Vision is of central importance. And I took a first bite at it here: The Three Pillars (October 25, 2004). I feel the need to elaborate on that theme.

I first want to talk about the tools. Actually it is one tool: blogging! Oh my god, there is nothing like it. Fast forward backwards to the Howard Dean 2004 campaign. If Dean's 600,000 core supporters were all avid bloggers with the blogging tools available for free today - text, links, audio, video - old media would not have had the option to massacre the campaign. Dean's famous I Have A Scream speech, it beats me to this day as to how anyone could have been offended. I don't get it, I never did. I don't know if it is cultural because I grew up in a culture where people are loud, quick to celebration, where people wear colorful clothes, and I mean primary colors, not the American mainstream drab.

But imagine if only 20 people in that room that day were video bloggers, and online people had the option to watch the entire thing, the party in the foreground with all its noise: things might have turned out to be different. I am an avid video blogger myself.

This is really powerful stuff, because campaigns spend more money on TV ads than on any other thing. What a waste! Imagine if the next progressive presidential campaign has to spend NO money on TV ads! What then? Does that make us super competitive?

Every volunteer should be a blogger. I recommend Google's Blogger. Other than that Google is the sexiest company on the radar right now. One, when you blog at Blogger, the Google search engine immediately indexes your stuff, and that makes all the difference, since search engines are the most used "road signs" today. And there is a search engine just for your particular blog in the top left corner. That is the sexiest thing about Blogger. Links are copy and paste. I recommend you insert Google ads onto your page. Blooger beats Flickr when it comes to photos. Look at this cutie taken by yours truly: Flickr does not offer that large size, full screen option. Google's audio and video are both free, and you don't have to worry about memory space, it's infinite, and sure you can take them anywhere on the web, but why not keep it all in-house? And with Google's resources, they keep improving the whole thing on a regular basis. I think they should work on integrating MathML: but that is just me.

Blogging is fundamental. It means every single person is a potential media house with a potential local/national/global audience. This is huge.

But there is one thing that is more important: it is Face Time. There is screen time, and there is Face Time. Our in-house LinkUps are a great idea as are MeetUps. I think we should keep using both. LinkUps are for the veterans and the hard core. MeetUps are for the uninitiated and the casual onlookers. And both merge.

As we work on this Research and Advocacy stuff, I think we should make use of both Face Time and Screen Time. Best part about that: it keeps things really flexible. Individuals have the option to give as much or as little time as they want without feeling they are missing out on things because they did not show up for all the events. And I don't believe we ought to duplicate stuff. That is where links come in. If there are progressive think tanks that have done good work on specific issues, we should just link to those articles from our blogs. And we should link to each other's blogs. That's another thing that is good for your blog in the search ecosystem: the more sites and blogs that link to you, higher up you show.

Once we have this basic frame, then we can start talking. I feel like I have already made my main points online. So for me Face Time is more about listening to others. But you don't want me to get started on the talking thing. My blogs are proof I am on the verbose side.

For now, of the Three Pillars, I would like to focus on just the first one.

Democracy is a simple concept: it is one person one vote. And America does not have it.

I think I invented the concepts of total, transparent democracy and non-violent militancy.

Methods
  1. Total, Transparent Democracy: All political deliberations are to be posted and archived online as all votes that make decisions when consensus might not be possible, all expenses the same. Political parties are publicly funded based on the principle of one person, one vote.
  2. Non-Violent Militancy: To never resort to violence, but to use words like they were bullets, to use organizational acumen like knives, to use communications technology to the maximum, to use money with utmost efficiency, to always know the importance of message, to make the best use of dialogue and coalitions, and to use the state apparatus to great effect once acquired.
This is from my Nepal blog. But it can be applied anywhere, I think.

Just look at New York. Not far north from here in Boston several hundred years back a group of concerned people started a revolution with the slogan No Taxation Without Representation. That revolution founded a country called America. But in New York 40% of the people who pay taxes can not vote because, err, they are not "citizens." That has got to be offensive. The Mayor takes your money, but he does not need your vote. How ridiculous is that?

Maybe the idea of voter registration should be abolished. Instead there should be voter lists prepared by the state in a scientific manner to make it as inclusive as possible. All you got to do is show up at the polling booth. And there should be a law saying noone should have to wait more than half an hour at the polling booth. Right now they make people in the poorer districts wait hours. Is that a deliberate discouragement? I think so. That is racist.

Electoral votes should be abolished. Let the president be directly elected. How is that for democracy?

For the Nepal situation, I have suggested totally taking money out of politics. I think that could work wonders here too. (Proposed Constitution)

Let the country be divided into 100 constituencies of near equal populations for the seats in the Senate. No need to take consideration of state boundaries. They are imaginary anyways.

Lack of statehood for DC is an obscenity. If DC can represent the entire country, it itself needs to get represented in the Congress.

I think we could talk of several more specifics like that, but the concept is rather simple: one person, one vote.

So two words: blogging and democracy. That's what I want to touch upon right now.

Some Deaniac is getting into the White House in the 2010s. I think it is going to be Obama: the greatest political event of 2004. What do you think?

Saturday, August 20, 2005

Simplifying Social Security Debate


I am no expert on the topic, and do not so pretend, but the outlines are quite plain, I think.

The Republican Party is no longer a small government party. They have been spending, and spending, and spending some more. That is what happens when you give all three branches of government to one party.

Deficits and debts are not good things. They can be temporarily incurred, but not forever. I don't know for sure why the Roman Empire collapsed, but America looks set to lose its number one position by overspending and overborrowing. The party is not going to end with a bang, but a whimper. You can't swipe a credit card forever.

On Social Security, instead of debating if the money thus collected should at least partly go to private accounts, why not encourage the rich (and famous) to save part of their earnings towards the same end? The stock market can always use some more money. That is how stocks go up, when people pump in more money into the stock markets. The demand and supply sometimes cuts itself off the real earnings and value of a company.

So you leave the social security tax for the purpose it is intended, and you encourage people to save in addition. You could even design tax credits and tax write-offs to thus encourage savings.

Social Security makes mathematical sense, statistical sense, just like car or health insurance. As soon as you drain away the pool, you are draining away the collective benefits. In non diplomatic talk, the Bush talk on Social Security Reform is an ideology taken too far, too much to its logical end.

There is parallel here between private accounts, and school vouchers. I am all for competition, but it should not be done in a way that students who are already strapped for resources will end up with even less resources. Vounchers, by definition, will benefit a select few at the expense of many others.

This is not to suggest I tow the Democratic line on these two issues. I don't.

The Republicans are wrong. The Democrats have not offered alternatives. Homework time.