Mike Connery on Facebook Causes Giving Challenge

Youth vote and tech guru Mike Connery has posted his own post mortem on the Facebook Causes Giving Challenge at techPresident (and his own blog, Future Majority). I agree with Connery’s conclusion:

Most pertinent to youth organizers, this contest and any future iterations provides a model for organizational development that can at least begin overcome one of the most significant hurdles to sustainable youth organizing – building a donor base out of a young membership with huge amounts of disposable income, but very little willingness to spend it on political/activist causes. Very impressive all around, and certainly something to watch in the future.

Football vs FISA

Sen. Chuck Schumer just spent six out of his ten allocated minutes praising the NY Giants for their Super Bowl victory and introducing a resolution doing just that. He did this instead of talking about oversight of how the government can and cannot monitor Americans’ communications.

I say this as a life-long and still giddy Giants fan: Mr. Schumer, please focus on what’s important.

Russ Feingold in Newsweek

Russ Feingold is interviewed in Newsweek and does a great job beating back Republican scare tactics and spurious arguments for surrendering our liberties in exchange for security.

How has the debate overall come to be framed so incorrectly, as you suggest?
One reason is that there’s been an inadequate response to the Bush-Cheney scare tactics. They’ve been successful every time—in the Iraq War, with the Patriot Act—[in saying] “If we’re not given these powers immediately, we will be attacked.” These are bogus claims. The problem is with many people, including Democrats, who fail to stand up and say, “We feel just as strongly as you do. And we don’t want you invading our privacy without any court review.”

Supporters of the PAA say that if these calls and e-mails were subject to the regular FISA court, it would take hundreds of lawyer and analyst hours to prepare them for the appropriate review.
Listen, a criticism like that just shows no understanding of what’s going on here. Every time a foreign conversation runs through a transmitter in L.A., there was an archaic technicality in the law that would require individualized warrants [in order for the government to intercept them]. We all said, fine, we agree with changing that, but in cases when the program ends up impacting Americans, there has to be some oversight.

What’s the status of your amendments? It’s been suggested that in the consent agreement to allow debate, Republicans are allowing straight majority votes only on amendments they know will fail—including yours.
We’re trying to make a record here, and to show who voted for what. My prediction is this thing will go through; it will be challenged and go through the courts. And eventually a Supreme Court with something like seven Republican-appointed judges will strike down the worst parts of it. This is a long-term battle to protect the rights of the American people.

In the modern political climate you’re more likely to hear about amnesty with respect to undocumented workers than you are about the amnesty for the phone and Internet companies who helped the government break the law before the act was passed.
Oh, I think there’s tremendous feeling that there’s a problem here. In some ways I think it goes deeper than immigration. People see their own personal liberties affected. And we’ve seen that the telecom immunity does offend people. People may be nervous about giving a free pass [on immigration]. But what’s gonna bother them even more are the types of things I’m describing here: the level to which their privacy is being subjected to a “trust me” government that impacts their daily freedom and privacy. It really is disturbing to people with any kind of common sense at all.

It’s clear that Feingold thinks about these issues in the same way so many of us online think about the rule of law. He recognizes the need to be strong in the face of an administration that uses fear as their main weapon. Feingold’s efforts standing by the rule of law and defending the Constitution is the sort of courage that we need today from more of Feingold’s colleagues in the Senate.

Feingold isn’t optimistic about our chances to stop the SSCI bill from going through, but is taking a long view on it. He’s a bright spot in the Senate who, alongside Chris Dodd, has provided the kind of leadership we sorely need from our elected officials.

Debate is about to resume on the floor of the Senate about the FISA legislation. I hope we’ll get to see more passionate words and committed stands in the face of fear-mongering by the Bush administration and the Republican Party from some of Senator Feingold’s colleagues.

Cross posted at the CREDO Blog.

Get Out The Vote

Tomorrow I’ll be voting in person in New York City for the first time (previous votes have been done by absentee ballot). Like many young, fairly transient people, I had no clue where my polling place was. Fortunately I’ve now received two separate emails from the Obama campaign directing me how to find my polling place in New York(One sent by David Plouffe yesterday, another from Barack Obama today).

The targeted email directs me to: http://my.barackobama.com/page/invite/nylookup and directs me, as a resident of New York City, to this NYC Board of Elections page where I was able to find my polling place. Non-NYC residents are sent to a portal for all county Boards of Elections.

What I actually found most helpful was the information provided on voting rules and time:

  • Polls are open in New York City and Nassau, Suffolk, Westchester, Rockland, Orange, Putnam, and Erie counties from 6:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.
  • Elsewhere in New York, polls are open from 12:00 p.m. to 9:00 p.m.
  • Anyone in line at the time the polls close is allowed to vote
  • If you are a first-time voter who registered by mail, bring a valid photo ID or a document that shows your name and address
  • If your name does not appear on the voter rolls or if you are a first-time voter and can’t provide proper identification, you may vote by affidavit ballot

Thanks for the help, Obama campaign!

For what it’s worth, I’m currently undecided about who I will vote for tomorrow…

Yes We Can

I watched this once two days ago and it’s been stuck in my head ever since. I haven’t decided if that’s a good thing or a bad thing yet. On my first viewing, I found the layering of Obama’s speech with spoken and sung versions of the text by celebrities fairly inaccessible. A lot of the timing is off just enough to make it hard to hear exactly what’s being said.

Jeff Jarvis is certainly on to something when he writes:

To me, this only underscores the notion that Obama’s campaign is the most rhetorical of the bunch: speeches and slogans so neat they can fit in 4/4 time.

Of course this also gets at the fact that a blurred version of his speech, when spoken by beautiful celebrities, is still really uplifting. Improbably so. As in, his words are being somewhat poorly repeated by somewhat vacuous spokespeople for a profound political message. I’m still finding it appealing in a way that makes me feel guilty, like a music connoisseur  who loves The Mars Volta but is accepting the fact that he also kinda digs Panic! At the Disco.

This video doesn’t make me want to vote for Obama any more or less than before I saw it, but as it has already gone viral I’m sure it will turn on lower information voters at a time when he needs to be turning out everyone he can.

Take Action to Stop Retroactive Immunity

This afternoon the Senate will reconvene to begin considering a raft of amendments to the bad Intelligence Committee bill on warrantless wiretapping. Debate will begin at 2 PM Eastern, though no votes will happen before 5:30 and it’s still unclear if votes on FISA will happen today. What looks more certain is that Title II amendments are likely to be considered tomorrow, namely the Dodd-Feingold Amendment to strip retroactive immunity from the underlying SSCI bill.

I have a breakdown of all the amendments being considered (and cboldt’s work has been much linked to, for good reason) at the CREDO Action Blog. But what I’m most concerned about today is the part of this legislative fight that has garnered the most attention thus far: retroactive immunity.

We only need 51 votes for Dodd-Feingold to pass and though we aren’t where we need to be yet, we have just over 24 hours to lobby the Senate to get the votes we need to defend the rule of law.

George Bush and Dick Cheney are pulling out all the stops to give their friends at Verizon and AT&T immunity. Retroactive immunity would prevent us from finding out what the Bush administration asked these companies to do and who asked them to act outside of the law. It would also prevent the big telecoms from ever being held accountable for violating the privacy and rights of millions of Americans.

We can stop retroactive immunity, but we need you to ask your senators to vote for the Dodd-Feingold amendment.
Click here to take action through CREDO Action’s Senate contact tool.

Our country is at its strongest when we are governed by the rule of law, not the rule of rightwing ideologues and authoritarian presidents in bed with our largest corporations. Stripping retroactive immunity from the current bill would ensure that the Senate preserves the rule of law in America.

We’ve fought hard to get to this point. Thanks to the work of Senators Dodd and Feingold, this fight has been delayed and delayed since October of last fall. With each delay we’ve found ways to put more pressure on the Senate to pass a good wiretapping bill that doesn’t include retroactive immunity. Now we need 51 votes.

The Senate will vote this week, most likely on Tuesday. Can you take action and then get a few friends involved too?
I’m not going to sugar coat this for you – we have an uphill fight to get to 51 votes. But we’ll have no chance of getting there if we don’t use the next day to make our voices heard.
Update:
McJoan has a list of phone numbers for key targets in the Senate. I hope you use it!

Cross posted at Daily Kos and the CREDO Blog.

Disclosure: I was proud to help lead the fight against telecom immunity as part of Senator Chris Dodd’s presidential campaign. I have joined the CREDO Mobile team to stop the Bush administration’s illegal wiretapping program and hold the telecom companies accountable for their lawbreaking.

Chinese Internet Dissidents

Today’s New York Times has a very interesting article about some of the internet dissidents in China who are discovering, creating, and publicizing ways to get around China’s Great Firewall. What’s particularly interesting is the way the article documents how people who were otherwise non-political were driven to activism in the face of repression.

In almost every instance, the resistance has been fired by the surprise and indignation when people bumped up against a system that they had only vaguely suspected existed. “I had had an impression that some kind of mechanism controls the Internet in China, but I had no idea about the Great Firewall,” said Pan Liang, a writer of children’s literature and a Web site operator who first learned the extent of the controls after a friend’s blog was blocked. “I was really annoyed at first,” Mr. Pan said. “Then the 17th Party Congress came, and I received an order that my Web site, which is about children’s literature, had to close its message board. It made me even angrier.”

Like others, Mr. Pan used his Web page to post solutions for overcoming the restrictions to some banned sites…

The article also makes clear that the levels of internet censorship are rising as the Beijing Olympics approach. Access to information is tightening, more Chinese internet police are being deployed, and the PRC government is cracking down on dissidents. The Olympics has had the opposite effect from what was promised by the IOC and the Beijing government: there is more censorship and less freedom as the government increasingly fears that the world will see that China is anything but a “harmonious society.”

What is sad, though, is that the Olympics could have been a moment for China’s communist government to genuinely liberalize, to open up their country to the democratizing forces of free speech, free press, and access to a free and open internet. Instead, they have promised that while arresting more and more dissidents, writers, and critics. The Chinese government has shown more of themselves in their illiberal actions than giving the world a candid view into their country ever could have.

Update:

The NYT also has a blistering editorial criticizing China’s march away from freedom in advance of the Olympics.

Eli!

Eli

Victory!

Enjoy that champagne, 1972 Dolphins.

Update:

funny pictures

ESPN (rough transcript):

“All season the talk around the NFL was about whether the Patriots were the greatest team of all time. Turns out they weren’t even the best team Sunday.”

Update II:

I’m having server problems that’s preventing me from posting new content. My server thinks it’s October 29, 1973. I have a couple good posts queued up which you can read in 35 years or when I get this bug fixed, whichever comes first.