WAY Off-Topic: Armageddon
I said in February that this year would be the year that restored my faith in baseball.
Boy, did it ever.
I don't know what to do.
For a kid born at Beth Israel hospital in Boston, MA, it can't get much better.
I said in February that this year would be the year that restored my faith in baseball.
Boy, did it ever.
I don't know what to do.
For a kid born at Beth Israel hospital in Boston, MA, it can't get much better.
“It’s all about the blogs.”
So says George Shulman, a professor at New York University’s Gallatin School of Individualized Study. Shulman is the recipient of an NYU Distinguished Teaching Medal in 2003 and the author of Radicalism and Reverence. Sitting in his office, where bookshelves take up the bulk of the wallspace, it seem incongruous to be talking about the healing powers of the ‘Net. After all, what can a guy who has a copy of Plato’s Republic on his wall tell us about information dissemination in the Digital Age. Well, a lot, it turns out. Shulman, surprisingly, comes across as a True Believer in the Internet Revolution, and its power to shape the political process.
More specifically, he attributes the success of Howard Dean and his grassroots campaign to the powers of the Internet.
“It let young people access his candidacy in a way that they hadn’t been able to before. The information, the platform, was always available,” Shulman says. “He made his plea directly to the electorate, to young people. His fundraising wasn’t targeted at corporations or at the wealthy, it was targeted at people who would visit his site and give $20.”
In September 2003, New York Magazine published the following: “The Dean campaign, everyone knows, has been made possible by the Internet. The campaign is a pure response-rate phenomenon. By being the first presidential candidate to deftly and efficiently access interest groups assembled through the Internet—a method first demonstrated by liberal groups like moveon.org—Dean has assembled a financing basis that threatens to swamp his competitors.”