I was reading snopes .com today to keep up on the latest ULs and ran across this bit:
http://snopes.com/politics/war/not1dime.aspClaim: Participating in a 'Not One Damn Dime Day' is an effective way to protest the war in Iraq.
Status: Probably not. Excerpt
As a functional protest, this one is equally off the mark. Although a boycott can be an active form of protest (even though boycott participants are in effect doing nothing, they're following a course of action that directly affects the object of their protest), boycotts succeed by causing economic harm to their targets, thereby putting them out of business or at least requiring them to change their policies in order to remain in business. But the target of this boycott isn't an entity that has the power to bring about the desired resolution (i.e., the government) — those who will be economically harmed by it are innocent business operators and their employees.Let me add to this that other problem with boycotts and calls to write this senator or that congressman is dilution of effort. On any given day in the liberal blogsphere, there are a number of such efforts, each trying to shine a light on an issue. This is a good idea in theory, but in practice, no matter how much light we have, it seldom manages more than a dim glow because of the number of issues it must illuminate.
Put another way, each of us is like an atom of uranium. The more of us that concentrate on an issue, the more "radioactive" the issue becomes. If enough of us manage to get together on an issue, then the issue achieves critical mass and an explosion (a result) occurs. There are a number of examples of this, the most recent was getting Barbara Boxer to stand and challenge the Ohio vote (Please, no arguments about whether this was a good idea of not, take that debate elsewhere and consider only the point I am making). If we had tried to push all the Dems, or even a small group of Dems, we would have failed. Instead, the effort coalesced around Barbara Boxer and reached critical mass: She signed the letter.
This also happened with a number of issues such as Trent Lott, The 60 Minutes "Memogate" (works for the right too), etc.
Folks, this is the model that works. We can only succeed only by narrowing our focus and picking one issue at a time. We keep piling onto a single issue, devoting all our attention, email, FAXes, phone calls until "critical mass" is reached and the issue goes our way.
If a key Dem is refusing to do what is right, then we start piling on him. We make him our poster child and we make sure he knows every minute of every hour of every day how we feel about the issue. We invite web sites after web site to focus on this wayward son. We encourage his constituents to visit his offices and make their displeasure known. We coordinate demonstrations at whatever events he appears at. We apply increasing amounts of pressure and we keep it on until he cries "uncle" and does the right thing.
To do this, we create a website that becomes our rallying point, as well as our polling place for deciding what issue/person we focus on. We do not change targets until either we succeed or the issue becomes moot. We then poll the people for our next target issue.
The site would allow any member to post an issue, and other members to rate the issue. Issues that get above a certain threshold then move to an action queue to be voted on. This is how we determine the next target issue.
Once a target issue is decided upon, we post links with phone numbers, email addresses, mailing addresses, office locations, relevant events (appearances, meetings, ect). Membership goes into activism/intel mode. Calling the person/organization and making their views known. Participating sites have a banner linking to us which changes as the target issue changes.
Example: Senator Reid will not move the Dems to filibuster Alberto Gonzales and we have decided he must. The alert goes out and we begin to concentrate on keeping his phones ringing, his mailboxes full and his awareness of our desires high. Any place he appears, we have demonstrators present. If he is out at a fundraiser, he knows we are there too, talking about the issue to the people shelling out money to him. We make a point of recruiting constituents to raise hell with him and let him know we are watching and we are not happy.
We keep the pressure on, building it as we can until either we get him to do right, or Gonzales is approved. The we move to the next issue.
(And yes, I know it is too late for Gonzalez, I just use him as an example).
If we want to help a candidate, we can do that as well, setting a fund raising goal and keeping that on the front burner until the goal is met. That candidate will KNOW how his supporters feel and lets face it, money talks.
Imagine how effective this could be if we succeed in getting the blogsphere to focus on one issue at a time instead of seeing our efforts mostly ignored. Issues that could be affected would be thing such as filibustering, leadership decisions (Kucinich for DNC chair?), fundraising, etc.
Folks on the left are not the only people to warrant our attention, moderates on the Right are also fair game.
I would like to hear your views on this idea. Please keep this kicked and ask others to join the discussion.
This site would run based on the will of the progressive membership. No leaders to disappoint us or "sell out". My only offer is the idea, site hosting, and organizing the initial effort. All other infrastructure would come from volunteers (programming, banner art, site maintenance etc.)
Ladies and gentleman, I propose bluenuke.com
David Allen
www.thoughtcrimes.org
The taste of Republican butt does not improve with age."The NeoCons can't be bargained with. They can't be reasoned with. They do not feel pity, or remorse, or fear. And they absolutely will not stop, ever, until you are dead.