http://www.buzzmachine.com/index.php/2006/04/02/not-quite-times/Note how he portrays the internet: as a tool for politicians in power. But way lower down in the story, there’s this anectode — which is the real lead — about people who won’t be used and now wield power of their own:
On the left in particular, bloggers have emerged as something of a police force guarding against disloyalty among Democrats, as Steve Elmendorf, a Democratic consultant, learned after he told The Washington Post that bloggers and online donors “are not representative of the majority you need to win elections.”
A Daily Kos blogger wrote: “Not one dime, ladies and gentlemen, to anything connected with Steve Elmendorf. Anyone stupid enough to actually give a quote like that deserves to have every single one of his funding sources dry up.”
That’s the real story, Times, and it’s only just beginning: Politics are changing not because those in power are learning to use these tools but because the people finally have these tools.
That makes me think that we here at the JK forum are a strange phenomenon that is still under the radar. Most people in the left blogosphere have an agenda and hold politicians to the fire if they don't fulfill it. We, on the other hand, have studied John Kerry greatly in depth and have decided he has the character, intelligence, insight, and vision to largely create what we think is most important. We try to think of ourselves as very independently minded, yet we feel reassured that big picture John Kerry is with us, so we are with him. In short, our primary agenda is not the Iraq War or universal health coverage or fiscal responsibility -- it's promoting "our guy" John Kerry. And what makes us truly fascinating was that JK did not either pay us or ask us to do this. Many posters here and on dKos love Feingold, Dean, Clark, and Boxer, yet as soon as one of these politicians does the "wrong" thing, they're immediately lambasted, condemned, and even called the ubiquitous "spineless". We're more forgiving because we know that usually, JK has a good reason for going a slightly different way than we expected, or we just accept "okay, I don't agree" like on, say civil unions vs. gay marriage. Our support for him is not fleeting which makes our smaller organization more powerful than the bigger, fickle ones.
My question to all of you is this. Do we the Kerrycrat people hold real power with the Senator? My first response would be "yes", but I'm curious what all of you think.