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Funding Presidential Libraries
Say George Bush needs
to raise half a billion dollars for his eventual presidential library
and scholarly institute in Texas. In fact, he
does, and that's the most a presidential library has ever cost
-- Clinton's ran $165 million and George H.W. Bush's half that.
The way the law stands now, anyone and everyone is welcome to anonymously
chip into the kitty: Halliburton, the Saudi government, somebody
looking for a pardon, whomever. Heck, a single donor could kick
in every red cent needed for construction and his or her name need
never appear anywhere in the public record. Think someone who's
willing to help a sitting president erase what is in effect a huge
debt is going to curry a little bit of favor? It's a giant backdoor
into the president's good graces. Rep. Henry Waxman's been fed up
with the way that presidential libraries are funded since when Clinton
was passing the hat for his. Today, at about 11 or so, Waxman's
Oversight Committee will be hearing
a bill that would amend the Presidential Libraries Act.
He'd make it so that the name of every donor over $200 is disclosed
and posted online in a timely fashion.
Crossposted at Daily Kos and MyDD
Who Owns What C-Span Airs?
The Speaker of House and the Republican Study Group have been going back and forth over Pelosi's use of a few C-Span video clips. Muddy, muddy situation. But what's clear is that nobody on Capitol Hill understands who "owns" what we see on C-Span.
It's confusing, no doubt. To start, proceedings on the House and Senate floor
are shot by government cameras, operated by government employees. What C-Span
does is grab that feed, mark it with their trademark, and air it. But the actual
feed is public domain -- that "lawyer-free
zone" where people shouldn't even give a second thought about using
remixing and using content however makes them happy. You might wonder, how do
we citizens get our hands on that raw feed? But that might be over thinking
it. A project called Metavid suggests it's okay re-use C-Span's feed as long
as their proprietary
markings are scraped off first.
As for committee hearings, they're a whole different story. House rules allows
broadcasters to film their own feeds. C-Span, as a private,
non-profit company, is one of those broadcasters. They record hearings with
their own cameras and vigorously assert rights to that content. It's
a C-Span-recorded clip of a committee hearing on global warming posted on the
Speaker's new blog, the Gavel, that C-Span
is objecting to. Right now, about half of the House's Committee's webcast their
hearings, and they can't restrict their use in any way -- because government
works aren't subject to copyright.
The same restrictions go for other non-Hill events that C-Span covers. Their cameras, their feed. Which is why C-Span could have a clip of Stephen Colbert at the White House Correspondents' Association dinner pulled down from YouTube.
This is a discussion that needs to be had. Confusion over copyright sows fear,
and fear creates a chilling effect (which is a whole different discussion, to
be sure). For heck's sake, the Speaker's office -- home to a more than a few
lawyers -- can't figure out what the rules are here. When it comes to witnessing
democracy, then we need to make it clear what the rules of the game are.
In fact, when dealing with C-Span, the basic rules should be as simple as those
of soccer. Forget off-sides all those other nuances -- everyone knows you just
kick the ball into the net and try not to use your hands. Kids take to soccer
like fish to water because they can easily wrap their minds around how the game's
supposed to go. Simple rules means everybody plays. And when it comes to engaging
in the democratic process, "everybody plays" is the goal.
Crossposted at the Open House Project
The Oil Under Greenpoint
More
than 17 million gallons of oil spilling from its container, contaminating
waterways and wreaking havoc on the environment. Exxon Valdez? Er,
no. Though the first part's right. In the 1940s and 50s, Exxon refineries
in New York leaked millions of gallons of oil into Newton Creek, a shipping
tributary of the East River that forms a natural boundary between Brooklyn
and our neighbor to the north, Queens.
That leak gives the surrounding neighborhood of Greenpoint the honor of being
the site of one
of the world's worst underground oil spills. (For the record, the Valdez
lost about 11 million gallons.) To get your bearings, here's a Google
street map/Google
satellite map of the area we're talking about. The affected area is about
the size of forty football fields.
It's a ginormous environmental mess. But I'm not sure how many people
in New York City, not to New York state know about it. Heck, I live in
Brooklyn and only about six miles south of the spill. And it was news
to me when a friend from Greenpoint casually dropped it into conversation
a few weeks back. (Though, to be fair, I'm kinda a newbie Brooklynite
-- I've only been here about 16 months. I concede that it's entirely possible
that everyone in the state knows about this and didn't tell me.)
By way of abbreviated history -- way back when, oil refining was a messy,
leaky business. And in 1950, a gasoline leak reportedly caught fire. That
set off an explosion that shot
manhole covers 25 feet into the air. But we were more relaxed back then
about things like, you know, oil, um, seeping into our rivers and streams. As
soon as the manholes landed and quit rattling around on the ground, everyone
moved on.
Then, about 28 years later, a Coast Guard helicopter spotted a big old plume
of oil flowing into Newtown Creek. In one location, under Kingsland Avenue,
the gas and oil layer was more than 20 feet thick! Everybody took twelve more
years to think things over. Then in 1990 the state of New York told ExxonMobil
that it just had to start cleaning up its mess.
And then...not much happened.
Until now, dun dun dun.
In 2004, the Riverkeepers (an environmental group you might know for employing
a guy by the name of Robert Kennedy) filed
"notices of intent to sue" against ExxonMobil and a few other
oil companies. In 2006 or so, the residents of Greenpoint organized.
The big news in 2007 is that new
Attorney General Andrew Cuomo seems to eager to be on Exxon like white on
rice. He's tired of their sweet talking, late night phone calls and promises
of "baby, I will...":
This is one of the worst environmental disasters in the nation, larger
than the Exxon Valdez and slower in the cleanup. ExxonMobil must and
will be held accountable. The toxic footprint of ExxonMobil is found
all over this area. It is ExxonMobil’s oil that remains under
the homes and businesses. And it is ExxonMobil that has dragged its
feet and done as little as possible to address the dangers that it created.
Cuomo is finally
hauling Exxon's tuckus into court. Gov. Spitzer's behind it, so are Sen.
Schumer and Rep. Weiner. And, heck, Erin Brokovich's on
the case. This situation has gone on way too long and we have a chance now
to finally things right. What we can hope for -- and work for -- now is that
remediation and resolution won't take another fifty years.
Crossposted at the Albany Project
Reprints
After giving it a great deal of thought, I've decided that it makes sense to crosspost here some posts I've posted elsewhere. So the next couple of posts will be pieces I already mentioned below. Onward!
Three minutes forty seconds?! I don't have three minutes forty seconds!
Today's sign the apocalypse is upon us:
Why climb the "Stairway to Heaven" when you can take the elevator? That's the logic behind Radio SASS (Short Attention Span System), an experimental radio protocol currently in development that takes classic tunes and whittles them down to about two minutes. "People's patience for music - even the stuff they like - is thin," says founder George Gimarc, a veteran programmer and former DJ from Dallas. "Twelve songs per hour won't cut it." Gimarc and his team of editor-musicians use what he calls "intuitive editing" to trim pop songs to their catchiest crux, pruning seconds from a guitar solo here, lopping off a chorus there.
Read or I'll Keep Singing
I'm a wanderer. Yeahhh, I'm a wanderer. I roam around around around around...Hey, sorry. I've written a handful of posts all around the blogosphere this last few days that I thought I might tie the all together here. Give them a home of sorts, so that they won't have to go roaming through the night to find a place in this world, a place in this woooorld! Again, apologies. I've been inside all day and am feeling punchy.
We had some fun over at MyDD this weekend with Funding the 50-State Gay Conspiracy, The Fairness Doctrine, Who Workers Really Fear, Checks and Balances, the Sweet Smell of Constitutional Duty. Over at the Open House Project, we have Who Owns What C-Span Airs? And I've just gone up on the Albany Project with The Oil Under Greenpoint.
Looking back, it seems like I've missed crosslinking some MyDD weekend posts. Oh well, they're always all here.
Saturday Night NYC Event
I'll be moderating. Come on out!
March 3 event with Amanda Marcotte
Come join us for an evening of political conversation and inebriation with
blogger Amanda Marcotte! It was no surprise that the first major “controversy”
of the 2008 campaign revolved around bloggers. Now that the dust has settled
from the John Edwards blog flap, come hear the inside story and discuss what
it all means for progressive politics, netroots activism and fighting the
hypocritical right-wing noise machine. Join us this Saturday at The Tank for
a night conversation, drinking, and networking. Panel discussion at 7pm, followed
by free drinks and drink specials until 10pm.
Saturday, March 3
The Tank
279 Church Street between Franklin and White
7pm
PANEL: CAMPAIGNING, BLOGGING AND FIGHTING BACK: Netroots Activism in Presidential
Politics
Amanda Marcottte
Amanda Marcotte is a writer and a feminist blogger who writes for and manages
Pandagon.net. She hides out from the
world with her computer in Austin, TX.
Scott Shields
After contributing to grassroots group blog Dean Nation, Scott Shields joined
the editorial staff of MyDD.com in 2005. In 2006, Shields was recruited to
join the Menendez for Senate campaign as the Director of Internet Operations.
He currently sits on the Netroots Advisory Council for the Drum Major Institute
for Public Policy and recently founded White Horse Strategies.
Ari Melber
Ari Melber is a regular contributor to The Nation and a contributing editor
at the Personal Democracy Forum.
Moderated by Nancy Scola
Nancy Scola is a Brooklyn-based writer and activist. She has, in the past,
worked for former Virginia Governor Mark Warner's Forward Together PAC and
on the Democratic side of the House Committee on Oversight and Government
Reform. Nancy is currently a weekend blogger at MyDD.
8-10pm
Happy Hour with free drinks & drink specials
Perhaps most importantly, this is an event to support Amanda Marcotte; there
is a suggested donation of $20. All proceeds will go to Marcotte to cover
her travel expenses and expenses for her blog, Pandagon.net.
A very special thanks to Blogging Liberally and Drinking Liberally for
all of their support.
"Marketing and Politics in Virtual Worlds"
I cobbled together some rough notes for today's Beyond Broadcast workshop
on marketing and politics in virtual worlds, and I thought I might as
well go ahead and post 'em here:
Beyond Broadcast: Marketing and Politics in Virtual Worlds
Two great minds on cyberlife, Clay
Shirky and MIT's Henry Jenkins
have been engaged in online debate over Second Life, the hot participatory
medium of the moment. Clay started it with a Valleywag post called "A
Story Too Good to Check." Henry responded with "Get
a (Second Life)!. Clay came back with Second
Life, Games, and Virtual Worlds, Henry with More
Second Thoughts on Second Life and then Clay again with Second
Life: A response to Henry Jenkins. Got all that?
(There's a big question that I'm largely going to punt on -- which
"virtual worlds" beyond Second Life, exactly, are we're talking
about here? World of Warcraft is usually thrown into discussions at
this point, but it seems to me that that's a pretty different beast
-- a multi-player game more than a virtual world. Shirky makes an interesting
point on this in one of those posts. The gist of is this: SL is a fairly
challenging environment with a pretty steep learning curve, but as it's
not really a "game," it doesn't train you to do anything difficult
or productive. One can be a quite happy SL avatar flying through the
air, which is one of the first skills taught on Orientation Island.
But are we learning things in Second Life that we can port over to any
possible future virtual worlds, whether that's SL v2 or some app still
a glimmer in someone's eye?)
Clay's main concerns with SL are "demographic" -- in short:
"the logic behind this belief is simple: most people who try Second
Life don’t like it." On this point, Jenkins ask, if the real-time
interactions suggested by virtual worlds like SL will "always represent
a special class of uses which competes not with the web but with other
teleconferencing technologies." But no matter, says Jenkins, "my
interest in Second Life has little to nothing to do with the statistical
dimensions of this argument. I've never been one who felt that arguments
about cultural change could be reduced to counting things -- Second
Life interests me as a particular model of participatory culture."
But when it comes to selling widgets via Second Life or using it as
a political communications tool, it's understandable to get caught up
on the the question of numbers -- how many people actually actively
use the medium?
Shirky talks about Second Life as the next in a line of somewhat failed
immersive technologies like "LambdaMOO or Cyberion City."
It's a certain cynicism (or maybe just healthy skepticism) that you
see sometimes in people who have been around the tech world for a while
and lived through the enormous hype and over promotion around virtual
worlds. And there sure has been a flurry
of press around Second Life over the last six months or so -- much
of it overheated. Following a lot of that hype, a good number of big
big corporations -- Toyota, American Apparel, Reebok, Dell, Nike, and
more -- entered into Second Life and set up shop. Then there's the buzz
in political circles. My old boss Governor Warner was the first
major American politician to enter into Second Life back when he
was considering making a run for the presidency. Then we saw the U.S.
House of Representatives that set
up shop in Second Life on the very day that Nancy Pelosi
was named Speaker and the new Congress kicked off. There's an unofficial
John Edwards for President
Second Life HQ. On the non-profit political side, there are things
like the Yak
Shack, a project of the UK branch of Save the Child, and Camp
Darfur.
Jenkins points to all this activity as a flaw in Shirky's thinking
on SL. "To some degree, all of the corporate, academic, nonprofit,
and foundation interest in SL is part of the hype which Shirky is dismissing
here." This part is important, I think. What we have in Second
Life is a shared space where organizations/individuals of differing
levels of power and resources are interacting on the same grounds. It's
like the New York City Marathon, where an amateur runner like myself
can compete on the same course at the same time as some of the best
athletes in the world. (Only they have fancier shoes.)
Jenkins (and others, for that matter) have delved into the costume
or carnival-like aspects to Second Life, where identities can be swapped
and hierarchies reordered. It's easy to get excited about these upendings,
but they raise real questions when it comes to marketing and politics
-- which, it can be argued, at some point rely upon interacting with
the outside world (though less so for marketing than for politics, I
think.) Jenkins admits that "I care only a little bit about the
future of virtual worlds. I care a great deal about the future of participatory
culture." But there are real questions about whether it's an amenable
environment in which to executive the very serious tasks of marketing
and politics. There are probably a few marketers and politicos questioning
their SL plans after a recent incident where Anshe Chung, the supposed
first Second Life millionaire, was attacked by giant
flying penises during a press conference. And then there's the virtual
world's first "terrorist" organization -- the Second
Life Liberation Army.
All this discussion is all well and good, but there's a practical aspect
to this -- what real applications of virtual marketing and politics
are we seeing now? Moreover, is Second Life significantly different
than other medium for marketing and politics than the ones we already
are used to?
(I'd be remiss if I didn't take this change to make a personal plug.
I wrote a paper on politics
and Second Life for George Washington University's Institute for
Politics, Democracy, & the Internet. It's aimed at political practitioners
and is fairly basic, but I hope that you might give it a read.)
-Nancy Scola
Beyond Broadcast
Today up in cold, cold Cambridge (I can hardly think of the Boston
area without shivering) MIT's Comparative Media Studies Program and Harvard
Law School's Berkman Center are hosting the second, I think, Beyond
Broadcast conference. Last year's conference seemed to be a big success.
Here's what's up for discussion:
Attendees will explore the means, the message, and the meaning of the
post-midterm, pre-presidential YouTube moment. Broadcast media have
long played a powerful role in shaping political culture and mediating
citizen engagement in the democratic process, and the conference will
examine how participatory culture is putting the tools of media creation
and critique in the hands of citizens themselves.
As part of the conference, at 1 o'clock I'll be hosting a workshop held
entirely in Second Life -- that's right, a virtual workshop.
The topic? Marketing and Politics in Virtual Worlds. If you'd like to
attend, it's free and open. Just join the 'Beyond Broadcast 2007' group
and teleport here.
Hope to see you there.
When Catholic Hospitals Don't Act "Catholic"
When I was out in Chicago last week digging into the union drive by Resurrection Health Care employees, I was struck by how very often conversations I had came back to the theme of "but these are supposed to be Catholic hospitals!" So I wrote a diary about it on Street Prophets, which is sort of the religious-flavored version of Daily Kos:
The kink in the system now is that it seems as if RHC isn't holding up its end of the deal. And I mean that in both a moral sense and a legal one. Approval of some of its mergers were contingent upon the continuation of care for the poor. Yet Resurrection acknowledged in 2004 that it had cut charity care by at least one-third. Illinois' Lieutenant Governor has accused RHC of failing to care for some poor while charging others exorbitant rates, and called on Cardinal George, the new archbishop of Chicago, to get RHC to live up to their mission. There has been one class action suit and then another, accusing Resurrection of overcharging or otherwise failing to care for the poor.
And at the same time, we have RHC employees growing fed up with the quality of care and conditions at their workplaces, and trying for years to form a union. RHC refuses to meet with them. Here again, seems like there's a great deal of daylight between how RHC is behaving and how Catholic teaching calls them to act. How's that? As much as health care is part of the church's ministry, union organizing is part of the church's teachings.
I'm still trying to think through whether it's okay (from an activist perspective) to be more upset with Resurrection than one might otherwise would be, just because they set themselves up as a Catholic organization. Anyway, there it is. (Have I mentioned here that I'm working with the AFL-CIO on the legislative push around the Employee Free Choice Act? Hmm, well, I am. And that's why I was in Chicago.)
TechPresident and the Open House Project
Yesterday saw the launch of two new projects
silly enough to include me as a writer and/or advisor. The
first is TechPresident:
TechPresident is a new group blog from Personal Democracy
Forum that covers how the 2008 presidential candidates are
using the web, and vice versa, how content generated by
voters is affecting the campaign.
My first post there is about
the Edwards blogger affair as a game-changer in campaign
politics.
The second is the
Open House Project:
The last time the House rules were seriously reconsidered
was 1995, when the Republicans took over Congress. Since
then, the internet has changed the way that Americans communicate
with each other. With a new Congressional mandate to open
Congress, it’s time for citizens to help open up the
process. One of the problems is that, well, no one person
really knows how to make it happen. It’s a big job.
The Open House Project is a temporary working group designed
to make recommendations to Congress on easy ways to begin
the process.
And my first post there is about creating
a single standard for congressional offices to tag and bundle
the chunks of information they produce.
[MyDD] Rallies and Mixtapes and Life in Albany
I've been sitting on a plane on a runway at O'Hare airport for an hour
and fifteen minutes now. It's 9° below outside, and the potable
water trucks have frozen. Departing planes can't leave the gates, and
arriving planes can't get in. As a hater of the cold, right now I can't
imagine why I thought me traveling to Chicago in February was anything
other than a ridiculously bad idea.
Thankfully, my Cingular laptop card turns wait time into work time.
And it gives me a chance to to finally recap a few posts I wrote on
MyDD last weekend. The first was a
call for photos and impressions of the anti-war rally down in Washington
DC and the second was a note on
the arrest of Atlanta deejay DJ Drama, mixtape virtuoso, on a felony
charge of selling unauthorized compilations. The third was the second
installment in a new series I'm calling Hearing
Progressive Voices, wherein I interview people doing things
in progressive politics that I've deemed interesting. My latest victim:
Phillip Anderson,
proprietor of the Albany Project.
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