Quick Hits - Critique and Reflection Edition

In the last few days, a number of critiques and profiles were published commenting on new/old infrastructure, the campaign(s), and where we're at as a movement. All are worth the time for those looking to get a better birds eye view of the current political landscape.

  • Rolling Stone eviscerates the disasterous "No on Prop 8" campaign. In reading the piece, one gets the overwhelming sense that the No on 8 folks ran the equivalent of John Kerry's Presidential campaign to the field and fundraising savvy Bush-like campaign helmed by the Mormans.
  • On Tech President, Clinton internet strategist Peter Daou discusses the Revolution of the Online Commentariat, in which he dissects radical changes that occur in politics when information is put (more) equally in the hands of million.
  • While the Obama Transition Team continues to innovate, Micah Sifry wonders if the Obama for America team - who met in Chicago this past weekend to devise the future of the movement - is regressing and killing the very openness and grasroots energy that made the campaign so successful.
  • Last week, the Alliance of Youth Movements met in New York. Bizarrely, almost no one I spoke to had ever heard of the conference or the groups involved. There are definitely a lot of groups out there claiming to speak for and/or organize youth. Sometime this year we're going to have to build some stronger connections between groups that attend these kinds of conferences and, say, groups that received money from major progressive donors this last election cycle. In any case, some of the conference panels were live streamed and archived. You can view them all here. (I have not yet done so, though the topics look interesting).
  • The Washington Post profiles the American Constitution Society. Created to counteract the conservative Federalist Society, ACS is becoming a powerhouse for producing lefty legal thinkers. I'll have to check my copy of Youth to Power when I get home, but I'm pretty sure that David Halperin, the ED of Campus Progress, had a hand in setting up ACS back in the day.
  • The New York Times notes that teenagers are getting hit hard by the economic downturn, limiting their opportunities to raise money for school and develop skills to help them in the workplace.

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Interesting info about the AYM conference

It's pretty shocking that nobody you've talked to had heard of the groups involved ... how US-centric! While the mainstream political blogosphere hasn't paid any attention to them, One Million Voices against FARC was covered in The Economist, and the Egyptian Facebook activists have been discussed in the LA Times and Wired. This is clearly an area where the rest of the world has been ahead of us -- although the Obama campaign and Join the Impact show that things are starting to happen here as well...

US Centric

I think that hits it on the head. 100% of the groups with which I'm involved (and that you'll find in the sidebar here on the site) are concerned with US electoral politics and/or moving policy within the chambers of the US Congress or their respective state houses. And they are 100% "progressive," so you are not really even getting a centrist or right of center view.

From what I understand, the AYM Summit was very much an event focused on those doing work on international/global issues. Those two camps don't talk to each other much at all.