The Facebooker Who Friended Obama, a piece published in this morning’s New York Times, paints an extremely flattering picture of Sen. Obama’s Internet presence and strategy. Orchestrated with some help by Chris Hughes, a co-founder of Facebook, Sen. Obama’s campaign has treated the Internet “as the connective tissue” between online organizing and offline action.
“Mr. Hughes wanted Mr. Obama’s social network to mirror the off-line world the same way that Facebook seeks to, because supporters would foster more meaningful connections by attending neighborhood meetings and calling on people who were part of their daily lives.”
Sen. Obama’s embrace of the Internet stems from his belief “that real change comes from the bottom up” (beliefs cultivated, of course, when he was a community organizer) — “And there’s no more powerful tool for grass-roots organizing than the Internet.”
While the piece does not highlight how Obama supporters are using Obama’s social network to question the Senator’s policy decisions, it does suggest that a vote for Obama might be a vote for official technological change in the Oval Office: “Mr. Obama has pledged that if he is elected, he will hire a chief technology officer.”
The piece also highlights nicely the way the campaign is trying to connect on and offline efforts on the part of the candidate’s supporters — one of the hardest-to-accomplish tasks with any organizational action that is executed online. They to nicely synthesize these two worlds, and has consciously worked to do so especially after realizing that after the primary by helping their users to more-easily phone bank and go door to door in search of other supporters. While Sen. Obama’s campaign has taken a lot from the world of small grassroots campaigns, that world can now take some cues from his campaign, which has had the luxury of the money and minds necessarily for figuring out how to best integrate communication technologies into setting collective action into motion.
Also in eAction news:
-Filed in News
Will Obama Inspire a New Generation of Organizers, a piece written by Peter Dreier and originally published in Dissent Magazine, appeared in The Huffington Post on Tuesday evening. Dreier, a professor of politics and director of the Urban & Environmental Policy program at Occidental College (and also teaches a class on community organizing), details the effect Sen. Obama, a former community organizer, is already having on the Millennial Generation:
Here, Dreier appears to be correct, and not necessarily over-optimistic. Having been an organizer in the past—becoming one quite by accident as I had no idea the job had existed before I had it—I’ve seen that Sen. Obama’s Presidential candidacy has brought to a greater consciousness that there exists a career centered specifically on personal empowerment and mobilizing social change. My parents and peers are now more familiar with what community organization is and entails than when I was an organizer myself.
Dreier also outlines the history of community organizing in America. Obama openly acknowledges the great Chicago organizer Saul Alinsky as an inspiration, which leads right-wing bloggers to loosely draw parallels between the Chicago organizer, the Illinois Senator, and, of course, Communism [see: "Saul Alinsky - yet another Obama mentor from his Marxist past"]. Dreier, however, illustrates the tradition’s more-substantial, three-dimensional history:
Finally, Dreier imagines the Organizer-In-Chief, and how this role could be leveraged to better leverage a platform and elicit constituent action:
And finally, Dreier suggests that Obama’s inspiration can be used to put on pressure to reform - even his own platform:
Again, Dreier is not over-optimistic or too-simplistic in his assessment. Community organizers and anyone generally excited or inspired by seeing a collective of people make something happen have reason to be excited, as their craft is being highlighted by a presidential candidate - specially one that has already inspired a young generation. Throughout my elementary school life, there always seemed to be ploys to make reading look cool via posters featuring endorsements by Spider-Man, Tom Hanks, Patrick Ewing, and others. It seems that now, however, considering how empowered different communities feel resulting from Obama’s candidacy, his is the best enforcement that community organization will get.
It it especially interesting to think of the president-organizational community role Dreier outlines, patented after Franklin Roosevelt and some of his constituents. After nearly three decades of presidencies that have celebrated individualism, imagining the constituent, or organized collectives of constituents as players rather than passive bystanders is exciting. Further, I very much appreciate the suggested interchangeable role of the constituent as an agent for platform change (using the “bully-pulpit” to mobilize collective action in response to climate change issues, war attitudes, gas prices, etc) and keeping the President’s (and Congress’s) platforms in check with reality (as we’re presently seeing Sen. Obama’s netroots supporters do with regard to his stance on FISA).
-Filed in Ideas
On this day, July 3nd, 2008, the news brings to our attention a generation of community organizer aspirants, the Chinese finding their way around the Great Firewall, backlash against Rogers, the Canadian iPhone provider, and much, much more.
-Filed in News
On this day, June 16th, 2008, the news brings to our attention more word on this newfangled election (and Sen. Obama as a web warrior), crowd-sourced movie-making, mobility and environmental activism and much, much more.
-Filed in News
On this day, June 12th, 2008, the news brings to our attention today’s goings on in mobile activism, the online efforts of young McCain supporters, the Grand Net War of 2025, incarcerated net and civil rights activists, and more.
-Filed in News
On this day, June 5th, 2008, the news brings to our attention the offering of a manifesto to political guerrilla warriors, the triumph of activism over sexism in Sen. Obama’s win, a look at this year’s National Conference for Media reform, the syndication of computer hackers, Twitter tools, and more.
-Filed in News
On this day, May 27th, 2008, the news brings to our attention the ascent of the youth vote, Roger Cohen on Obama’s knack of leveraging networks, writing as a bomb, a short list of Arab political bloggers, organizers getting “Konnected,” and more.
-Filed in News
On this day, April 28th, 2008, the news brings to our attention the death of print, blogger-mom anger, hacktivism, and sex-for-action:
-Filed in Uncategorized