- Amazed at various new media programs and how they can be used for nonviolence
- Violence can be effective in suppressing protests of important people
- Twitter! is cool
- Google is so much more than a blind search
- The value of micro-blogging
- It is important for campaigns to have some awareness of how they are perceived
- Time your campaign carefully so as not to compete
- We need to focus more on the solution and not just the problem
Friday, October 31, 2008
Halloween Reflections
Friday, October 24, 2008
Reflections 10/24
- Obama campaign has been strategically smart, but the ultimate test is Election Day
- Reaching out to faith based initiatives for gras roots purposes is very helpful
- Best way to ensure success of campaign is to make supporters feel a part of it
- It's a good idea for Obama to reach people in the Red states
- Obama has made people feel part of a movement rather than working for a campaign
- Interesting to see role of citizens in election
- I was unaware of using citizens' arrest as form of nonviolent protest
- The more concrete and specific nonviolent actions are, the better people can understand and join in
- Obama has successfully surrounded himself with a team of experts
Friday, October 17, 2008
Reflections from 10/17
- Change from the top down but without community support, results could be short-lived
- Sustainability is one of he greatest challenges in a nonviolent campaign
- Importance of personal touches in nonviolent campaigns/fund-raising, like the Soulforce postcard thank you
- I was impressed by the police officer in the Soulforce video, and how his civility helped their campaign
- Political ads don't have to be divisive to be effective; they can be moving
- Sometimes ignoring the jabs of your opponent is the most effective way to mute the impact of the opponents violent weapons
- Nonviolent campaigns are currently being overshadowed by the presidential election, and others are loosing funding because of the economic situation
- 12 principles can be achieved by different political systems
- The approach of Equality Riders took by turning the other cheek was very powerful
- Do not improvide, but prepare and adapt
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
One Sherrif Takes a Nonviolent Stand
CNN's Campbell Brown's wrote:
Here's a video from CNN:
And an eloquent shout out from Rachel Maddow:
The Chicago Sun Times reported that renters were being evicted because there landlords were in default on their mortgages. The owners had been notified, but they had not, in turn, notified the renters. He took a very tough, principled stand and faces repercussions himself.Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart has announced that for the foreseeable future he is not going to evict anyone else from a home banks have foreclosed on.
How come? He's fed up.
Here's a video from CNN:
And an eloquent shout out from Rachel Maddow:
Labels:
Campbell Brown,
CNN,
evictions,
Rachel Maddow,
Tom Dart
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
Ads on X-Box?
Would you think of putting up ads in X-Box games to promote your cause? Would it reach your demographic? Barack Obama thought it was a good idea. Check out Ben Smith's blog entry in Politico on the subject and for more images.
Update on the Great Schlep!
We posted the Sarah Silverman video earlier, and here's a CBS story covering the actual schlep. Reportedly, thousands signed up on line and dozens actually went! Daily Kos pulled several videos together in this diary entry. There's also an especially beautiful one from Israel on voting for Barack Obama following the CBS story. Now, how would you evaluate the success of the schlep?
Labels:
Barack Obama,
Daily Kos,
Great Schlep,
Israel,
Sarah Silverman
Friday, October 10, 2008
Reflections 10/10/08
- The diversity of activists was essential to the succes of the Civil Rights movement
- From Rev. Green - everyone has an ego, but the important thing is to move past them to make progress
- Key to successful campaign: focus on message
- It takes more energy to hate than to be hated
- Bayard Rustin is the man!
- Remarkable to me that Rev Green is a man so full of optimism and positivity
- Great leaders of our time shouldn't be the only one's respected
- I'm overwhelmed by how far we've come since the Civil Rights movement, but have so far to go, even in the nation's capital
- Be your own voice and you will rally people
- How can we channel our emotional energy into something constructive?
- I wonder what the world would be like today if we hadn't lost so many brilliant people
- Rev. Green's tremendous respect for his parents and others aroumnd him in spite of differences
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
Muting the Impact of Opponent's Weapons
There's a great piece by Ari Melber in The Huffington Post about the Obama campaign's response to the media on McCain's negative attack ads. He puts the onus back on them, saying,
Think about the political jujitsu here. How does this mute the impact of the opponent's violent weapons? The campaign has other approaches. The overall message is that when there's nothing more to offer, campaigns go negative. The Obama camp even has a video quoting John McCain on this. They also have their "Fight the Smears" and "Know the Facts" efforts off their web site.
Notwithstanding the facts, we fully expect an increasingly frustrated and desperate McCain campaign to continue to lie in attacking Senator Obama," reads the memo to the reporters. However, the question remains - will McCain and his allies be challenged by the press on their allies or will they be allowed to propagate them with impunity?
Think about the political jujitsu here. How does this mute the impact of the opponent's violent weapons? The campaign has other approaches. The overall message is that when there's nothing more to offer, campaigns go negative. The Obama camp even has a video quoting John McCain on this. They also have their "Fight the Smears" and "Know the Facts" efforts off their web site.
Labels:
Ari Melber,
Barack Obama,
Huffington Post,
John McCain,
negative ads
Saturday, October 4, 2008
Peacemaker Interview: Nancy Delaney
Katie Suter
Modern Peacemaker Interview
Nancy Delaney
Nancy works for Oxfam America as the Outreach Manager. She works extensively on the CHANGE Leadership Program; recruiting college students, training them in nonprofit strategy and international issues, and helping them initiate awareness campaigns on their campuses. Nancy lives in Boston with her husband and has two adult sons.
• Background:
o Who/What were your greatest influences? She traveled a lot as a child because her father was in foreign service. She lived in El Salvador for 3 years. She had amazing experiences that brought her face-to-face with inequality at a young age. Because she was so young they made a very deep impression on her and it was hard for her to wrap her head around it. In her everyday life she lived in a secure home but she would see people in desperate straights during her walk to school. This always stayed with her- she asked, ‘Why do I have this life and they do not have it?’ Nancy wrestled with that over the years, but never found the answer. This is what she believes is inspiring about the program she works on, the CHANGE initiative. As a young woman, she was not doing anything like the actions the students from CHANGE are doing. However, the idea of justice stayed with throughout her life. When the opportunity presented itself to explore the nonprofit sector, she took it. She started as a volunteer for Oxfam and then became an employee. Once she began to understand the routes, causes, possible solutions to international problems it was impossible for her to turn back. “I was completely hooked,” she said. Essentially, she believes the beginning of her journey was at age 6 in El Salvador, where she experienced personal contact with inequality.
o Where did you go to college? What did you study? She went to college at Holy Cross in Wooster, Massachusetts, where she gained the influence of Jesuit college. She believes the experience of learning in a Jesuit environment was important for her. She studied Spanish and had an “unofficial minor” in Latin American Studies. She was interested in understanding the information about a culture one can gather from both literature and history. Nancy was very focused on government and policies, but also with the people’s writing. These studies, combined with the Jesuit ideal of ‘men and women for others’ supported her path toward social justice work. During school, Nancy did volunteer work as part of the campus group, SPUD, which gave time and resources to the local community.
o What work did you do before Oxfam? She “wandered around” at first. Nancy took a couple of years after graduation because she believed it was important to have some life experience before she considered graduate school. She tried different jobs in the “informal sector”-and then began to look for a “real job” in the for-profit sector. She worked for an international transportation company. Nancy believes this was good experience in business and management and that her years in the for-profit sector were good preparation for her work at Oxfam. After her sons were born, she wanted to try something completely different- nonprofit work. She sought out Oxfam for their reputation. Nancy believes there are many different paths to social justice work and related that every person at Oxfam has a different way that they came to be there.
• Peace as an influence
o Is it important to you that your actions are nonviolent? Nancy does not think about conflict and violence as a way to make change for the issues she is working for. She acknowledges that many people accept poverty as simply part of the fabric for life, but she believes that this is not predestined or inevitable. Nancy thinks that the kind of well-researched, well-conceived strategic ways of addressing the issues of the systemic causes, as they have at Oxfam, are the only way to go about it. She cannot even imagine the other position. She realizes there are examples of when violence has moved populations and created change. However, she believes that to do the work Oxfam does, it is necessary to address the issues and have a really sound analysis. She believes that this, along with the organization itself, is how one makes really sustainable change. She emphasized analysis over methods of violence.
• Staying with it
o What is the best part of your job? Nancy related that there are a lot of people who do social justice work that is not direct service (meaning they do not go into the community). She has the part of social justice work that she believes is so special: The people she works with, she gets to see [in the Change Leadership program]. While many colleagues must sustain themselves on the belief that they’re making change, she gets the benefit of meeting students, see the kind of change they enact, and feeding off of all their actions and energy.
o How do you balance it with family? She said that it is difficult but always worth it to balance. Additionally, she said the Non-profit sector is good at helping people balance. The older her sons became, the more important she believed it was to do social justice work with Oxfam. She saw that she could bring her experiences and what she was learning home to her family. Her two sons have worked at Oxfam as interns and one worked on the farm bill for the organization. This was an unforeseen benefit of working for Oxfam. The rewards also manifested themselves in “funny ways”. She would speak in their classrooms and then their universities about her work. Also, her sons grew up understanding injustice existed in the world. The older they grew, the more her commitment deepened. She saw the impact her experiences had on them and how they viewed the world as a result. This made her think about her own role.
o How do you handle the slow-progress? Nancy makes sure that her personal efforts are positive and move her causes forward. She ensures that she can access impact and evaluate effectiveness of what she does. She related this to why she advocates for the continued renewal of the Change Leadership program. She believes it is a good use of resource, with tremendous multiplying affects. “It is a step forward,” she said. She said it is important to ask questions about her actions- that she does an action not for the sake of doing it, but for the impact. Further, she believes that awareness is the first step to engagement. She said it is important to not be overwhelmed by the problems, but to keep moving forward. Personally, she carves out pieces of the problem where she thinks she can be effective and pushes further where she can. She related she is part of Oxfam’s larger strategy to make change. She said that everyone has bits and pieces of the initiative. She said to ask, “Why are people living in poverty?” Then, she said to analyze: to look at structures, then what is needed to change them. She greatly enjoys working with college students to address change.
Modern Peacemaker Interview
Nancy Delaney
Nancy works for Oxfam America as the Outreach Manager. She works extensively on the CHANGE Leadership Program; recruiting college students, training them in nonprofit strategy and international issues, and helping them initiate awareness campaigns on their campuses. Nancy lives in Boston with her husband and has two adult sons.
• Background:
o Who/What were your greatest influences? She traveled a lot as a child because her father was in foreign service. She lived in El Salvador for 3 years. She had amazing experiences that brought her face-to-face with inequality at a young age. Because she was so young they made a very deep impression on her and it was hard for her to wrap her head around it. In her everyday life she lived in a secure home but she would see people in desperate straights during her walk to school. This always stayed with her- she asked, ‘Why do I have this life and they do not have it?’ Nancy wrestled with that over the years, but never found the answer. This is what she believes is inspiring about the program she works on, the CHANGE initiative. As a young woman, she was not doing anything like the actions the students from CHANGE are doing. However, the idea of justice stayed with throughout her life. When the opportunity presented itself to explore the nonprofit sector, she took it. She started as a volunteer for Oxfam and then became an employee. Once she began to understand the routes, causes, possible solutions to international problems it was impossible for her to turn back. “I was completely hooked,” she said. Essentially, she believes the beginning of her journey was at age 6 in El Salvador, where she experienced personal contact with inequality.
o Where did you go to college? What did you study? She went to college at Holy Cross in Wooster, Massachusetts, where she gained the influence of Jesuit college. She believes the experience of learning in a Jesuit environment was important for her. She studied Spanish and had an “unofficial minor” in Latin American Studies. She was interested in understanding the information about a culture one can gather from both literature and history. Nancy was very focused on government and policies, but also with the people’s writing. These studies, combined with the Jesuit ideal of ‘men and women for others’ supported her path toward social justice work. During school, Nancy did volunteer work as part of the campus group, SPUD, which gave time and resources to the local community.
o What work did you do before Oxfam? She “wandered around” at first. Nancy took a couple of years after graduation because she believed it was important to have some life experience before she considered graduate school. She tried different jobs in the “informal sector”-and then began to look for a “real job” in the for-profit sector. She worked for an international transportation company. Nancy believes this was good experience in business and management and that her years in the for-profit sector were good preparation for her work at Oxfam. After her sons were born, she wanted to try something completely different- nonprofit work. She sought out Oxfam for their reputation. Nancy believes there are many different paths to social justice work and related that every person at Oxfam has a different way that they came to be there.
• Peace as an influence
o Is it important to you that your actions are nonviolent? Nancy does not think about conflict and violence as a way to make change for the issues she is working for. She acknowledges that many people accept poverty as simply part of the fabric for life, but she believes that this is not predestined or inevitable. Nancy thinks that the kind of well-researched, well-conceived strategic ways of addressing the issues of the systemic causes, as they have at Oxfam, are the only way to go about it. She cannot even imagine the other position. She realizes there are examples of when violence has moved populations and created change. However, she believes that to do the work Oxfam does, it is necessary to address the issues and have a really sound analysis. She believes that this, along with the organization itself, is how one makes really sustainable change. She emphasized analysis over methods of violence.
• Staying with it
o What is the best part of your job? Nancy related that there are a lot of people who do social justice work that is not direct service (meaning they do not go into the community). She has the part of social justice work that she believes is so special: The people she works with, she gets to see [in the Change Leadership program]. While many colleagues must sustain themselves on the belief that they’re making change, she gets the benefit of meeting students, see the kind of change they enact, and feeding off of all their actions and energy.
o How do you balance it with family? She said that it is difficult but always worth it to balance. Additionally, she said the Non-profit sector is good at helping people balance. The older her sons became, the more important she believed it was to do social justice work with Oxfam. She saw that she could bring her experiences and what she was learning home to her family. Her two sons have worked at Oxfam as interns and one worked on the farm bill for the organization. This was an unforeseen benefit of working for Oxfam. The rewards also manifested themselves in “funny ways”. She would speak in their classrooms and then their universities about her work. Also, her sons grew up understanding injustice existed in the world. The older they grew, the more her commitment deepened. She saw the impact her experiences had on them and how they viewed the world as a result. This made her think about her own role.
o How do you handle the slow-progress? Nancy makes sure that her personal efforts are positive and move her causes forward. She ensures that she can access impact and evaluate effectiveness of what she does. She related this to why she advocates for the continued renewal of the Change Leadership program. She believes it is a good use of resource, with tremendous multiplying affects. “It is a step forward,” she said. She said it is important to ask questions about her actions- that she does an action not for the sake of doing it, but for the impact. Further, she believes that awareness is the first step to engagement. She said it is important to not be overwhelmed by the problems, but to keep moving forward. Personally, she carves out pieces of the problem where she thinks she can be effective and pushes further where she can. She related she is part of Oxfam’s larger strategy to make change. She said that everyone has bits and pieces of the initiative. She said to ask, “Why are people living in poverty?” Then, she said to analyze: to look at structures, then what is needed to change them. She greatly enjoys working with college students to address change.
GREAT USE OF NEW MEDIA! Live billboard with texted questions!
Free TV : Ustream
What a great idea! Rent a mobile electronic billboard and post questions to the candidates via text submissions! As reported in the Personal Democracy Forum . . .
What a great idea! Rent a mobile electronic billboard and post questions to the candidates via text submissions! As reported in the Personal Democracy Forum . . .
The California Democratic Party has a giant electronic billboard up somewhere near a Los Angeles-area rally that Republican VP candidate Sarah Palin is doing today that is displaying live text-message questions people are sending in. On top of that, the whole thing is streaming live back onto the web using UStream.tv.Check the California Democratic Party website for details!
Friday, October 3, 2008
Thought as of 10/3
Get well, friends with norovirus!
- Body language and perception of attitude can be almost more important than language
- Importance of good organization in nonviolent campaigns
- To effect large scale change, we sometimes have to compromise our own well-being and safety
- Scratch the surface of the myth, and you will find that the most important thing is the organization and the people in the shadows
- Nonviolence is a discipline. It only seems distant to those who are not trained in it.
- Thinking . . .
Wednesday, October 1, 2008
Payment to Protest: Pro-War Group Offering Cash For Frats To Demonstrate At VP Debate
According to the Huffington Post, Vets for Freedom was working a St. Louis fraternity to encourage them to turn out at the VP debate. Paying protesters actually isn't that new. There was a resource in Germany where people advertised themselves as potential protesters. And you have to admit, the ROI could be attractive. Mercenaries have been around for thousands of years. Why not nonviolent ones?
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