Archive - Jun 2007

June 29th

Honk for Peace

In my more cynical moments, I wonder how much difference it really makes to stand by the side of the road holding out a sign advocating peace, or honking as I drive by similar demonstrator. I wonder how much difference all the time and effort that Kim and I, and so many of our friends put in on Ned Lamont’s campaign. I wonder how Ned feels about all the time and effort he put in.

Then, I remember Robert Kennedy’s famous quote:

Each time a man stands up for an ideal, or acts to improve the lot of others, or strikes out against injustice, he sends forth a tiny ripple of hope... and crossing each other from a million different centers of energy and daring those ripples build a current that can sweep down the mightiest walls of oppression and resistance

That sort of sums up my reaction to Corey Boutilier’s documentary ‘Honk for Peace’ which Kim and I saw a rough cut of last night.

The film starts off with footage of various demonstrations in New York City. It has clips from various people that had been working for peace long before Ned entered the U.S. Senate race. It focuses primarily on the anti-war component of Ned’s message. During the campaign, one of our goals was to get people to recognize other parts of Ned’s message besides the anti-war part, but since that is what most people focused on, it ended up being perhaps one of the most important parts of his legacy.

The film also explores some of the important aspects of campaigns that people too often overlook. We all show up at rallies for candidates that we support, but we rarely think about the importance of all the work done to set up the rally, whether it is making sure that the banners are up, the seats are set, the press knows where to go, or simply that the right songs are playing. It comes back to the theme of ‘Honk for Peace’. Each of us does what we can to bring a message of peace, each of our actions adds another ripple of hope, and it great to see some of the behind the scenes people get recognized for the work they did.

Corey has just started showing around parts of the documentary and gathering feedback. He hopes to have the film out at one festival or another, perhaps as early as this fall. I sure hope so. I think it is an important film that all of us who will be working for peace in the 2008 elections need to see.

(Categories: )

June 28th

Into the Abyss

Seven years ago, I got remarried and then left my last full time job on Wall Street. During the following years, I’ve consulted to financial firms, volunteered for political campaigns and non profits and found my mix of work shifting more and more from Wall Street to a focus on social change. Many of my friends have told me that I spend too much time doing pro bono work and I need to be more aggressive in marketing myself and in making sure that the opportunities I take up are financially rewarding, as well as meeting my needs to help bring about social change. They are probably right. I’m working on that.

While I was working full time on Wall Street, I could easily afford our house, Orient Lodge, which this blog is named after. Yet, as I spend less and less time on Wall Street it is time to downsize. Today, we accepted an offer on our house, and assuming nothing goes wrong over the next six weeks, we will be moving.

Where will we move? Well, that depends on a lot of variables, in particular, where can I find reasonable paying gigs. It would be great to stay in the Fourth CD and help with Jim Himes’ campaign. Some good friends are encouraging us to move to Milford, close enough to still help with Jim’s campaign, but where we could also help with Kerri Rowland’s effort to become Milford’s next Mayor . Some suggest that we should move into western Milford in hopes that Kim would run for an open State Rep seat.

Milford would be great, especially if we could find a place near the water. It isn’t all the way to Bethany, which is what Kim’s father hopes for, but it is a lot closer.

Last weekend, we went to a party in the woods near Redding. A small house in the woods wouldn’t be all that bad either. For most of my work, all I really need is a good Internet connection.

Looking at it that way, moving back to the state of my birth, the great State of Maine, wouldn’t be at all bad, if I could find jobs I could do from there. Then, there is Massachusetts. My mother’s house may be going on the market soon, and perhaps I could move to Williamstown. Fiona would put in a good word for the other end of the state, out on Cape Cod.

With all the options opened up, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Washington DC or even Washington State are all on the table. A job in DC wouldn’t be all that bad since I’ll have two daughters in college in Virginia. We could live in the Virginia suburbs of DC. Kim’s dad might not be all that happy, but we would find ways of getting them together.

For that matter, if I could find a way to support myself, make sure that Fiona got a good education, and not feel too guilty about the amount of gas I would have to burn up, I would spend a few years videoblogging my way across this country, a twenty first century adaptation of Robert Pirsig, William Least Heat Moon, Jim Bronson, Charles Kuralt and any other great travel writers I can throw in. But if Maine is a pipe dream, that’s probably at least two bowls of a pipe dream.

So, as I prepare to close the final door on Orient Lodge, the house, not the blog, and peer out the window of opportunity, which people assure me God is opening, I have yet to make out the two paths diverging in a yellow wood to choose from. Instead, right now all I see is a pathless wood. Perhaps I should rename my blog, the Birch Swinger.

Into the abyss, wish us luck and Godspeed.

All-American Presidential Forums on PBS

Yesterday, I received two interesting tidbits about the All-American Presidential Forums on PBS that will be happening this evening. The first was in a discussion with Robert Cox of the Media Bloggers Association (MBA). It was through the MBA that I received credentials for the Libby Trial. This time, they are working with PBS to credential bloggers to cover the Presidential Forums.

I have mixed feelings about credentialing processes. Too often they can be used to re-enforce a status-quo of who’s in and who’s out. MBA has done a great job of bringing in some of the bloggers that I consider some of the great under-recognized bloggers.

Faye Anderson will be blogging at Anderson@Large. I believe I first met Faye at the Media Giraffe summit back in 2006. She is a bright and engaging blogger, whom I’m pleased to see will be speaking at BlogHer at the end of July.

Another great blogger from New York City that will be there is Liza Sabater. Liza writes at culturekitchen, and The Daily Gotham. It seems like I run into at Liza at every blogging event, and she is always bringing up important questions. I really look forward to her coverage of the forums.

Terrance Heath, of the The Republic of T. is going to be there. I first met Terrance through the Progressive Bloggers Alliance and we were on a panel together in DC a few years ago. I haven’t seen him in a few years, but I still enjoy reading his blog.

Then, there are bloggers that I learned about through MBA. La Shawn Barber and I were supposed to be covering the Libby trial at the same time, and I started reading her blog because of this. We do not agree politically, and despite putting in lines like “Liberals are such crybabies”, she usually writes pretty insightful material.

I think I first stumbled across Kim Pearson through MBA. However, she writes so many interesting things, I may well have first read her writing about Second Life, some sort of media reform activities or something else. I’m glad she’ll be blogging the Presidential forum and I’m also glad to see that, like Faye, she will be speaking at BlogHer.

Another blogger that I really enjoy reading that will be part of the credentialed bloggers is Pam Spaulding. I’ve never met Pam, but I really enjoy reading Pam’s House Blend.

There are several other bloggers that I’ve read here and there but don’t really know or follow. I look finding out more about them. In many ways, I think I might be more interested in hearing from the bloggers who are credentialed than from the candidates themselves. MBA has set up this page to aggregate the feeds of these bloggers. It looks like a page worth watching.

If that is not enough, Michael Forbes Wilcox writes that Governor Deval Patrick will appear in the televised presidential debate. It was Michael and his friend Lori that first introduced me to Gov. Patrick and I echo Gov. Dean’s comment about Gov. Patrick, "Governor Patrick is a rising star in the Democratic Party and an outstanding example of the strong leadership vision and values that our party offers to American people."

While I didn’t think much of Wolf Blitzer hogging the spotlight at the debates in New Hampshire, I do hope that we see a lot of Gov. Patrick during the forums.

So, I’m excited about the forums. I’m excited to see Gov. Patrick. I’m excited to what the bloggers will say. I’m even hopefully that the candidates will have something interesting to say.

(Categories: )

June 26th

Wordless Wednesday

Okay, this isn't really wordless, but...

Once you've watched the video, if you have a little more time, go out and listen to, or read this speech

(Categories: )

Helping the voiceless find their voice

Yesterday, my daughter brought in the mail. It included a package from the Edwards campaign, a kit for hosting our house party on Wednesday. My wife and I looked at the package with a sense of excitement and nostalgia. Four years ago, we hosted house parties for Gov. Dean’s Presidential campaign. Now, we are doing it for Sen. Edwards.

For those of you who don’t know what a house party is, it is really very simply. You have a bunch of your friends over to your house, let them know why you are supporting a specific candidate and encourage them to contribute to that candidate. In short, it is a simple fundraiser.

I remember when we first talked about hosting a house party. It reflected a profound change in the way we understood politics. Back then, I thought of politics as a game for the rich and well connected. There is no way that regular person like I could host a Presidential Fundraiser.

Well, campaigns have changed. Some of it is due to the Internet and the ability of people to contribute online. Some of it is due to candidates that understand that democracy isn’t a spectator sport, reserved for the rich and well connected.

No, today, we can all be much more involved. We can work together to help change our country. My wife and I learned that from Gov. Dean and so now we’re hosting a house party for John Edwards because we believe that he is the candidate that is doing the most to help the voiceless find their voice, whether it be helping bringing his voice to calling for an end of the war in Iraq, getting people to focus on the needs of the poor, in New Orleans, the whole gulf coast, across our country and across our world, or in many other ways.

If you want to find your voice in the political dialog, if you want to help others find their voice, please attend a house party Wednesday night. If you’re in Stamford, CT, please come to ours. Otherwise, find one near where you live, or host your own.

It is a wonderful feeling to realize how much difference we all can have.

(Cross posted at John Edwards' blog)