Archive - Apr 2010

April 7th

Dr. Larry Lessig Horrible v. Captain Foley Hammer and Penny Bysiewicz

“Destroying the status quo because the status is not quo. “

This evening, I will go hear Larry Lessig deliver “The 19th Annual Hugo L. Black Lecture on Freedom of Expression "Speech and Independence: The Wrongs of Corporate Speech”. I suspect I probably know much of what he’s going to say. I’ve heard him speak before and he has a recent speech up on his website.

Matt Singer heard Larry Lessig speak at Rebooting Democracy recently, and wrote up a response to Lawrence Lessig. In his speech, Lessig suggested that things in Washington are “much, much worse” than candidate Obama said on the campaign trail. Matt Singer goes even further. He suggests that Lessig’s call for public financing of campaigns is an “inadequate cure”, and I think Matt is partly right.

Based on the experiences of campaign finance reform here in Connecticut, I think Matt underestimates the impact that campaign finance reform can bring. He suggests a different path to change

The good news then is that there are other methods to win. The bad news is that they're really hard. For the most part, they mean working hard for a series of years, knocking a ton of doors, dialing for dollars, motivating volunteers, handling coalitions, etc., etc.

Actually, the campaign finance reform and hard campaign work are closely related. Candidates that decide to kick the big money addiction of the current special interest driven system find they need to work hard, be frugal and find creative new ways of getting their message out. They have more time to focus on this, because they don’t have to spend as much time dialing for dollars and can spend more time talking with volunteers and voters and finding new solutions to old problems. Of course, what we need in government right about now are creative and frugal hard working leaders.

Here in Connecticut, we are watching this unfold in what could be a very interesting Governor’s race. Ridgefield First Selectman Rudy Marconi, a Democratic Candidate for Governor, put up several creative advertisements on his YouTube channel, especially attacking the monied special interests, yet these videos didn’t go viral and Mr. Marconi is still a dark horse in the race.

Today, Former Stamford Mayor Dan Malloy sent out a press release announcing

The Dan Malloy for Governor Campaign today announced the launch of its first paid advertising effort. Beginning today, the campaign will be running ads on hundreds of Connecticut news and information websites including key political blogs.

Will these carefully targeted ads get enough extra bang for the buck to stand up to the advertising that other Gubernatorial candidates are buying on television? It will be interesting to watch and see.

Meanwhile, the Connecticut Attorney General’s race has gotten a new twist. I’ve written before about how the issue about Secretary of State Susan Bysiewicz’s contacts database has seemed to me to be a red herring. I obtained the database, and showed it to anyone who wants it. Various people have read what I consider to be irresponsible articles about the database and have commented to me about how the database doesn’t have any Republicans in it, or that the ‘special notes’ are only about Democrats. It is a good example of concocted stories getting misrepresented and ultimately spreading false information. The copy of the database that I obtained contained approximately 37,000 people. 8,400 were Republicans. Around 7,200 of the records had ‘special notes’, and about a thousand of the special notes were about Republicans.

The bigger issue is whether or not she is qualified to run for Attorney General. On the one hand, there is the legal question that is being argued in the courts right now. I’ve argued before that I believe the statute that some are trying to use to exclude her from the ballot is unconstitutional. We will see what the courts decide. Yet the bigger question is not whether she is qualified in the courts view of the statute and constitution, but whether she is qualified in the public’s mind in terms of her experience as an attorney. As CTNewsJunkie reports, the transcripts of her deposition show Bysiewicz has little litigation experience. This is the real question that should be looked at.

Unfortunately, large media corporations, like other special interest groups, seem to have little interest in what is best for the voters or for the state and seem to go for juicy stories to boost readership, instead of informative stories that really help voters understand the issues and become more involved.

So, will Larry Lessig address the complicity of the large media organizations that profit from the current political system? Will he talk about the issues of how we elect or appoint judges and whether the judicial branch is in as desperate need of reform as the legislative branch? Will he comment on Singer’s concern about other paths to change?

Or, is Dr. Horrible right, that we're treating a symptom while the disease rages on, consuming the human race. The fish rots from the head, so they say. Is Dr. Horrible right about needing to cut off the head? What will your role be in all of this?

Note: For those who don’t recognize the references to Dr. Horrible, Captain Hammer and Penny, please check out Dr. Horrible’s Sing-Along Blog.

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Wordless Wednesday



Fiona and the Calf, originally uploaded by Aldon.

April 6th

Mobile Media Sharing

Yesterday, both DigitalMediaWire and Digiday:Daily ran stories about NearVerse securing $1 million in seed funding. I had written about NearVerse a few weeks ago so I thought I’d find out what is new.

Really, there wasn’t much news. The company sent out a press release about funding they had received last year. Their iPhone app, which was supposed to be the hot item of SxSW just didn’t get all that much buzz, and most of the people that tested it for me where unimpressed. Yet I still think they may be on to something.

This thought was reinforced as I read through various blog posts about the Nokia N900. Zach Goldberg has been writing some very interesting things about UPnP and the Nokia N900 on his blog, BlueSata. In one post, he wrote about the Sonos multi-room sound system. It is worth noting that the Sonos page talks about being able to control the sound system from an iPhone. By the sounds of Zach’s blog post, you can probably do the same from a Nokia N900 and his UPnP software.

Yet it is the idea of mobile media sharing that gets me. Could some of Zach’s work on UPnP on the N900 be used to facilitate sharing music and other media between N900’s, and perhaps even iPhones and people’s home music systems? Could Zach’s code be used to take the idea of NearVerse’s LoKast to a whole new level?

I don’t know enough about UPnP and it’s hard to tell how Zach’s code might work with my idea. I haven’t managed to get Zach’s code to run on my machine yet, and even if I do, I haven’t found any N900 owners around where I live so I wouldn’t have a great chance to test out some of the ideas.

So, anyone else out there experimenting with UPnP on their cellphones? With LoKast? With other ways of sharing media from mobile devices?

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April 5th

Large Groups and the Political and Media Ecospheres

A recent email discussion about the earthquake in Mexico and people’s reactions to it have caused me to spend a little more time thinking about how political and media ecospheres are virtual environments were large group behavior, for better or worse, emerges.

In the 1990s, I was working within a complicated matrix management structure for a large international bank. To increase my effectiveness, I hired an organizational consultant to coach me. Her doctorate was in psychoanalytics as it applied to organizations, particularly in the tradition of Tavistock, Wilfred Bion, A.K. Rice and others called Group Relations. I became fascinated by Group Relations and read extensively on the topic, as well as attended various Group Relations experiential conferences.

A key part of Group Relations experiential conferences is the large group. The attendees of the conference gather with tasks like “learning through experience how groups function, how leadership in groups takes place, and how the participants can become more effective leaders within their organizations and communities”. It was fascinating to watch people in the group take up roles that they might otherwise not have taken up, due to pressures from the group as it reacted to the anxieties of the group.

I became particularly interested in this as it took place online and was invited to write an article about the Internet and the Large Group for the Journal of Group Analysis back around 2001. Technology has changed a lot since then, and there are many more people online now than a decade ago, but still people have similar reactions as members of large groups online.

With this long introduction out of the way, let me explore a discussion on the mailing list of group psychotherapists that I participate in. One person noted, “This is an unsafe world. Don’t you think it’s becoming less and less safe every day?” A graphic in the Los Angeles Times provided a good illustration of this. The first two months of 2010 showed fewer earthquakes of magnitude four or greater than the previous four years, but more earthquakes with a magnitude of six or greater. Looking at U.S. Geological Survey data, the first two months of 2010 showed over twice as many magnitude six or greater earthquakes than the average from 1900 until the present.

Others suggested that the daily media blitz, focusing on the ‘disaster du jour’ is what makes things seem worse. If anything, the media ecosphere with its focus on, “If it bleeds, it leads”, may be creating a dangerous feedback loop in the large group of media viewers. The ‘disaster du jour’ is what boosts viewership, so media corporations seek out the disaster du jour, which feeds the group’s anxiety addiction.

Yet with a large group at a Group Relations Conference, there are ‘consultants’ to the group that will, from time to time, share observations about what is going on with the large group. Perhaps bloggers can take on some of this role in questioning what the traditional media is doing, and if it is feeding some sort of anxiety addiction. I flirted with this idea a few years ago in my blog post, Are bloggers Group Psychotherapists?.

I ended that blog post with:

Ultimately, bloggers are no more group psychotherapists then they are journalists. Yet just as bloggers can learn a lot from journalists, they could learn an awful lot from group psychotherapists and could help bring innovation and healing to problems that our towns, cities, states, countries and world faces.

This returns me to my reaction to the email discussion. There, I suggested that the real issue is perhaps not whether or not the world is more or less safe than it was in previous years, but how we deal with anxieties that it might be less safe. It seems like much of the political discourse these days is focused on people’s fears about this world being less safe. In fact, the discourse may in fact be contributing to a less safe world, just as a large group, running wild with its anxieties can become a more dangerous place, without someone helping people contain the anxieties.

So, my question to bloggers, journalists and politicians, are you able to step up and help contain anxieties instead of fan them? To any group psychotherapists that might read this, can you help people in media and politics learn how to contain anxieties and process them into more helpful reactions? Can you help transform our media and political ecospheres into safer holding environments?

What do you think?

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April 4th

Easter

“Watch the field behind the plow turn to straight dark rows
Put another season's promise in the ground”

I recently stumbled across a quote about farmers and hope. I don’t remember the exact words, but it was something about farmers living by hope as they place a seed in the ground. I think Stan Roger’s great song, ‘Field behind the plow’ captures some of this.

For me, New Years and Easter always seem to be the two big holidays where we talk about hope. New Years talks about the hope for the coming year. It is a man made sort of thing and comes in the bleak winter when hope seems most intangible. Easter is different. Easter is about hope in God’s love for us and comes as symbols of that love come bursting forth from the tomb and from the barren ground.

So, we sit at our kitchen tables and celebrate gifts that remind us of this vernal and eternal hope.

“So ease the throttle out a hair, every rod's a gain
And there's victory in every quarter mile”

Happy Easter, everyone.

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