Archive - Aug 2010
August 13th
Campaign Spending and Voter Turnout
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Fri, 08/13/2010 - 08:48As pundits continue to pontificate about the low voter turnout last Tuesday, the state legislature meets today to consider whether or not to override Governor Rell’s veto of their fix to Connecticut’s Citizens’ Election Program. As I was reading Matt Zagaja’s Primary Post-Mortem on DeliberateCT it struck me: perhaps voter turnout is inversely correlated to campaign spending.
There are plenty of reasons why spending more money on campaigns might decrease voter turnout. A popular reason in this area is negative advertising. Negative advertising is often cited as a cause of decreased voter turnout, and in some cases that may even be the goal of the negative advertising campaign. Related to this is the idea of election fatigue. As people’s mailboxes, telephones and TVs get bombarded with messages from the candidates, voters simply get tired of it all and don’t even bother voting.
Yet perhaps the issue is a little deeper. Massive campaign spending is anti-democratic. Our republic is supposed to be a representative democracy. We are supposed to elect officials to represent us in public office. To represent someone, you need to listen to them. You need to hear their concerns. Voters just may feel that the candidate that spends $50 million dollars to tell you what she believes isn’t listening to you, the same way some voters feel that current elected officials just aren’t listening.
There is also the aspect of fiscal responsibility. Voters may feel uncomfortable giving control of the governmental purse strings to people that spend millions of dollars of their own money to get elected. Are these really the people that best understand what it means to stay on a tight budget?
Our political system has become too much of a media show. It is not about intelligent discourse, it is about winning over viewers and getting them to buy a product. The product is the candidate and the purchase is made in the voting booth. People don’t want to buy political products. They want representation. So, they just stay home.
An issue in the Citizens’ Election Program is whether or not ‘triggers’ are constitutional. Triggers are when a self-funded candidate exceeds some threshold. This triggers the Citizens’ Election Program to provide additional funds to candidates participating in the program. The courts have held that this is unconstitutional because it could have a chilling effect on the ultra-wealthy person’s desire to spend unlimited funds. In fact, the courts appear to have it completely backwards. It is the ultra-wealthy person’s excessive expenditures that has a chilling effect on the more fundamental aspect of free speech, people going to the polls and casting their votes.
The fix to the Citizens’ Election Program is an imperfect fix. However, it is probably the best we can get as long as judges believe that the ability to spend unlimited funds on campaigns is of greater importance than voter turnout.
August 12th
MeeGo 1.1, Partitions, Bootmenu, Kernel Power, Flasher, and All That Stuff on the #N900
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 08/12/2010 - 22:43Quim Gil has a blog post up Running MeeGo 1.1 unstable in your N900. I’ve kicked around installing Meego and this is my report of how things have gone.
@FringeNYC Preview – Richard 3, with Roots in Wilton
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Thu, 08/12/2010 - 08:06Now is the winter of our discontent
Made glorious summer by this sun of … Wilton?
I’ve always loved funky modern adaptations of Shakespeare and when I used to regularly attend the Edinburgh Fringe Festival, I would seek out such plays. The listing of Richard 3 on the FringeNYC website describes the Less Than Rent production of Richard 3 like this:
Betrayal! Bloodlust! Punk Rock! Shakespeare's classic tragedy re-imagined in a nuclear wasteland. Nineteen-year-old Richard Gloucester is trying to get ahead in post-WWIII England, and he wants the crown...really effing bad. It'sTheEndOfTheWorldAsWeKnowIt!
Sounds right up my alley. To add to my anticipation, I fondly, yet vaguely, remember a production of Richard the Third that some of my roommates back in 1983 were part of. I have other favorable, but much less clear recollections of a great movie version.
With this, I signed up for the event on Facebook. This morning I received an email from Nicole Ventura who plays Tyrrel in the play to get tickets because they are going fast. I checked out Nicole’s Facebook page, and she and I have one friend in common: James Presson.
Now, I must admit, I have a lot of friends on Facebook, and I can’t always place how I know someone on Facebook. James is listed as having graduated from Wilton High School in 2008. Then it struck me. James Presson, Voices in Conflict.
This was the play that students in a Drama class at Wilton High School created out of “letters and essays written by Iraqi civilians and American soldiers serving in Iraq”. Back in 2007, I wrote about it in Helping students find their voices, or not:
So, what are the issues that our schools are trying to address today? First, there is the case of “Voice in Conflict”, a play put together by a theatre class at Wilton High School. This was the play that was judged to be too inflammatory by the school’s superintendent to be put on in the $10 million auditorium, so instead the students were invited to perform the play in venues around the country.
The major focus of that article was about whether or not our educational system is helping students find their voices. Besides the Wilton case, I also spoke about Avery Doninger. Avery and James appear to have found their voices by speaking out against an educational system that seemed intent on stifling their voices.
Now, James is a theatre major at Fordham and is directing Richard 3. His experiences with Wilton High School and Voices in Conflict provide an interesting and important backdrop to the production. Having this background, Richard 3 moves from the “sounds like something I would enjoy watching” category to the “absolute must” category. However, opening night, really afternoon, tickets are going fast. However, there are four additional performances as part of FringeNYC. Get your tickets now.
August 11th
Adding Google Documents Forms to Tumblr
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 08/11/2010 - 22:04Recently, I was asked how to add a Google Document Form to Tumblr. I don’t do a lot of work in Tumblr, but I figured it would be fairly easy, depending on what you want to get done. So, here is what I did:
First, create a Google Document Form: Go to Google Documents. Click on Create New, and select Form. Create the questions you want for the form. Then, click on More Options, and Embed. This will give you some text you can copy and paste that looks something like this:
<iframe src="http://spreadsheets.google.com/embeddedform?formkey=SomeRandomFormKeyWithLotsOfNumbersAndLetters" width="760" height="625" frameborder="0" marginheight="0" marginwidth="0">Loading...</iframe>
As best as I can tell, with my limited Tumblr experience, there are two things that you can do with this. One is that you can create a Custom Page in Tumblr with this. When you are logged into Tumblr, click on Customize. Then, click on Pages… Add a page. Give the page a URL and select a Custom Layout. Enter the html in the custom layout along with any other information you might want or need.
It is worth noting that when I tried using a standard layout and put in the html, it would change the html before returning to the wysiwyg editor. Another thing that I tried, which worked nicely was to add the html into the Info section for my tumblr page. When doing this, you might want to experiment with different widths and heights. In my case a width of 200 and a height of 350 worked nicely for my simple two question form.
Another thing you may want to do is add a link to the results. In my case, once I had created my form, I went back to the Google Docs main page that lists all my different documents. I selected the form I wanted and brought it up as a spreadsheet. Then, I clicked on the down arrow next to share, and selected Publish As A Website. With this, you can simply take a link which you can add to your custom page, or you can get HTML to embed in a page. This html looks pretty similar to the html for the form, and again, you might want to adjust the width and height.
To get a look at some of this, check My Tumblr Page in the lower right hand section, as well as the Test Google Docs page I created.
You could also use these methods to embed a Google Documents Form into your blogs or other websites. Are you doing anything interesting with Google Documents Forms?
Wordless Wednesday - Checking the Voting Machines
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 08/11/2010 - 09:40Okay. A quick word. I watched the registrars and moderators secure the voting machines and ballots and print out the reports in Woodbridge, CT. I feel that it is very important to keep an eye on the vote counting process, even in a town like Woodbridge, where it is done extremely well.