Archive - 2010
November 3rd
Wordless Wednesday
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 11/03/2010 - 09:19November 2nd
Random Election Notes
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 11/02/2010 - 15:37Well, it is election day, and I’m busy crunching numbers. I’m taking a few minutes out to write a few observations.
First, it is a beautiful day out and that seems to be helping voter turnout. It has been busy across the state with some polling places being overwhelmed.
In Woodbridge, as of 3 PM, about 43% of registered voters had voted already. Voting has been pretty steady throughout the day with voting heaviest between 7 and 8 and 8 and 9. As of noon, it appears as if 39% of Republicans and Democrats have voted, but only 24% of unaffiliated voters have made it to the polls. Is this because people who register with a party are more motivated? Is it because the party is more effective in getting out the vote? Is it something else?
I have not yet looked at age groupings, but I did get my Foursquare badge for voting and I flagged that I had voted on Facebook. Will these tools inspire younger or geekier folks to get out and vote? We’ll see.
Hopefully, I’ll have time for more analysis a little later.
November 1st
Connecticut Election Night Preview
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 11/01/2010 - 18:59Everyone has been writing their prediction of who will win tomorrow in the big races and what it will mean for our state and our country. However, there is a theme that is perhaps being overlooked that is worth exploring. What role will minor party candidates play this time around.
There are several interesting aspects to this. First, there are the minor party candidates for statewide office. In the Gubernatorial race, Dan Malloy and Tom Foley face a third candidate, Tom Marsh, who is running on the Independent line. I saw my first Marsh lawn sign today. He had started off as a Republican and switched to the Independent party. With the race between Malloy and Foley being very close, Marsh may not get that many votes. If Malloy wins, and Marsh gets more votes than the difference between Malloy and Foley, there are going to be some upset Republicans calling Marsh a spoiler and traitor.
The U.S. Senate race looks even more interesting. Besides Dick Blumenthal and Linda McMahon, John Mertens is running on the Connecticut for Lieberman line and Warren Mosler is running on the Independent line. Both have run spirited campaigns. When it was looking especially close between Blumenthal and McMahon, Mertens and Mosler faced the same fate as Marsh in the Gubernatorial contest. This has been especially a concern amongst progressive Democrats who wanted to see the Connecticut for Lieberman line on the 2012 ballot, but don’t want to see Blumenthal’s chances threatened. I’ve now seen some Mertens lawn signs by the side of the road as well.
There is also the Brian K. Hill write-in campaign for U.S. Senate. It is not clear what sort of impact he will have. I’ve seen a fair amount of Hill lawn signs, and he has been trying to reach out on Facebook.
For Secretary of State, Treasurer, Comptroller and Attorney General, the Green Party and the Independent party both have full slates. The Libertarian Party has candidates for Secretary of State and Comptroller.
However, the minor party to watch is the Working Family Party. I’ve now received requests from two different organizations urging me to vote on the Working Family Party line. They have cross endorsed the Democrats on all of these lines and it will be interesting to see what percentage of the vote they get.
It gets even messier when you go further down the ballot. In a press release from the Secretary of the State’s office, Secretary of State Susan Bysiewicz notes that “There are as many as nine political parties running candidates for the various seats on the ballot, depending on the town and legislative district.”
This has presented some interesting ballot logistics. Fifteen communities will have double sided ballots and most of the ballots look like complicated bingo cards.
Looking at the State Representative races provides all kinds of interesting information. The Republicans are running 126 candidates and the Democrats are running 136. There are 16 open seats, 12 Democratic and 4 Republican. 9 Republicans are unopposed, as are 9 Democrats. In addition, there are 12 Democrats that appear on the ballot as both Democrats and Working Family Party candidates and have no opposition. The district with the most party lines is the 100th district where Democratic Incumbent Matt Lesser is on the Democratic and Working Family Party lines and Republican challenger John Szewczyk is also on the Connecticut for Lieberman, Libertarian and Independent lines.
Besides the 100th district, the Connecticut for Lieberman party has candidates in six other districts. The Libertarians have no other State Rep candidates.
The Independent party is running candidates in thirteen different State Rep races. In two of these races, they are cross endorsing with the Connecticut for Lieberman party. In six of the races, they are cross endorsing Republicans.
The Working Family Party has 59 State Rep candidates. With one exception, all of these are cross endorsed Democrats. The exception is David Stevenson in the 107th district where the Democrats did not nominate a candidate.
The Green Party has four candidates, none of whom are cross endorsed. In the 67th district, the Green Party candidate is the only challenger to Republican Incumbent Clark Chapin. Four other parties are fielding just one candidate. The Christian Center Party is running Daniel Traceski as the only opponent to incumbent Republican Penny Bacchiochi. The Buckman for Connecticut party is running Brien Buckman in a crowded race for Denise Merrill’s seat. The We the People Party is running David Parian in a crowded race against incumbent Chris Donovan and the Common Sense Party is running Bruce Siennick against Republican Incumbent David Scribner, whose only other competition is the aforementioned David Stevenson.
Rounding out the State Rep races, there are six Petitioning Candidates. Two are running against Democratic Incumbents that face no other opposition.
There are also six registered Write-in candidates for State Rep. Three of them are running in the 6th district where Democratic Incumbent Hector Robles is running unopposed. This afternoon, the Hartford Police Department terminated Officer Robles for various violations of the Hartford Police Department’s Code of Conduct.
How will all of these races turnout? We’ll have to wait until tomorrow to find out.
Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 11/01/2010 - 08:58Rabbit, Rabbit Rabbit. For All The Saints. NaNoWriMo. November starts off with a bang and keeps on going. Election Day. Our Tenth Anniversary. A funeral. All leading up to Nana’s birthday and Thanksgiving. Beneath all of this are subthemes of work and how to use social media to better the human condition. There is a lot going on right now. Let’s look a little bit closer at a few of these.
First, my regular readers will recognize that I like to start each month with my ‘Rabbit, Rabbit, Rabbit’ post. It harkens back to simpler childhood days and a belief that the incantation, 'Rabbit, Rabbit’, in various forms, depending on where you lived and other factors, would bring good luck or fortune for the month ahead. I like to use this as a chance to reflect on the month just ending and the new month starting.
The new month starts with the Christian holiday, All Saints Day. I’ve always loved this holiday. The music is spectacular. For All The Saints is one of my favorite hymns. I’ve always associated the day with Hebrews 12:1
Therefore, since we are surrounded by so great a cloud of witnesses, let us also lay aside every weight, and sin which clings so closely, and let us run with endurance the race that is set before us,
I love the image of such a great cloud of witnesses, all the saints, people around us today, and those who have passed on. Kim and I met during her mother’s final days on earth and we joke about how our relationship is founded around remembering those who have passed on. We celebrate birthdays and anniversaries by going to funerals. This year will be no different as we go to a funeral two days after our tenth wedding anniversary.
Halloween, or All Hallows’ Eve, come from the traditions of All Saints’ day as well as from Samhain when the border between this world and the next grows thin. For me it is often a time of inspiration, so it is good that November is National Novel Writing Month, or NaNoWriMo. Here it is the first of November. Can I write a 50,000 word novel this month? I’ve tried a couple different years. One year I succeeded. The next two years I didn’t complete it. I haven’t really decided if I’m going to give it a try this year; there is so much else going on.
I do have a great idea for this year. Coming of Age. College Road Trip. Influenced by Andrei Tarkovsky, William Gibson, Gary Gygax, maybe a little William Golding, set in the midwest, California and the Ukraine. I’m just not sure if I’ll have time to tackle it. We’ll see what today brings.
Today, I’ll be talking with some folks about using social media to better the human condition. I don’t know what this will lead to, but it could be really exciting. Then, tomorrow is election day. I’ve committed to helping get people out to vote tomorrow. It will be interesting to see what sort of turnout there will be. Will it be a high turnout for mid-term elections or will we suffer from an enthusiasm gap? The results of tomorrow may also tie into prospects of how to use social media to better the human condition. All of this will set the stage for the rest of the month.
Hang on folks, it may be a wild ride.
October 31st
Freebird!
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Sun, 10/31/2010 - 14:58Recently on the Adgitize Forums I asked fellow bloggers what bloggers' memes they participate in. This led to an interesting discussion of memes and the pros and cons of participating in Bloggers’ Memes.
Meme is one of those words that everyone seems to have a different idea what it is. Bloggers often talk about weekly blogging community events like Music Monday, Ruby Tuesdays, Wordless Wednesdays or Follow Fridays. Others question whether or not these are really memes in the purest sense of the word. I tend to think they are and to participate in a few different ones.
Music Mondays is the idea of bloggers putting up blog posts about music every Monday. Often they visit one another’s blogs and leave comments or links. Wordless Wednesdays is the idea of bloggers posting pictures, typically with minimal verbiage attached. Again, the idea is to visit one another’s blogs and leave comments or links. Follow Friday grew out of Twitter where people list people that they like to follow on Twitter, hoping that others will list them as people good to follow as well. I end up doing it as a blog post so people can get the context of why I follow someone. Perhaps the commenting and linking are simply more basic memes that go into these blogging memes.
Yet memes are much more than just little things bloggers do to connect with other bloggers. The Wikipedia definition is “a postulated unit of cultural ideas, symbols or practices, which can be transmitted from one mind to another through writing, speech, gestures, rituals or other imitable phenomena”.
The idea dates back to Richard Dawkins’ book “The Selfish Gene”, written in 1976 the evolutionary aspects of memes. How does “a postulated unit of cultural ideas, symbols or practices” replicate? How does it morph? What are the history of these ideas?
Some members of the Adgitize Forums spoke about disliking memes. They spoke about it in terms of bloggers memes. However, when you look at it in the wider perspective, being part of a culture means participating in various memes. Do we shake hands with people when we meet them? Do we bow to them? Do we hand business cards to people? Do we use one hand when we do it or two? Do we take off our shoes when we enter people’s houses? Do we say God Bless You when someone sneezes? Each of these seems to be units “of cultural ideas, symbols or practices”.
I thought about this more yesterday, when I went to see Blue Man Group’s performance in Hartford yesterday. At one point, as members of the group went down and interacted with members of the audience, I thought it would be really interesting to see Blue Man Group on Oprah. As I think back on it, I suspect that they were using particular memes tied to shows like Oprah. However, since I don’t watch shows like Oprah, I can’t really name or describe it. Yet it seemed like it was there.
At another point, they spoke about various things that people do at concerts, holding up cellphones and waving them back and forth. This would also seem to be a meme that has evolved over the years. It used to be lighters. This led to someone shouting out from the audience “Freebird!”. This too, it would seem is a unit of cultural practice. In fact, the Blue Man Group seemed to be heavily laden with memes and related ideas. The references to cellphones, texting, Captain Crunch, Twinkies and Lady Gaga would have been completely missed by people from other cultures or times, including fans of Blue Man Group when they first started back in the nineties.
It would still have been a wonderful experience, not recognizing the cultural symbols in the performance and simply absorbing the rhythm, music, and imagery, but it would have been a much different experience.
I don’t claim to know a lot about memes. I tend to look at our culture, at times, from the view point of a detached observer, but knowing the cultural practices, even if I don’t always participate in them, I believe, enrich my experiences.
So, I keep posting Music Monday, Wordless Wednesday and Follow Friday posts on my own blog. I read other blogs participating in other memes, and I enjoy hearing someone shout “Freebird!” out at performances.