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Home Current Affairs

The Next Thesis Is Here

by Dana Blankenhorn
October 31, 2006
in Current Affairs, Internet, journalism, political philosophy, politics, The 1966 Game
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Southern_strategy
As a political Thesis reaches its sell-by date, notice that it’s invoked almost religiously.

The idea of "waving the bloody shirt" against Democrats reached almost totemic status, both in the 1890s and again as the Depression started to bite. In 1966 Democrats continued to run on the New Deal.

Why? Because the press believed it. Reporters don’t understand transformation. Their work is entirely transactional. They are today-oriented people, who see neither the past nor the future. Since political myths and values live in both the past and future, they’re Indians before Columbus — blind, deaf and dumb.

So it is today. Bush is spending most of this week in the South, and his minions are recreating their old Southern Strategy, because they really have nothing to offer the voters. Their Thesis is completely out of ideas.

As it was 40 years ago with Republicans, establishment Democrats today are fearful. They are afraid to talk about where they really stand, and some are more ready to make civil war on other Democrats than put forward an agenda, because the nascent open source thesis most actually believe in is untried — it’s almost unspoken.

What thesis, you ask?

Internet_values_1
The values of this medium — openness, connectivity, consensus —
the values that work in engineering, and work in science, and which
work best in every creative process — these are the values that we
need in politics to meet our real challenges.

These challenges are greater than any the nation has ever faced.
Global warming. Global poverty. Replacing hydrocarbons with renewable
hydrogen. Aging. They are challenges which can only be met through
learning, and teaching, and working together.

The tool to meet these challenges is in your hands, it’s right in front of your eyes. This medium. Yet
the idea of applying the lessons learned in building this medium to any
other sphere is untested, untried, and (we assume) elitist.

Yet so was every other political thesis in our nation’s political
history. Goldwater Republicanism was created in an elite environment,
and nurtured by wealthy men who were successful in business. The New
Deal was also created in an elite environment. So was Progressivism. So
was Abolitionism.

Elite environments — where people are often accused of wealth and
guilty of education — are the great laboratories of our political
thought. It’s people with the time and space to think, and to write,
and to speak, and to organize, who drive political change. Democracy is
a middle class process, and in terms of this planet’s median income,
the middle class is in fact the upper class.

The next Thesis is here. Pass it on.

Tags: 2006 electiongenerational changegenerational politicsGeorge W. BushHoward DeanInternet mythInternet valuespolitical transformationpolitical valuesU.S. politics
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Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn began his career as a financial journalist in 1978, began covering technology in 1982, and the Internet in 1985. He started one of the first Internet daily newsletters, the Interactive Age Daily, in 1994. He recently retired from InvestorPlace and lives in Atlanta, GA, preparing for his next great adventure. He's a graduate of Rice University (1977) and Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism (MSJ 1978). He's a native of Massapequa, NY.

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Comments 2

  1. David Leigh says:
    19 years ago

    The real question of interest is, “WHY are Democrats afraid to talk about where they really stand?”
    If they truly believe they are right then they have an obligation (to themselves, if no one else) to clearly state their positions, with no spin, no obfuscations, and no semantic tricks. Yet they don’t.
    OTOH, if they don’t truly believe they are right then they have an obligation to change their tune.
    Which obligation will win, if any? Do not make the mistake of believing that the “Open Source Thesis” is the sole province of the Democratic Party. You have to ask yourself how it is that the Republicans lost their fear of stating their positions? Hint: it is not for nothing that Reagan was known as “The Great Communicator”.
    The beauty of the “Open Source Thesis” is that it is NOT the province of any particular party. It is a policy of open communication and discourse in which the citizenry as a whole can participate and benefit.

    Reply
  2. David Leigh says:
    19 years ago

    The real question of interest is, “WHY are Democrats afraid to talk about where they really stand?”
    If they truly believe they are right then they have an obligation (to themselves, if no one else) to clearly state their positions, with no spin, no obfuscations, and no semantic tricks. Yet they don’t.
    OTOH, if they don’t truly believe they are right then they have an obligation to change their tune.
    Which obligation will win, if any? Do not make the mistake of believing that the “Open Source Thesis” is the sole province of the Democratic Party. You have to ask yourself how it is that the Republicans lost their fear of stating their positions? Hint: it is not for nothing that Reagan was known as “The Great Communicator”.
    The beauty of the “Open Source Thesis” is that it is NOT the province of any particular party. It is a policy of open communication and discourse in which the citizenry as a whole can participate and benefit.

    Reply

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