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Home Current Affairs

Proof in the Spin

by Dana Blankenhorn
November 10, 2006
in Current Affairs, Internet, Personal, political philosophy, politics, The 1966 Game
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When a political thesis fails the first inclination of its adherents is always to blame the leaders.

This was very true in 1966 when Democrats faced the death of the New Deal Thesis in results that brought Eisenhower Republicans and one Ronald W. Reagan to prominence.

They blamed Vietnam. They blamed poor campaigns. They insisted that liberalism was intact, and the search was on for to either return President Johnson to his liberal roots or find someone who was a more "true liberal."

The exact same thing, in reverse, is happening right now among Republicans. It wasn’t the Thesis, it was how it was implemented. Bush and his team were not "real" conservatives. The Clinton and Netroots Democrats who came to power just ran better campaigns. Real conservatism is still intact, and the search is on to find a successor to Bush who is a "true conservative."

Bush_rally
The result is a vacuum in which a new Thesis can be born. While the
press is yammering about how Democrats have to rush in and prove
themselves worthy of governing, the fact is that the Republican party
has not yet even begun the task that must lie before it, which is
creating new Myths and Values, relevant to today’s problems, that will
engage voters.

Just as in Goldwater’s time, Netroots Democrats have begun building
a real infrastructure that can have that discussion. Since that
structure is based on the Internet, it is inevitable that Internet
values are assumed. Ideas like openness, consensus, and connectivity
are taken for granted. And it’s what is assumed true, not what is
argued about, that lies at the heart of any new political Myth.

Regardless of where they stand on specific issues, no Democrat wants
to get rid of Internet organizing. The idea of building from the
grassroots up is accepted, even if some wish mainly to direct this
energy toward their own causes.

This is a process agreement, not a programmatic one, as the
Goldwater Thesis was. It’s also an agreement that is held throughout
the party, again unlike the Goldwater Thesis, which had to fight for 16
years after Goldwater’s nomination to take power.

How do we turn that into policy? Again, we start with areas of wide
agreement. Net neutrality, more unlicensed spectrum, more antitrust
enforcement in the telecom space. More science, more research, more
funding for cures — stem cell research is a true wedge issue.

And then we can start thinking about deeper questions, such as:

  • How do we get the most from every mind, at every stage of life?
  • How do we moderate online discussion so it leads to solutions?
     
  • How do we leverage online resources to help people find and build solutions to their own problems?

Again it’s process, not ideology. That’s the heart of the Open Source
Thesis, a search for broad agreements rather than narrow majorities.
Everyone has something to contribute, and we need every possible
contribution.

Because the problems we face do not allow for an ideological solution.

  • The replacement of hydrocarbons is not an ideological cause. It
    should be a business problem, once conditions for making it one are put
    in place.
     
  • The saving of the planet is not an ideological question. It’s as old as Teddy Roosevelt.
  • Engaging the developing world should not be an ideological
    question. Without that engagement the first two problems can’t be
    solved.
     
  • Science is not an ideology, nor is it an ideological pursuit.
     

Start with where we agree, and there you will find the programmatic path within the Open Source Thesis.

Tags: 2006 electionBush ThesisGeorge W. Bush. Lyndon JohnsonInternet politicsNixon Thesisopen source thesispolitical changepolitical thesisThesis of ConflictU.S. political history
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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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