Archive for September, 2005

New trends in Digital Politics: Going Mobile

Friday, September 23rd, 2005

After writing and talking about using mobile devices for advocacy, I am delighted to see the emergence of new technologies to help better leverage mobile devices for advocacy AND more attention being paid to it by the advocacy community. On September 13, 2005, the Institute for Politics Democracy & the Internet at George Washington University hosted the Politics to Go conference, where advocacy professionals were treated to a buffet of new vendors offering exciting new technologies that capitalize on mobile devices. In addition to the conference, IPDI has published a very useful handbook on the topic. An executive summary of the handbook is also available.

More Disturbing News From New Orleans

Friday, September 23rd, 2005

There is mounting evidence that plans are underway that will end up hurting the evacuees, especially the poor and black citizens of New Orleans.
First, I want to draw your attention to Naomi Klein’s recent article called “Purging the Poor.” According to evidence she has uncovered, “New Orleans is already displaying signs of a […]

Fallujah Mercenaries Assigned to New orleans

Monday, September 12th, 2005

Sometimes it is better to just let you read what someone else wrote.
Here is a story from Jeremy Scahill and Daniela Crespo of Democracy Now about how the Department of Homeland Security has sent mercenaries from Blackwater to New Orleans to fight the criminals there. Remember Blackwater? They are the mercenaries that strung […]

FEMA: FEEBLE OR FIENDISH?

Thursday, September 8th, 2005

Reports from a wide range of the news media have identified serious problems with FEMA under the Bush Administration. From FEMA head Michael Brown’s startling admission four days after Katrina hit New Orleans that he only just learned there were more than 10,000 people stranded in the Convention Center to reports that Brown sent a memo to Homeland Security Secretary Chertoff five hours after the storm hit politely asking for 1,000 Homeland Security personnel to make there way down to the Gulf coast over the next two days to FEMA turning away donations of water from Wal-Mart before the storm hit, FEMA’s gross negligence and incompetence is now common knowledge.

Did Judge Roberts and the White House Exchange Favors?

Tuesday, September 6th, 2005

Below is a letter I just sent to the Editors of the Washington Post. I thought I would share it with you:

Dear Washington Post Editor,

I am disturbed to find little or no coverage in the pages of the Washington Post regarding the apparent quid pro quo arrangement between Judge Roberts, while he was sitting on the Federal Appeals panel deciding whether to apply the Geneva Convention to military tribunals in Guantanamo, and the White House, who nominated Roberts to the Supreme Court one week after he ruled in favor of the Administration.