Quote of the Day: Agnostic
BY Nancy Scola | Wednesday, October 27 2010
We'll finally get rid of the idea that there's virtue in technology as technology.
From left to right, Ari Berman, Sam Graham-Felsen, Joe Rospars, and Zephyr Teachout. -- Zephyr Teachout, the 2004 Dean campaign's director of Internet organizing, reflects on the silver lining she saw in the success of a web-savvy tea party movement. Teachout joined Obama '08 campaign online director Joe Rospars (a fellow Dean '04 vet) and Obama campaign lead blogger Sam Graham-Felsen in conversation with Ari Berman, author of the new book "Herding Donkeys: The Fight to Rebuild the Democratic Party and Reshape American Politics," last night at Manhattan's McNally Jackson bookstore.
A thread running through the evening was that the Obama campaign succeeded as a perfecting of the ideas and approaches that were attempted, with some hits and some misses, during the '04 Dean campaign. Teachout took points away from Rospars and his crew for not using recurring community-based events as an organizing tactic, but she had mostly praise for how the next wave of online organizers executed on the ideas about networked politics that were still rough and new in 2004. "They were craftspeople," said Teachout of the Obama online cadre.

We'll finally get rid of the idea that there's virtue in technology as technology.