Survival of the Followed-est: How the Right Sees Twitter
BY Nancy Scola | Tuesday, April 21 2009
At a Politics Online session this afternoon on the future of the online political right, conservative new media guy Justin Hart ("Tweet for Chuck") walked the audience through his evolutionary view of the right's approach to Twitter. Interesting stuff. On the topic of Top Conservatives on Twitter, a.k.a. #TCOT, Hart said that part of the appeal was the thrill of head-to-head competition. To make it on the top of the #TCOT leaderboard, conservatives had to ascend to the uppermost ranks of Twitter in terms of the number of followers. The liberal view of the world, said Hart with half a chuckle, might see it that everyone on Twitter should have the same number of followers. Not so on the political right. "The conservative point of view is that self interest and self-aggrandizement is part of human nature," he said. So the idea of competing to amass Twitter followers, said Hart, seems entirely like the natural order of things.
(I'm throwing this here because it's too good to let pass. The Next Right's Jon Henke on getting past Reagan worship: "Republicans say 'Reagan' like smurfs say smurf.'" Classic.)