Blogroll Amnesty Day

February 3rd, 2009

The Pajama Pundit posted yesterday about Blogroll Amnesty Day, something I didn?t know existed until then. He plugged several blogs, including your?s truly. In order to pass the love around, here are all of the other Blogs that he plugged as well.

The Absurd Report
The Rude Pundit
C. Alyson Love
Brown Man Thinking Hard
Distributorcap
Dizzying Intellect
d r i f t g l a s s
Rumproast
Shots On The House
Simply Left Behind
The American Boy
The Hathos
ThePoliticalCat
TYWKIWDBI
Vast Variety
Viva Chuck Todd/Viva Rachel Maddow
Annette’s little piece of the world
Hip Young Thing
Zuky
Bipartisan Rules
Susan Katz Keating
Science Text
The Communist Dance Party
Deadenders
The Median Sib
Oh Gosh

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Society

Gay New York

Robert over at FiveThirtyEight.com has posted the results of same-sex marriage polls from the state of New York. According to these polls the majority of New Yorkers support same-sex marriage.

Voice in the Wire

Late in the evening of December 6th, in the Exarcheia district of central Athens, 15 year old Alexandros Grigoropoulos was out with friends. Shortly after 9pm the group became part of a confrontation with members of the Greek Police. Alexandros was shot and killed.

In the days following the killing Alexandros became a symbol of a growing frustration among Greek youth over the country’s growing economic problems, rising unemployment, and a general perception of an inefficient and corrupt Greek government.

Riots in Athens over the death quickly spread like through out the country and then through out the whole of Europe.

The speed at which the riots spread has in part been attributed to organizers using text messaging and the internet as a means of spreading their message and setting up meeting locations. In an article to the Associated Press, Paul Have wrote…

At least some of the protests were organized over the Internet, showing how quickly the message of discontent can be spread, particularly among tech-savvy youth. One Web site Greek protesters used to update each other on the locations of clashes asserted there have been sympathy protests in nearly 20 countries.

This isn’t the first time we have seen the internet become a tool of the disenfranchised as a means of organizing protests.

When California passed Proposition 8 on November 4th, a wave of Anti-Prop 8 web sites such as Join the Impact, appeared on the web as a means of directing information to protesters and to organize events such as the Nationwide protest of November 15th and upcoming December 20th “Light Up The Night For Equality“.

Even in tightly controlled China, the internet has been used to organize people to effect change in government policies and stop construction of a chemical plant.

The internet is still basically in its infancy and the genie is out of the bottle. It’s difficult to imagine just how the civil rights movement of the 1960′s would have progressed had the internet been available. Imagine watching Martin Luther King’s “I have a dream” speech as a live web cast or if Rosa Parks could have texted all her friends to join her in sitting at the front of buses all over the country on the same day.

Often, as individuals, we feel somewhat powerless against those with power, whether it be government, or the vocal majority. We sit in our homes feeling sorry for ourselves and saying “I can’t do anything about my situation so I’ll just make the best of it.” What we don’t realize is that we are rarely if ever truly alone.

Cross posted at The Pajama Pundit

Love Prevails in Connecticut

Connecticut joins with Massachusetts today as the only 2 states in the nation to currently have Legal Same-Sex Marriage. While Connecticut has allowed civil unions since 2005, the state supreme court ruled 4-3 that same sex couples had the right to wed after the civil unions law gave them all marriage rights but was deemed unfair as it created a “different but equal” status, which to some is akin to segregation which was endured by the African-American community for decades. For now voters in Connecticut have voted down attempts to amend their state Constitution., but the The Family Institute of Connecticut and other gay equal rights opposition groups vow to keep fighting.

Douglas Healey / AP

Personally today is in stark contrast to the events of November 4th when California passed Proposition 8, along with Same-Sex bans in Arizona and Florida. The fight for equal rights is far from over.

Fight the H8 in Your State

The Wired President

The US government has been making slow inroads into the information age by expanding services, such as paying property taxes online, or even filing your federal income tax, to the net for the last several years. Within hours of being elected president, Barack Obama’s staff has created a surge of online activity that may make him be to the Internet what John F. Kennedy was to TV.

Obama, capitalized on Howard Dean‘s 50 state campaign tactic and expanded the use to the internet immensely. The grass roots organization that he was able to develop by using the internet to organize events, spread campaign messages, and farm donations allowed him to far outspend John McCain.

The Washington Post has a great story that talks about Obama’s new web site Change.gov. It also looks like the Republican party is starting to learn from Obama’s success as well.

Other links

First Read

Countdown on Prop 8

Keith Olbermann’s special comment on Prop 8.

Thank you Keith.

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