hypeforamerica.blogspot.com
Hype for America: February 2006
http://hypeforamerica.blogspot.com/2006_02_01_archive.html
This blog challenges the view that the Dean campaign fundamentally changed the nature of American democracy. It is created for the Internet Law and Politics Seminar at Harvard Law School. Saturday, February 11, 2006. Did the Dean Campaign change campaigning forever? Free polls from Pollhost.com. Posted by megan @ 6:37 PM. Replying to my post on change. The fundamental question here is whether someone will one day be able to rise from the blogosphere and rally enough support to win a national election....
hypeforamerica.blogspot.com
Hype for America: A Political Voice, but no Listeners
http://hypeforamerica.blogspot.com/2006/02/political-voice-but-no-listeners.html
This blog challenges the view that the Dean campaign fundamentally changed the nature of American democracy. It is created for the Internet Law and Politics Seminar at Harvard Law School. Saturday, February 11, 2006. A Political Voice, but no Listeners. In addition to the emerging "elite class" on the blogosphere (noted below. The two are not the same. The Trent Lott story. Of information flow from the blogosphere to mainstream media is clearly the exception, not the rule. TforA. Posted by megan @ 2:58 PM.
hypeforamerica.blogspot.com
Hype for America: EgoCasting: Internet as Political Self-Affirmation
http://hypeforamerica.blogspot.com/2006/02/egocasting-internet-as-political-self.html
This blog challenges the view that the Dean campaign fundamentally changed the nature of American democracy. It is created for the Internet Law and Politics Seminar at Harvard Law School. Saturday, February 11, 2006. EgoCasting: Internet as Political Self-Affirmation. An important psychological consideration in assessing the merits of the Internet as a campaign tool is the concept of egocasting. With this in mind, we see the folly of TforA's. This is another very important contrast to the impact TV has h...
hypeforamerica.blogspot.com
Hype for America: Internet Democracy: Procedurally Better, Substantively the Same
http://hypeforamerica.blogspot.com/2006/02/internet-democracy-procedurally-better.html
This blog challenges the view that the Dean campaign fundamentally changed the nature of American democracy. It is created for the Internet Law and Politics Seminar at Harvard Law School. Saturday, February 11, 2006. Internet Democracy: Procedurally Better, Substantively the Same. I want to expand here on ryan’s point. The faster, cheaper, easier argument is easy to make and made well by TforA. In their post about the explosion of blogging. People have found ways to disseminate information relatively rap...
hypeforamerica.blogspot.com
Hype for America: Netroots or Grassroots?
http://hypeforamerica.blogspot.com/2006/02/netroots-or-grassroots.html
This blog challenges the view that the Dean campaign fundamentally changed the nature of American democracy. It is created for the Internet Law and Politics Seminar at Harvard Law School. Saturday, February 11, 2006. Type for America: Meetup.com. Johnny over at TforA. Has made the case that the use of Meetup.com. Has really changed the way people connect. Sure, it had some impact on the race, but our goal here is to identify what is hype - and this is definitely hype. Posted by ryan @ 1:36 PM. This is th...
hypeforamerica.blogspot.com
Hype for America: On Change
http://hypeforamerica.blogspot.com/2006/02/on-change.html
This blog challenges the view that the Dean campaign fundamentally changed the nature of American democracy. It is created for the Internet Law and Politics Seminar at Harvard Law School. Saturday, February 11, 2006. Replying to my post on change. The fundamental question here is whether someone will one day be able to rise from the blogosphere and rally enough support to win a national election. Even if the internet did lower the barriers to participate in politics, real world factors will always be...
hypeforamerica.blogspot.com
Hype for America: Focusing the Question: Advantages at the Margins versus the Long Term
http://hypeforamerica.blogspot.com/2006/02/focusing-question-advantages-at.html
This blog challenges the view that the Dean campaign fundamentally changed the nature of American democracy. It is created for the Internet Law and Politics Seminar at Harvard Law School. Saturday, February 11, 2006. Focusing the Question: Advantages at the Margins versus the Long Term. Since we’re trying to answer the question of whether the Dean Campaign. Significantly changed the nature of campaigning, we need to look at the nature of change. And social networking tools. According to the CIA and Censu...
hypeforamerica.blogspot.com
Hype for America: Power in the hands of the Few?
http://hypeforamerica.blogspot.com/2006/02/power-in-hands-of-few.html
This blog challenges the view that the Dean campaign fundamentally changed the nature of American democracy. It is created for the Internet Law and Politics Seminar at Harvard Law School. Saturday, February 11, 2006. Power in the hands of the Few? Type for America: Dean and Blogging "Abroad". Johnny over at TforA. Is writing some well-researched pieces, but I think his post hides another problem with viewing the internet trend as anything more than the same old politics with a twist. I]t was Jerome who f...