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(Group)think global, act local

I’m a fairly new reader to the Huffington Post, a byproduct of this academic-driven exploration of Web 2.0 and finding some hooks in various communities. I get the daily email, and when titles and/or authors are intriguing enough. The email that arrived today included an entry by David Russell, in what appears to be his first Huff post: “When the National is Really Local.” Russell is the writer-director-producer who was responsible for a couple of favorites, Flirting With Disaster and I Heart Huckabees, and has a new film planned (The H-Man Cometh) starring Vince Vaughn as a radio personality who identifies too much with his listeners.

Russell rants (very briefly) about the disconnect between the jet-setter interest in hobnobbing with politicians and political issues and the actual issues as they affect their own neighborhood, such as a six-month construction project to widen a highway. As Russell writes:

This is exactly the type of ‘quality of life’ issue that the Clinton administration focused on to great effect, ways that government can make people’s day to day lives better –precisely the kinds of things most politicians (and Brentwood liberals) find too small or boring to get into.

This post resonates with me for two reasons. First, I wholeheartedy agree with the observation. I’ve clicked my share of insta-faxes from organizations like MoveOn.org in my time, but all it does is prevent a personal critical mass from forming. It is passive activism. The effects are nice for those whose local neighborhood access involves Congress. For the rest of us, it has the unintended effect of allowing individuals to be less involved than they might otherwise be.

The second point, though, is Russell’s post itself. It has a bit of griping and astute observation, but no solution offered. He doesn’t suggest action readers could take, instead implying that the Hollywood movers-n-shakers should make an adjustment in some non-specific manner. As any good Informatician knows, knowledge itself doesn’t change behavior.

So here, as I gripe about the nature rather than the content of the Russell entry, I’ll try to to avoid a follow-up critique on this post by offering some ideas for local engagement:

  1. Figure out who your City Council representatives are, and ask for a meeting with one you don’t know. Or, if you know them all, introduce a councilperson to one of your friends who doesn’t.
  2. Look at an agenda from your County Council meetings, and Google up on the issues involved with one of their items.
  3. Find a volunteer organization and invest some time to understand the nature of a local need.

These actions aren’t going to make the Huffington Post anytime soon, but imagine what would happen if more people did them.

By Kevin Makice

A Ph.D student in informatics at Indiana University, Kevin is rich in spirit. He wrestles and reads with his kids, does a hilarious Christian Slater imitation and lights up his wife's days. He thinks deeply about many things, including but not limited to basketball, politics, microblogging, parenting, online communities, complex systems and design theory. He didn't, however, think up this profile.

3 replies on “(Group)think global, act local”

WordPress is arguably the best Web 2.0 app there is. The community took off within the past year or so, providing a huge list of plug-ins and template designs. Compare that to something like MediaWiki, which is widely used but hard to vary and support in the same way, and WP looks even better.

About once or twice a year, I get a small window of opportunity to carve out an upgrade to our sites. I’m hoping for a day or two this break to work on things here and getting our WikiSchmiki updated at the same time.

thanks for dropping by.

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