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August 11, 2004

Blogging the Republican National Convention

After my experience blogging the Democratic National Convention, I have been spending time thinking about what I want to do during the Republican National Convention. I haven't been offered credentials by the Republican Party, and I sort of doubt that I will. I have asked around to see if I can find some other way to get credentials through working with a more traditional medium, but nothing has materialized.

However, as I discovered last time, much of the story takes place outside the convention hall, and I suspect this will be even more of the case with the Republican convention. Today I received an email from the New Democratic Majority about a Progressive Tourism Bureau that will be set up at a performance space called The Tank.

The Progressive Tourism Bureau is “an exciting collaborative project during the Republican Convention in New York of [many organizations] … to give protestors a direct route into the massive grassroots effort underway to win this election and to build an enduring progressive coalition at the local and national levels.”

It seems like The Progressive Tourism Bureau is an optimum place to blog from. I sent off an email to them about the opportunity. A bit later, I received an email from Matt Stoller who helped organize bloggers in Boston. He said that The Tank is looking to be an informal blogger HQ. I’ve sent off an email to the people organizing this, and I hope to cover the convention from The Tank.

If readers have thoughts about what they would like to see covered from New York during the convention, please let me know.

On an international level, the British press is reporting that “the UK's Labour, Conservative, and Liberal Democrat conferences all said they would consider applications from bloggers, but have had no enquiries.”

If anyone can find funds for me to go cover these conferences, I would love to go.

Posted by Aldon Hynes at August 11, 2004 3:08 PM | TrackBack
Comments

Here's an excerpt from the liner notes of Steve Earle's new record due out August 24th on Artemis Records. It's called "The Revolution Starts...Now"

The word “immediate” best describes the atmosphere around the studio as this record was being made in the late spring of 2004. The prisoner abuse scandal had just broken and the Bush administration, still reeling from the 9/11 commission hearings, was circling the wagons. The Democrats, for their part, were carefully (sometimes, in my opinion, too carefully) trying to sort out how best to press the advantage. Meanwhile, back here in Tennessee, me and my boys had a deadline to meet.

The most important presidential election of our lifetime was less than seven months away and we desperately wanted to weigh in, both as artists and as citizens of a democracy. All but two of these songs were recorded within 24 hours of the first line hitting the paper. We worked 12- and 14-hour days and in between takes and over meals we talked about the war, the election, baseball, and women, in precisely that order.

Maybe I am getting old.

Democracy is hard work. American democracy requires constant vigilance to survive and nothing short of total engagement to flourish. Voting is vital, but in times like these voting alone simply isn’t enough. By the time some of you hear these songs the election will be over. Then the real struggle begins.

When the dust clears and the votes are all counted (we’re watchin’ YOU, Jeb) it will be up to all of us—Democrats, Republicans, Greens, and independents alike—to hold whomever is left standing accountable for their actions on our behalf every single day that they are in power. The day after the election, regardless of the outcome, the war will go on, outsourcing of our jobs will continue, and over a third of our citizens will have no health care coverage whatsoever.

Like I said, it’s hard work and there’s so much to be done. And there always will be.

The Constitution of The United States of America is a REVOLUTIONARY document in every sense of the word. It was designed to evolve, to live, and to breathe like the people that it governs. It is, ingeniously, and perhaps conversely, resilient enough to change with the times in order to meet the challenges of its third century and rigid enough to preserve the ideals that inspired its original articles and amendments. As long as we are willing to put in the work required to defend and nurture this remarkable invention of our forefathers, then I believe with all my heart that it will continue to thrive for generations to come. Without our active participation, however, the future is far from certain. For without the lifeblood of the human spirit even the greatest documents produced by humankind are only words on paper or parchment, destined to yellow and crack and eventually crumble to dust.

Yours for the motherfuckin’ revolution,

Steve Earle

Fairview, Tennessee

For more information about Steve's new record, and to become involved with Steve's revolution, click on http://www.kochent.com/eCards/SteveEarle/default.html or email jharris@artemisrecords.com. Thanks for your help.

Posted by: Jeff Harris at August 24, 2004 1:50 PM
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