I just wanted to let you know what a terrible, lousy, shoddy site you've endorced, and call your attention personally to the comments that I've posted on the page that links to the terrible site. I will continue to bring this matter to the attention of the poeple that designed this terrible site until they fix it. I would appreciate knowing if you will join the call to fix this thing. I feel sorry for the people who used this tool to supposedly get a message out and learn something. It's a disaster.
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2 days later, and nothing has changed. However, I keep pressing the case for greater democracy, not the top down, filtered chopped and channeled kind:
From: matt love <mattlove1@gmail.com>
Date: Mon, Nov 7, 2011 at 6:18 PM
Subject: Re: Please, get it together
To: info@allourideas.org
I got 24 votes on my site for the choice between
The prioritizing Occupy goals page is terrible, should have been recommended by the Daily Bad. It has the same 66 choices it had when ...
and
sample choice
But I would get a lot more if your add choices function worked. As I have a lot of other good choices to present to people, and I want other people to present their good ideas, too (better than "end the inheritance tax" for example, one of the 66 choices over at Brand X occupy site.
I promised my community that I would be persistent in addressing this problem on your website.
Thank you for your immediate attention.
You should be ashamed for recommending that site, it's terrible, should have been recommended by the Daily Bad. It has the same 66 choices it had when I first looked at it - a few good ideas, many trivial ones, a depressing number of bad ones. I suggested 20 more. None of them have appeared. It's not an exercise in democracy, it's an exercise in draining off time (like change.org, and moveon.org) that could be spent productively, in activism. On Thu, Nov 3, 2011 at 6:49 PM, The Daily GOOD
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| | While pundits and reporters have bemoaned the lack of clarity on Occupy Wall Street's to-do list, a media nonprofit has taken a (not-so) radical approach to creating a unified agenda: asking people what matters most in a systematic way. New York City-based Digital Democracy is the organization behind OccupyVotes, a new web platform that lets users prioritize the various demands of the Occupy Wall Street movement. Making college free or taxing fossil fuels? Raising taxes on corporations or reducing interest on college loans? Voters select the concern that's more pressing, resulting in a ranked list of demands. "What's cool is the system itself is totally open-sourced, transparent and accountable," says Digital Democracy president Max Belinsky. If voters don't see a relevant demand on the list, they can seed their own ideas into the voting platform's rotation. More than 23,000 people have voted since the tool was launched on October 16. The top idea thus far? "Repeal corporate personhood." As part of Digital Democracy's mission of empowering marginalized communities to participate in the democratic process, Belinsky is eager to move the tool beyond the internet onto the streets of New York so that everyone can participate. "Can we make a physical voting booth where Grandma can walk up to it and start to vote even though she's never been on the internet?" he wonders. Or in Egypt, where Digital Democracy piloted the tool at the height of the revolution, could organizers drive an iPad-equipped pickup truck around the country to gather data on what matters most to people? Belinsky says the group is in talks with partners in Egypt to make that a reality. For now, look out for the voting platform on an occupier's smartphone near you. | | | |
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I want to play in your town for you and 2 of your friends.
http://eventful.com/performers/matt-love-/P0-001-000156481-4/demands
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