Archive for the ‘Democracy’ Category

We need startups to build democracy tech – TechCrunch

Its time to actually make the world a better place.

Silicon Valley was birthed from an existential threat to the world. Nazi radar defense technology was decimating the Allied air forces. But American engineers heeded the call, and in a Harvard lab led by Stanford professor Frederick Terman, invented radar jammers that helped win the war.

Terman brought the engineering talent back to Stanford, turned it into the MIT of the West, won military contracts, pushed researchers to start companies and made Silicon Valley the center of innovation.

How the need to jam Nazi radar led to Silicon Valley

Its time for engineers to heed the call once again. President Trump poses an existential threat to world peace, social equality, the environment and the future of American values.Now the resistance needs tech tools to fight back.

There are huge opportunities for startups to build these, though their success will be measured in progress and not just profit.

If you build this stuff, TechCrunch wants to hear about it. [You can email me at josh@techcrunch.com]. And if youve already built it and we havent covered it yet, let us know how youve adapted your tech for these dire times. Well be publishing stories about the best tools for the resistance.

[Update: Y Combinator, the top startup accelerator, has put out a request for startups in the civic tech space. Startups that fight fake news, ease the transition into the future of work and automation, or improve democracy should consider applying to YC.]

Some of our favorite existing democracy tech includes grassroots activism text message management tool Hustle, voter registration site Vote.organdencrypted chat app Signal. Tech cant solve everything, and having too many options can dilute support. But these have already shown promise for instigating civic engagement.

So dont just change the world for yourself like some HBO Silicon Valley parody. Change it for the better.

Link:
We need startups to build democracy tech - TechCrunch

Paul Krugman says democracy and Trump can’t coexist: ‘Either he or the republic will be gone soon’ – Raw Story

New York Times columnist and Pulitzer Prize-winning economist Paul Krugman believes there are only two ways Donald Trumps presidency can end: Either with his resignation, or the death of democracy.

In a tweet storm posted on Tuesday morning that analyzed the events of the past few days such asthe anti-immigration executive order that sparked chaos last weekend and the presidents continued assault on media outlets who dont give him positive coverage Krugman said that there was simply no way that a president with Trumps authoritarian tendencies can coexist with our constitutional republic.

In other words, writes Krugman, either Trump goes or our democracy does.

Given the rate at which things are coming to a head, President Trump the sort-of legitimate head of a republic wont last long, Krugman writes. Either he or the republic, in any meaningful sense, will be gone quite soon. I have a hard time seeing one year, let alone four.

What this means, Krugman says, is that absolutely no one should collaborate with Trump even if they happen to agree with him on a particular issue. The threat to democracy that Trump represents, according to Krugman, is too great to risk giving him legitimacy.

Anyone considering working for or with this White House Senators, officials, businessmen shouldnt, he concludes. Either youre going to go down with a disgraced president, or youre going to be complicit in the death of democracy. Just say no.

The whole tweet storm follows below.

Either he or the republic, in any meaningful sense, will be gone quite soon. I have a hard time seeing one year, let alone four 2/

Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) January 31, 2017

Either you're going to go down with a disgraced president, or you're going to be complicit in the death of democracy. Just say no 4/

Paul Krugman (@paulkrugman) January 31, 2017

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Paul Krugman says democracy and Trump can't coexist: 'Either he or the republic will be gone soon' - Raw Story

Former Ukraine finance minister: Russia wants to upend Western democracy – CNN

The Axe Files, featuring David Axelrod, is a podcast distributed by CNN and produced at the University of Chicago Institute of Politics. The author works for the podcast.

"The information attacks, the propaganda, the cyberattacks ... We've lived through all the things they tested first in Ukraine," Natalie Jaresko, the country's former finance minister told David Axelrod on The Axe Files podcast, a joint production of CNN and the University of Chicago's Institute of Politics.

"It's shocking that they would take the risk of doing that in the United States. And now it appears -- I've seen reports -- Germany, France and elsewhere. "

Jaresko, who was born and raised in the the suburbs of Chicago by Ukranian-American parents, says Russia's goal is to boost nationalist candidates who will turn away from global alliances.

"It surprised me only because I didn't expect that it could be possible in the United States," she said. "But this is about the Kremlin wanting to destroy the Transatlantic Partnership, wanting to destroy... the liberal post-World War II international order, which is based on democracy, human rights, territorial integrity, sovereignty of nations."

Jaresko, who served as Ukraine's finance minister from 2014 to 2016 and helped reform the country's economy, says she will take a wait-and-see attitude about the beneficiary of Russian meddling in the US election, President Donald Trump.

Trump has hinted at better relations with Moscow, including the lifting of economic sanctions imposed after Russia invaded Ukraine and effectively seized Crimea and portions of Eastern Ukraine.

Bur Jaresko warned against any thaw unless Russia withdraws from Ukraine and changes its behavior.

"The goal is to live in a world where we live by the values and the principles that we believe in," she said. "And so if Russia leaves Eastern Ukraine and returns Crimea, we're all for better relations. France and Germany are today allies, and they were terrible enemies at one time. That's all possible, but it's not possible at the cost of Ukrainian sovereignty."

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Former Ukraine finance minister: Russia wants to upend Western democracy - CNN

What does democracy look like? – Patheos (blog)

Not this:

according to a couple recent articles that passed through my twitter feed recently.

Tablet published a piece by Lee Smith titled, The Arab-ization of American Politics, with a provocative subtitle: Why do so many Americans mistake what typically signals a failure of democracy for democracy itself?

The crux of Smiths argument is this: despite the protesters chant that this is what democracy looks like that we hear repeatedly at these marches,

American democracy is not about the size of crowds. Mass gatherings are not supposed to guide our democracy or protect our freedoms. Yes, the Constitution guarantees the right to freedom of assembly as well as freedom of speech, as it also guarantees, for instance, the right to bear arms. However, only a fool believes that democracy looks like collecting Nazi-era Lugers, or looks like a closet full of pornographic magazines. The actual mechanism of democracy is not people going to the street, but to the ballot box and voting for their chosen candidate.

The Founding Fathers did not need the example of the French Revolution birthed in blood and gore the same year the U.S. Constitution came into force in order to understand the dangers of people going to the streets to fight for their political ideas. The violence that frequently resultswhether ignited by the most radical protesters, or by the most radical protectors of orderwhen political power is counted in large numbers massed in public squares is a constant throughout human history. And thats exactly what the framers sought to save us from.

In fact, Smith says, mass crowds generally represent, e.g., in the Arab Spring, the failure of democracy Westerners took it for granted that the protesters against Mubarak in Tahir Square were pro-democracy because they equated protests with democracy, so they were unprepared for the Morsi government to embrace the Islamism of the Muslim Brotherhood; and subsequently, they were unprepared for the return of authoritarianism in al-Sisi because, after all, he came to power due to yet more protesters.

A second article, in City Journal, bySteven Malanga, The Book of Saul, addresses the particular question of the Democratic party. Referencing proclamations of success of the Womens March and the actual substantial advantages of the GOP at the state and national level, he writes:

The new Democratic Partythe one increasingly governed by identity politics and driven by special interestshas become so intoxicated by the nostrums of Saul Alinsky and his Rules for Radicals that it has forgotten how to operate in a democracy, where elections count more than revolutionary theater. Perhaps this is the inevitable result of elevating a charismatic former community organizer to the presidency. President Obama was a gifted campaign strategist and an appealing personality, but he convinced his party that the Alinsky model was a viable permanent approach to governing. True, it often worked for him, but success led him to use it as a crutch, even after he assumed the worlds most powerful office. Were going to speak truth to power, presidential advisor Valerie Jarrett once said when asked about media bias against Obamas policies. As political scientist Pete Peterson pointed out, however, [Y]oure the White House. You are the power.

Obama inspired a generation of like-minded Democrats to follow him into the protest-as-politics movement. Bill de Blasio has been an elected official in New York City for 15 years now, having served on the city council and as public advocate, and now as mayor. Yet, he attends protests as if he were a powerless outsider and occasionally invites arrest, according to the New York Times. In a city dominated by left-leaning Democrats, getting arrested on purpose is good politics.

So what is the value of protests in a modern, functioning democracy?

Last week we saw generically anti-Trump protests. On Friday, the March for Life took place. And this weekend, there were various protests at airports in reaction to individuals being detained and prevented from entering the United States despite previously-obtained visas or even permanent residency.

At the same time, flying across my facebook feed are calls to call Congressmen about the upcoming confirmation vote for Betsy DeVos and yet these facebook posts struggle with the question: what do you do if you know your Senators are firmly on one side or the other? One friend, in Michigan, hoped that there would be value in calling Senators in Ohio with the pitch that we have family and friends in Ohio but it seems to me that offices simply dont give the time of day to callers who arent constituents.

And of course, the increasing focus on battleground states and early-primary states has meant that many people feel keenly the irrelevance of their vote, and the uselessness of traditional activities like knocking on doors and passing out flyers.

Readers, thoughts? Are protests the cornerstone of democracy or one step away from mob rule?

Image: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File%3ATrump-WomensMarch_2017-top-1510075_(32409710246).jpg; By Mark Dixon from Pittsburgh, PA (Trump-WomensMarch_2017-top-1510075) [CC BY 2.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0)], via Wikimedia Commons

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What does democracy look like? - Patheos (blog)

Fake news inquiry by MPs examines threat to democracy – BBC News


The Drum
Fake news inquiry by MPs examines threat to democracy
BBC News
The inquiry will examine the sources of fake news, how it is spread and its impact on democracy. Claims that voters in the US election were influenced by fake news spurred the inquiry, the committee said. Damian Collins, the committee chairman, said ...
MPs to investigate threat to democracy from 'fake news'The Guardian
MPs consider the threat posed by fake news on democracyThe Drum
UK lawmakers look into fake news' 'threat to democracy'Fox News
The National -International Business Times UK
all 36 news articles »

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Fake news inquiry by MPs examines threat to democracy - BBC News