Archive for the 'blog' Category

I’m Looking at You. You Are Beautiful.

Felix, good friend of Progressive Wednesday, introduced me to the You Are Beautiful project many, many years ago, and, I’m glad to see that it’s still going strong. What is You Are Beautiful? It is, in the project’s own words:

a simple, powerful statement which is incorporated into the over absorption of mass media and lifestyles that are wrapped in consumer culture. The intention behind this project is to reach beyond ourselves as individuals to make a difference by creating moments of positive self realization. We’re just attempting to make the world a little better.

Intention is the most important aspect of the You Are Beautiful project in its idea of purity. Nothing is sacred. Everything that has a perceived value becomes commodified. We work extremely hard that this message is received as a simple act of kindness, and nothing more.

Advertising elicits a response to buy, where this project elicits a response to do something. The attempt with You Are Beautiful is to create activism instead of consumerism.

How is this achieved? Well, for example, if you send an SASE to the folks at You Are Beautiful you’ll receive five free stickers that say as much on them. Then, you’re encouraged to place those stickers in open, surprising places to spread what amounts to a true, often forgotten, and powerful positive message. Click this sentence to find out how to get a hold of your own stickers.

It goes further than that, though. You Are Beautiful frequently takes part in collaborations with individuals and groups. The only caveat is that this simple message should be spread by any means except through commercialism. That means no t-shirts, mugs, calendars, etc. Nothing to sell. No product are to be created to give away, even if they are to be given free of charge. They’re pretty serious about this.

Again, in their own words:

We work extremely hard to not let this project become commodified or commercialized. We have respectfully turned down every commercial opportunity that has been offered. We feel for this particular message, it would water down the mission. We have several copyrights in place to protect ourselves, and limit its use to solely noncommercial projects.

The aforementioned Felix (he’s been keeping an interesting, engaging, content-rich blog going since 2002) worked on a collaborative project with You Are Beautiful. The project, You Are I Am, is an “exploration of repetition and variation.” He describes the process of creating this Flash-based experiment on his website: “Participants were given a sticker labeled ‘I Am,’ followed by a blank. After filling out their phrase, each person was then photographed. It was often surprising how much you could tell about the person… based on how they described themselves.” You can read even more about the process by clicking here.

“You Are I Am” is stunning, beautiful, revealing, vulnerable, funny, fun, and remarkably honest. In short, it’s the kind of art that the Internet needs more of. Check it out for yourself by clicking any of the sentences in this paragraph.

Friends (and I’m not just saying this because you’re reading this website, but, you know, it doesn’t hurt anything)… friends, you are beautiful.

This Wednesday: Demanding Net Neutrality

Problem:

Right now, we have a free and open Internet. Sure, it can cost you a pretty penny to access the Web, but it’s an open sourced environment in many, many ways, and no one website is inherently faster than another. Sure some load faster because of the demands of Flash, or HTML5, or videos, but that’s about it.

However, there’s a major push being made by the country’s biggest and ugliest cable and telephone companies – Verizon, Comcast, Time Warner Cable, AT & T – you know, the ones that we have to fork it over to in order to find our favorite recipes, poems, news, social networking sites, chat, email…. (Wait… you’re on the Internet right now, so I can probably stop listing everything that’s on the Internet. That is, unless, you’re my 89-year-old grandmother—who makes a mean meatloaf—and I’ve finally convinced you to hop on the WWW with promises of my verbal acumen. Hi, Nonna! )  Anyway, they want to be “gatekeepers,” deciding which sites go fast, slow, or not at all. Read that last clause again: not at all. That’s the kind of control they literally want to have. Why? To stifle competition. To sell speedier connections to the highest bidders. To control content.  The result? An end to the most significant information revolution that has ever happened.

Anyway, Net Neutrality is the issue this week. What is it, exactly? Net Neutrality essentially means that WWW service providers cannot discriminate between different kinds of content and applications online. In other words, all websites and Internet tech all will continue to exist on a level playing field.

Net Neutrality drives technological innovation, free speech, economic growth, and a democratic sharing of information. Net Neutrality prevents service providers from interfering with our Internet experiences.  In the words of The Free Press Action Fund, “With Net Neutrality, the network’s only job is to move data — not to choose which data to privilege with higher quality service.”

Where do we come in? We need to fight back against the aforementioned behemoths that are spending hundreds of millions of dollars lobbying the FCC and Congress. And because there are many more of us than there are of them, and because we hold the power of our votes, and because tens of thousands of small and large businesses want Net Neutrality, too, we have a real chance to retain a freedom we’ve come to expect. And that’s a key thing about America: we can’t ever assume we’ll retain a freedom just because it exists now.

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Make Progress:

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Sign:

Sign our petition to save the Internet! SaveTheInternet.com

This doesn’t get much easier people.

Click the logo to the right. Sign your name to a petition put together by the aforementioned Free Press Action Fund. Join over 1.9 million Americans who are openly speaking to Congress, insisting that they act according to the freedoms we deserve.

Net Neutrality is the most important First Amendment issue facing this country.

It follows that staying silent on Net Neutrality is a demonstration that you don’t care about the freedom that you’d be choosing not to exercise. Wait. That sentence is a little confusing. Just sign the sucker, okay? You’ll thank us in ten years.

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Donate:

Five bucks. Half of a trip to see a lousy movie starring Ashton Kutcher (I realize this is redundant). A super-sized sack of crap from a fast-food “restaurant.” Hell, you can re-wear some socks and underwear and go another week without doing laundry.

The point is that you might not think that five bucks is much, but when enough people care enough to give five bucks, you’d be amazed at how quickly it adds up. Let’s go back to the movies for a second: a trip to a flick will set you back about ten bucks; just think of the insane totals that movies rake in every weekend. Those small amounts of money, collected together, make the news every single Monday!

Worried the Free Press Action Fund won’t use your money wisely? Worry not, my progressive grasshopper. 87 cents of every dollar donated supports their core campaign and movement building work to make the U.S. media system more democratic, diverse, and accountable.

Just click this sentence to help keep your voice in the ears of those who control what happens next.

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Watch:

Okay, so this video is a little dated (but barely), and yes, sure, it’s even a little goofy (I mean, there are cartoon alien spacecraft zapping the Internet with lasers), but I’ll be damned if it doesn’t explain what I’ve tried to explain in ways that cannot be misunderstood. So if you’re at all confused, please, please, please watch this video. (If nothing else, my favorite REM song off my favorite REM album makes a guest appearance.)

Net Neutrality is about power and who will have it: us or them. And yes, this is an either-or situation.

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Share:

Right now, as the Internet exists, consumers –you and me—have the control. We choose content, applications, and services available anywhere, regardless of who we use to log on. If we lose Net Neutrality, we’ll be faced with an Internet that lacks the freedoms we’ve come to expect, and it will look much more like cable TV. Websites, content, applications will be like channels, and we’ll be forced to pay to choose what we want to see (if we can see what we want at all, that is).

Right now, the Internet is a place of freedom, and it bucks the tradition of previous forms of media in that any site (including Progressive Wednesday) has the possibility of having the popularity, scope, and reach of a TV station. We value freedom of expression so much that it appears at the beginning of our list of rights. Rights we lacked and we can lack again. This isn’t a scare tactic on our part. This is the reality we face from big businesses right now, today, and tomorrow, until they give up or get their ugly way.

So this action is the simplest of all. See that “Share” button on the left-hand side of this post? It’s about an inch and change below this sentence. Click it and share this Wednesday with your friends. You can send it along on your social network of choice through that button or you can even email it.

The choices we make now, the actions we chose to take, will determine if Net Neutrality continues to exist or if decisions about content are decided in boardrooms. I think you know which one is more progressive.

How to Blog Progressively

Problem:

You want to blog. You don't want to spend oodles of moolah to do so. You type “blog– into any number of search engines and are pointed to Blogger.com, the most used blogging software on the Internet. The service was once privately held by Prya Labs and is now owned by web-behemoth Google. Blogger’s service is pretty good, and some of our favorite blogs are hosted there. But while there are lots of “hacks– available for it, we think variety, open source, and creativity offer a better solution.

Additionally, Blogger has problems and more problems, and you have to backup your page yourself.

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Make Progress:

There are plenty of free blogging options (see Typepad, Xanga, Blog City, Livejournal, and Greymatter), but whether or not you already have a blog[1], we recommend the use of WordPress.com[2], a free blog-hosting service offered by Automattic Inc., which describes itself as “a group of geeks who are passionate about enabling people to publish on the web.– As geeks, we’re a fan of geeks, and we’re using their open source software, which is found at WordPress.org, to make and maintain Progressive Wednesday.

If you don't have a blog, but you like reading them and you think you’d like writing your thoughts and options on the topics of the day, then start one — this alone can be part of progress. How? Here’s how:

  • To highlight regional and national information important to progressives.
  • To communicate information and ideas to, if nothing else, friends and family.
  • To help with progressive Google-bombing.
  • To increase progressive voices on the Internet.
  • To create a place to post information, photos, audio and video that we at Progressive Wednesday might link to. (Please let us know about your blog.)
  • To give a voice to a vast number of locales and provide new ways of looking at significant problems and places where there’s room for improvement.

And here are some reasons why we encourage you to use WordPress.com:

  • The sucker is FREE with two capital E’s.
  • Your blog will have a sidebar with more widgets than even the beta Blogger.
  • For a nominal fee, you can customize the CSS code.
  • The tags are organized for you.
  • Your tags get added to global tagging which can then be searched by readers.
  • They back you up automatically: “Every minute when you're writing a post we save it to the server.–
  • There’s simple importation of your existing blog so you can make the switch.
  • You can also build a group blog with several different writers.
  • The hosting servers are located in two different cities (San Diego and Dallas) and your blog is saved in both (no one else as far as we can tell, offers this kind of back up).

So once your blog is up and running where do you look for progressive content? Well, start by familiarizing yourself with your local papers, but also check out national new services and progressive and regressive blogs alike. Read their blogrolls. But most importantly, write, write, and write. And remember: there’s no such thing as writer’s block.

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[1] You can easily import a pre-existing blog into WordPress.

[2] We don’t think WordPress is immaculate, and we don’t think Blogger is Satan in binary. It’s that WordPress is our fave and we give it props… make that mad props.