Posts Tagged obama

Hate, Racism and Smiles in 2009

The health debate currently taking place in the United States has brought about some unexpected realities to society.  We’ve been seeing hate and racism boil over in some locations all under the guise of "well, I didn’t mean it that way.”

There are certain people in the US (and thankfully they are a small number, but nonetheless) who take their marching orders from hate monger Rush Limbaugh.  Now, let me say, I’m a big guy – fat if you will – but how anyone could stand to listen to this sweating, pill-popping pig of a person is beyond me.  Rush is what we call an angry, white man who pretends like he doesn’t know what he’s doing.  He is trying to stir the racism and hatred pot, and thanks to his shrinking audience size the only people left to listen to him nowadays are the true nutcases that will do whatever he tells them to do.  That’s just plain scary.

There are so many people out there without healthcare.  People without access to basic preventative services that it is no longer up for debate in my mind whether we need it or not – we need a national healthcare system, and we needed it 30 years ago.

I have high hopes that the small lunatic fringe led by the conservatives and Rush will be ignored and we can have a serious, intelligent debate with good results in the end.  I have faith that most people want to do what is right and have more sense than to listen to a drug addict tell them how to think.

Even if you are against nationalized healthcare for whatever reason (other than Rush told you to be against it), you know what is happening at these town hall meetings isn’t right.  You know racism and hatred when you hear and see it.

Turn off Rush, think for yourself – and no matter what side you are on, let’s all have an intelligent debate on the future of healthcare.

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Forget Research Polls, We Have Twitter

Last night I was busy watching, along with millions of other people from around the world, President Obama’s State of the Union address.  Not only was his presentation inspiring and a call to action for every American, it was also the most heavily Twittered State of the Union ever.  At one point, by my count, over 700+ tweets were rolling in every second about the speech.  Even members of Congress were in on the act.

Regardless of what you think of Obama (and for the record, I’m a big O-man fan), what took place last night – and all throughout the 2008 election – is a sign of how the social landscape has changed.  In years past it would take hours, sometimes days, for researchers and survey firms to tabulate how people felt about an event such as this.  Even then, they were highly limited in what they could measure.  It was impossible to measure second-by-second response, and you only got a few people which (you hoped) represented the masses.  It was time consuming, inaccurate and limited.

Fast forward to 2009 and the social networks have transformed how we view any event, political or not.  Almost instantaneous reaction to the different parts of Obama’s speech flew through the Twittersphere.  Facebook and CNN provided a direct link so you could not only watch online, but also provide real-time feedback of what you thought.  Responses and reactions by the masses were available within seconds, not days.  The Whitehouse blog (let’s not forget this is the first Administration with a blog!) was updated with video and transcripts of the speech within minutes of it ending.  You just know that Obama’s administration was keeping tabs on what worked – and what didn’t.

We now live in a digitally connected world in which our social networks are a part of us just as much as the networks we form with our family, co-workers and “offline” friends.  No longer is it acceptable to “wait for the data” or to claim that you aren’t sure of how something played out in the marketplace.  We no longer need the polltakers or the research firms to tell us how the world reacted – we know how they reacted, and we are a part of that reaction.

The transformation to social media is still in the early stages, but nobody can deny it has already crossed the point of no return – and let’s be honest, who would want to return to the old way?  We know the value of being active in the social media; and we know what happens if we aren’t.    This is the golden era for the 3rd generation of marketing – and it’s exciting to watch it all unfold.

Think I’m off base or right on the money?  You could leave a comment, but how about dropping me a tweet instead?

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