Hotspur Speaks . . . on Pansy Asses
In Henry IV, part 1, Shakespeare penned a brilliant outburst
by the great warrior, Hotspur. As he stands bloody and exhausted from
battle, a mincing nobleman demands that he immediately turn over
his prisoners to be taken to the King. Hotspur's later response to
King Henry IV:
My liege, I did deny no prisoners.
But I remember, when the fight was done,
When I was dry with rage and extreme toil,
Breathless and faint, leaning upon my sword,
Came there a certain lord, neat and trimly dressed,
Fresh as a bridegroom, and his chin new reaped
Showed like a stubble land at harvest home.
He was perfumèd like a milliner,
And twixt his finger and his thumb he held
A pouncet box, which ever and anon
He gave his nose, and took't away again;
Who therewith angry, when it next came there,
Took it in snuff; and still he smiled and talked;
And as the soldiers bore dead bodies by,
He called them untaught knaves, unmannerly,
To bring a slovenly unhandsome corse
Betwixt the wind and his nobility.
With many holiday and lady terms
He questioned me, amongst the rest demanded
My prisoners in your majesty's behalf.
I then, all smarting with my wounds being cold,
To be so pestered with a popingay,
Out of my grief and my impatience
Answered neglectingly, I know not what--
He should, or he should not; for he made me mad
To see him shine so brisk, and smell so sweet,
And talk so like a waiting gentlewoman
Of guns and drums and wounds -- God save the mark! --
And telling me the sovereignest thing on earth
Was parmacity for an inward bruise,
And that it was great pity, so it was,
This villainous saltpetre should be digged
Out of the bowels of the harmless earth,
Which many a good fellow had destroyed
So cowardly, and but for these vile guns,
He would himself have been a soldier.
This bald unjointed chat of his, my lord,
I answered indirectly, as I said,
And I beseech you, let not his report
Come current for an accusation
Betwixt my love and your high majesty.
It sounds like any warrior's disdain for those who benefit from
battle but choose not to participate. It echoes my raging disregard for Lt. Bush,
who enlisted at the same New Haven USAF recruiting office that I did, but three
years later.
Bush and I received the same expensive
pilot training, which obligated us to serve a specified period, as a
pilot,
to return the public's investment in us. I trained with National Guard guys,
and respected their
participation
and future role. But none of the kinds of people I trained with had any choice
but to keep flying airplanes and keep taking flight physicals until they
fulfilled
their obligation.
In short, there are those who serve and those who do something
else.
Shirking
Yesterday, Clay
Shirky straightened us all
out again in Dean
and the Last Internet Campaign. I stipulate unreservedly that Clay
Shirky is more qualified than I to comment on social software and on social
movements. However, I cannot escape my sense that a culture needs to fully
honor its heroes and do so for more than a news cycle. In this medium called
the Web, designed to post and comment on scientific observations, should
we not
embrace the obvious and dismiss the superficial? Here's the beginning of
Shirky's post:
I just re-read David Weinberger’s quotes
from the Trippi speech last week, because something felt funny the first
time I read it, and this time I found it, where Trippi says:
"We did a
pretty damn good job of it. Given the Party rules, we should never
have been able to get to where we were 3 weeks before Iowa: Ahead
in the
polls, etc. We did it without the Party. The American people did, using
the tools provided by the Internet."
The Dean campaign has been proof-of-concept
for a number of novel political tools and tactics, and for that, their
place in history is assured. However,
Trippi comes this close to blaming the voters.
This is interesting. Clay Shirky isn't part of Dean's place
in history. I'm pretty sure he never visited headquarters in Burlington or
even on Lexington Ave. He didn't attend the Digital Democracy Teach-In last
week so he has no direct experience to report there either. What we have
here is
Clay Shirky's musings on David Weinberger's report of Joe
Trippi's speech.
Shirky's diatribe against Dean's Trippi's historic
campaign seems to be that the campaign played to the 600,000 Americans who
signed up at the Dean site rather than to the Americans who had not yet registered.
Fair enough. Here's
Clay's
conclusion:
So those of us watching Dean thinking "This
is it — the campaign we’ve been waiting for" were,
in a way, correct. This is it, or rather that was it, before Dean decided
that he could run a populist campaign without the support of the populous.
The big surprise, to me and to many of us, is how little it mattered.
Though Trippi said "It’s all about money", they blew
through $40M to surprisingly little effect.
So there is a second piece
of good news for democracy here, but it’s
not the good news Trippi would have you believe. The good news is this: a
campaign can use internet tools to help create extraordinary successes in
fund raising and generating name recognition and getting good poll numbers,
can even have its candidate anointed frontrunner before the first vote is
cast, and all of that, taken together, is still not enough to get people
to vote for a someone they don’t like.
Aha! There it is, the root of the outrage:
"This is it — the campaign we’ve
been
waiting for"
It took me a while to understand the love-hate relationship
so many social software advocates have with the Dean boom-bust cycle. Having
embraced the campaign early, they feel betrayed by its meatspace
results. Since the campaign "failed" in winning a primary, they must either
dismiss social software as a force, or savage those who try and "fail."
They never suited up for the
game, but feel qualified to judge
it from the cheap seats. They play the smaller and safer pundit game,
where expertise and wisdom is implied by the voice of profundity, uncompromised
by the
inconvenience of engagement. What would be wrong with "Hey, this and that
worked great! Why don't we work together on this other thing?"
It's like the guys peddling
books on getting rich. Why would anyone skilled at no-risk
wealth bother selling books about it?
Trippi's Honor
On Sunday night before his keynote, Joe stopped by our table
for about an hour with Josh and Franz and Neil and
me. Joe has a huge
heart
and
passion for the work he started with the Dean campaign. He was struggling
with how he would communicate the miracle that was wrought by the people
attracted to the Dean campaign. His mantra is that the Dean renaissance was
a dotcom miracle, not a dotbomb, as you can hear
directly at Doug Kay's terrific IT Conversations site. He did not then
nor does he yet comprehend how so many smart people see what happened.
Joe is amazingly open
and humble and has anecdotes from decades of Presidential campaigns. He
also has some serious technical chops. He was the energizing and intellectual
force that made the possibility of Digital Democracy even coherent enough
to have a name. When Tim O'Reilly asked me the best way to introduce him,
I suggested that Joe is the Thomas Edison of the movement, whose accomplishments
are undimmed by our collective failure to identify better filaments.
Tim O'Reilly knows what all of us do, that Digital Democracy
was the most galvanizing topic of what may prove to be the most seminal conference
O'Reilly has produced; and that without Joe Trippi, the most urgent topic
this week in San Diego might have been something about secure WiFi or maybe
military robots.
It was interesting to follow the IRC channel during Joe's
talk. It gave me a raging case of cognitive dissonance, as I struggled to
reconcile my direct personal experience and what I was hearing from Joe's
mind and heart, compared to a self-destructive dialogue of experts lacking
expertise.
Snatching Disappointment from the Jaws of Exuberance
Net-savvy techies and blogizens
have a liberating message for the world: The Internet is the planet's
best hope
for deliverance
from
incompetent and often conspiratorial media, political and corporate dinosaurs
using entrenched power to stifle innovation, information and individual freedoms.
This is the "Information wants to be free" cohort of our culture,
and there can be no better thought space as a basis for third millenium values.
Clearly that was the dominant mindset at Etech–the people
commenting on Joe Trippi's description of the intersection of politics and
the Internet
as expressed by the Dean campaign.
The mystery was why so many of them, rather than listening to the
were telling each other that they understood this problem so much better
than Joe Trippi, and so dismissive of the best work yet done in this space.
The present and future leaders of a new movement dedicated to the Great
American Restoration have been created because one transformational leader,
win or lose, will have made a difference beyond words.
And win or lose --
so must we.
—
Joe Trippi
5:28:32 PM
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