At the Big Tent in Denver, Markos Moulitsas of “Daily Kos” fame made plenty of copies of his new book, Taking on the System, available. I’ve been reading my copy on my trip back to Vermont (I am actually writing this diary from O’Hare in Chicago).
It’s a good read. Markos is an excellent writer (lord knows he gets enough practice). It lacks citations, which drives me nuts, but I’m getting a lot out of it. Most of the book is an exercise in breaking out the transformational power of new media into its constituent parts and providing successful case studies of each (and not always political case studies as Markos sees a lot of parallel institutional change in, for example, the music industry).
Markos casts himself and the netroots movement as the next step in Saul Alinsky-style activism, disarming the critcism from the more reactionary set (many of whom cite Alinsky – to whom Taking on the System is dedicated – as an inspiration themselves) with Rules for Radicals quotations such as “we will start with the system because there is no other place to start from except political lunacy”. It should be mentioned that Markos casts himself in such a role without ego, as he is uniquely able to speak about himself and his contribution objectively, almost clinically so. It’s refreshing.
But here’s the discussion: Markos observes in the prologue that the rapid democratization of media and (by extension) other power institutions has left the “traditional gatekeepers” (largely the traditional media) and the political “elites they guard” with a choice:
Some are embracing this democratization, welcoming the new participants. Others are simply tolerating the interlopers, acknowledging the process as an inevitable evolution in our culture. Then there are those digging in their heels, and fighting a losing battle to protect their domain.
At the Denver convention – both on the ground with the Vermont delegation and in reviewing the coverage back home – JD, Christian and I were witnessing all three of these reactions. Most prominently (I believe) on display was the “tolerating” process of simply dealing with these changes as an inevitability. But each of the other reactions Markos lays out were clearly in play as well.
Rather than give you my opinion, I’d like to hear the opinion of GMD’s readers. Among the Vermont “gatekeeper” and “elite” set, who do you think is welcoming the new paradigm, who is simply accepting it and trying to make the best of it, and who is digging in and pushing back?