Interactivity Foundation

Reflections From the Storm

’Twas in another lifetime, one of toil and blood
When blackness was a virtue and the road was full of mud
I came in from the wilderness, a creature void of form
“Come in,” she said, “I’ll give you shelter from the storm”  Bob Dylan, 1975

After nearly a month of unprecedented political and civil unrest in Madison, I certainly wouldn’t mind a little “shelter” from the storm. But with the battle over collective bargaining rights, state budget priorities, and working class interests versus corporate interests in Wisconsin just shifting to new terrain in the last few days, I can only examine some of the current storm damage and offer a few very rough and weary reflections.

What seems different about these protests:

What seems the same:

One last observation:  The kind of conversational dialogue, multiple perspectives, and efforts toward longer-term thinking practiced by the Interactivity Foundation all seem like a good and necessary part of some form of a healthier open government. But as recent events remind us, our authoritarian impulses are also constantly at work. And these impulses not only despise dialogue, reasoned argument, and multiple perspectives, they work ceaselessly to ignore, shut down, and sell them off to the wealthiest bidder. Against this sad reality, dialogue and discussion efforts are unquestionably nice even necessary but also completely insufficient. Advocacy, protest, and civil disobedience (among other forms of political behavior) are required as well. The plutocrats aren’t ever going to give up their toys, power, or share of the last Wall Street bailout just because they participated in a facilitated discussion that included multiple perspectives.

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