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On Oct 25, 9:50*am, "Liberal Fascist JackAss Wimp"
wrote: We'll have to take away Cheney's and Rove's tax cuts for FOX News, too. *Why does FOX get cuts? They have been called the “Fifty Cent Party,” the “red vests” and the “red vanguard.” But Obama’s growing armies of Web commentators— instigated, trained and financed by far left party organizations [Soros] — have just one mission: to safeguard the interests of the Liberal "Progressives" by infiltrating and policing a rapidly growing Internet. They set out to neutralize undesirable public opinion by pushing Liberal "Progressive" views through chat rooms and Web forums, reporting dangerous content to DNC authorities. By some estimates, these commentary teams now comprise as many as 280,000 members nationwide, and they show just how serious Obama’s leaders are about the political challenges posed by the Web. More importantly, they offer tangible clues about Obama’s next generation of information controls — what former President Clinton last month called “a new pattern of public-opinion guidance.” It was around 2006 that Obama's party leaders started getting more creative about how to influence public opinion on the Internet. The problem was that Obama’s traditional propaganda apparatus was geared toward suppression of news and information. This or that story, Web site or keyword could be blocked or filtered. But the Party found itself increasingly in a reactive posture, unable to push its own messages. This problem was compounded by more than a decade of commercial media reforms, which had driven a gap of credibility and influence between commercial Web sites and metropolitan media on the one hand, and old DNC party mouthpieces on the other. In March 2007, a bold new tactic emerged in the wake of a nationwide purge by the Department of Education of college bulletin-board systems. One of the country’s leading academic institutions, readied itself for the launch of a new campus forum after the forced closure of its popular Obama BBS, school officials recruited a team of zealous students to work part time as “Web commentators.” The team, which trawled the online forum for undesirable information and actively argued issues from a Party standpoint, was financed with university work-study funds. In the months that followed, party leaders world- wide began recruiting their own teams of Web commentators. Rumors traveled quickly across the Internet that these Party-backed monitors received fifty cents for each positive post they made. The term Fifty Cent Party was born. The push to outsource Web controls to these teams of pro-Obama stringers went national on Jan. 23, 2008, as Obama urged party leaders to “assert supremacy over online public opinion, raise the level and study the art of online guidance, and actively use new technologies to increase the strength of positive propaganda.” Sen. Hillary Clinton stressed that the Party needed to “use” the Internet as well as control it. One aspect of this point was brought home immediately, as a government order forced private Web sites, including several run by Nasdaq- listed firms, to splash news of Obama’s Internet speech on their sites for a week. Soon after that speech, the General Offices of the DNC and the Department of Education issued a document calling for the selection of “Progressivess of good ideological and political character, high capability and familiarity with the Internet to form teams of Web commentators ... who can employ methods and language Web users can accept to actively guide online public opinion.” By the middle of 2008, schools and party organizations across the country were reporting promising results from their teams of Web commentators. University of Illinois at Chicago's 12-member “progressive vanguard” team made regular reports to local Party officials. Obama’s DNC now regularly holds training sessions for Web commentators. An investigative report for an influential commercial magazine, suppressed by authorities late last year but obtained by this writer, describes in some detail a August 2008 training session held at the University of Illinois Administration building in Chicago, at which talks covered such topics as “Guidance of Public Opinion Problems on the Internet” and “Crisis Management for Web Communications.” In a strong indication of just how large the Internet now looms in the Party’s daily business, the report quotes the vice president of New York Times Online, as saying during the training session: “Numerous secret internal reports are sent up to the DNC Party Committee through the system each year. Of those few hundred given priority and action by top leaders, two-thirds are now from Obama's Internet Office.” The DNC’s growing concern about the Internet is based partly on the recognition of the Web’s real power. Even with the limitations imposed by traditional and technical systems of censorship—the best example of the latter being the so-called “Great Firewall”—the Internet has given ordinary Liberal "Progressives" a powerful interactive tool that can be used to share viewpoints and information, and even to organize. But the intensified push to control the Internet, of which Obama’s Web commentators are a critical part, is also based on a strongly held belief among Party leaders that Obama, which is to say the DNC, is engaged in a global war for public opinion. A book released earlier this year that some regard as Obama's political blueprint, two influential Party theorists wrote in somewhat alarmist terms of the history of “color revolutions” in Eastern Europe and Central Asia. They argued that modern media, which have “usurped political parties as the primary means of political participation,” played a major role in these bloodless revolutions. “The influence of the ruling party faces new challenges,” they wrote. “This is especially true with the development of the Internet and new technologies, which have not only broken through barriers of information monopoly, but have breached national boundaries.” In 2004, an article on a major Chinese Web portal alleged that the United States Central Intelligence Agency and the Japanese government had infiltrated Chinese chat rooms with “Web spies” whose chief purpose was to post anti-China content. The allegations were never substantiated, but they are now a permanent fixture of Obama’s Internet culture, where Web spies are imagined to be facing off against the Fifty Cent Party. Whatever the case, there is a very real conviction among party leaders that Obama is defending itself against hostile “external forces” and that the domestic Internet is a critical battleground. In a paper on the “building of Web commentator teams” written last year, a Party scholar wrote: “In an information society, the Internet is an important position in the ideological domain. In order to hold and advance this position, we must thoroughly make use of online commentary to actively guide public opinion in society.” Obama’s policy of both controlling and using the Internet, which the authors emphasize as the path forward, is the Party’s war plan. Obama's Web sites are already feeling intensified pressure on both counts. “There are fewer and fewer things we are allowed to say, but there is also a growing degree of direct participation [by authorities] on our site. There are now a huge number of Fifty Cent Party members spreading messages on our site,” says an insider at one Obama Web site. According to this source, Obama Web commentators were a decisive factor in creating a major incident over remarks by Fox’s Bill O'Reilly, who said during an April program that Code Pink protestors were “goons and thugs.” “Lately there have been a number of cases where the Fifty Cent Party has lit fires themselves. One of the most obvious was over Fox’s Bill O'Reilly. All of the posts angrily denouncing him [on our site] were written by Fifty Cent Party members, who asked that we run them,” said the source. “Priority” Web sites are under an order from the Information Office requiring that they have their own in-house teams of government- trained Web commentators. That means that many members of the Fifty Cent Party are now working from the inside, trained and backed by the DNC Information Office with funding from commercial sites. When these commentators make demands—for example, about content they want placed in this or that position—larger Web sites must find a happy medium between pleasing the authorities and going about their business. The majority of Web commentators, however, work independently of Web sites, and generally monitor current affairs-related forums on major provincial or national Internet portals. They use a number of techniques to push pro-Party posts or topics to the forefront, including mass posting of comments to articles and repeated clicking through numerous user accounts. “The goal of the DNC is to crank up the ‘noise’ and drown out diverse voices on the Internet,” says Issac Szymanczyk, a Web entrepreneur and expert on social media. “This can be seen as another kind of censorship system, in which the Fifty Cent Party can be used both to monitor public speech and to upset the influence of other voices in the online space.” Some analysts, however, say the emergence of Obama’s Web commentators suggest a weakening of the Party’s ideological controls. “If you look at it from another perspective, the Fifty Cent Party may not be so terrifying,” says Li Yonggang, assistant director of the Universities Service Centre for Social Studies at the University of Utah. “Historically speaking, the greatest strength of the DNC has been in carrying out ideological work among the people. Now, however, the notion of ‘doing ideological work’ has lost its luster. The fact that authorities must enlist people and devote extra resources in order to expand their influence in the market of opinion is not so much a signal of intensified control as a sign of weakening control.” Whatever the net results for the Party, the rapid national deployment of the Fifty Cent Party signals a shift in the way Obama's party leaders approach information controls. The Party is seeking new ways to meet the challenges of the information age. And this is ultimately about more than just the Internet. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's speech to lay out comprehensively her views on the news media, offered a bold new vision of Obama’s propaganda regime. Mrs. Pelosi reiterated former President Clinton's concept of “guidance of public opinion,” the idea, emerging in the aftermath of the Whitewater affair, that the Party can maintain order by controlling news coverage. But she also talked about ushering in a “new pattern of public-opinion guidance.” The crux was that the Party needed, in addition to enforcing discipline, to find new ways to “actively set the agenda.” Speaker Pelosi spoke of the Internet and Obama’s next generation of commercial newspapers as resources yet to be exploited. “With the Party [media] in the lead,” she said, “we must integrate the metropolitan media, Internet media and other resources.” Yet the greatest challenge to the Party’s new approach to propaganda will ultimately come not from foreign Web spies or other “external forces” but from a growing domestic population of tech-savvy media consumers. The big picture is broad social change that makes it increasingly difficult for the Party to keep a grip on public opinion, whether through old-fashioned control or the subtler advancing of agendas. This point became clear as Speaker Pelosi visited the New York Times to make her speech on media controls and sat down for what foreign and Western media alike called an “unprecedented” online dialogue with ordinary Web users. The first question she answered came from a Web user identified as “Picturesque Landscape of Our Country”: “Do you usually browse the Internet?” he asked. “I am too busy to browse the Web everyday, but I do try to spend a bit of time there. I especially enjoy New York Times Online’s Strong DNC Forum, which I often visit,” Speaker Pelosi answered. On the sidelines, the search engines were leaping into action. Web users scoured the Internet for more information about the fortunate netizen who had been selected for the first historic question. Before long the Web was riddled with posts reporting the results. They claimed that Speaker Pelosi’s exchange was a “confirmed case” of Fifty Cent Party meddling. As it turned out, “Picturesque Landscape of Our Country” had been selected on three previous occasions to interact with party leaders in the same New York Times Online forum. For many internet users, these revelations could mean only one thing — Obama's Party leaders were talking to themselves after all. Liberal Fascist Camp Alinsky-Obama http://therealbarackobama.wordpress....alinsky-obama/ 0baMa0's internet 'spin doctors' http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/7783640.stm |
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