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One of the stranger fallouts from the 2009 Honduran coup has been the scheme hatched by an NYU economist, Paul Romer, along with free-market libertarians—including Milton Friedman’s grandson, Patri; you can’t make this shit up—to start a bunch of “year-zero” cities in the country, free-market utopias with their own laws, etc. It’s like Empire’s Workshop meets The Shock Doctrine meets Fordlandia (except Henry Ford at least had his year-zero city provide free health care). If they were to come to fruition, they would be little more than free-trade maquila zones, like the kind that run along the US-Mexican border, except more savage.

In any case, the plan has hit a snag in that a committee of the Honduran Supreme Court has declared them unconstitutional, though that ruling could be reversed by the full court. Recently, a lawyer who argued for their unconstitutionality was gunned down, joining the long list of decent people killed as a result of the US-endorsed coup.

By the way, related to the discussion Corey Robin had on his blog about whether Hayek’s and Friedman’s support for dictatorships were inherent to their thought or just situational, Patri Friedman has cleared that point up, saying, in relation to these kind of start-up cities, that “Democracy is the current industry standard political system, but unfortunately it is ill-suited for a libertarian state.” Peter Thiel, founder of Paypall and bankroller of FB and another supporter of the Honduran scheme, wrote: “Most importantly, I no longer believe that freedom and democracy are compatible.” Glad that particular contradiction has gotten resolved. Adelante.

(Source: azspot)

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"I hope we shall crush in its birth the aristocracy of our moneyed corporations which dare already to challenge our government to a trial of strength and bid defiance to the laws our country”."

— Thomas Jefferson, Letter to George Logan, Nov. 12th, 1816

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Please take a moment to remember Patrice Lumumba. He embodied the highest hopes for the people of the Congo, and 50 years ago today they were robbed of his promise by a plot orchestrated by the US and Belgium. We can’t know for sure what the Congo might have become under his democratic leadership, but we do know of the brutal dictatorship installed in his stead, and the broken, tortured country that has emerged today. If ever there were cause for tears of righteous-rage…

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The Internet as “Deliberative Medium”

In a piece I wrote a few weeks ago about what it means to be a netizen (in the broader “stakeholder in the content and character of the internet” sense) I touched on the idea of the internet as a democratic medium (in the “democracy of ideas” sense).

One idea I didn’t explore explicitly but which has been nagging at me is the problem of deliberation. If the internet is to provide a democratic space of the sort that really informs and empowers state-citizen democracy, deliberation is a critical dimension.

Web 2.0 tools have thus far afforded opportunities for expression, creating open spaces where ordinary people can create ideas and influence which ones rise to the top. However, as Michel Bauwens of P2P Foundation aptly points out, “expression is not deliberation”. In fact, expression without deliberation seems to lead to “dictatorships of the loud”.

As Bauwens asserts, the internet has allowed for expression, mobilization and direct action, but ”most Web 2.0 platforms are not very well suited for the kind of complex deliberation that would be needed to create a context for decision-making.” It seems we don’t yet have the technical tools or cultural capacity, to navigate complexity, quality/credibility and disagreement online.

The tools for achieving deliberation online, however, are improving and hopefully along with them our cultural capacity for navigating complexity and bringing about more ideal democratic outcomes. Keith Moore at Open Government TV recently turned me on to one such tool - the video below explains Online Townhalls, a platform designed to help make sense of the chaos of the “democratic internet”.

What tools of democratic deliberation have you come across on the web?


OnlineTownhalls Intro from AthenaBridge on Vimeo.

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In the short time of less than a decade, online communities appear to be producing one or several virtual repertoire/s of contention, depending on tactical insertions into target sets of message flows…It remains to be seen however, the extent to which this vision [Gordon brown’s] translates into greater decision making capability for citizens in matters of national and local government.

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Some thoughts on responsible netizenship.