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Week of May 4, 2008 - May 10, 2008

A Governing Majority


We are seeing something this year that has been long anticipated but never fully realized in a modern America. The last time a governing majority came together in this country was under FDR. He served four terms and forever altered the destiny of a nation.

The threat of the Soviet Union held us together in the years following the New Deal, through Korea and Civil Rights and Vietnam. At the same time, state governments directed national guard forces to fire on American citizens and suspended civil liberties throughout American cities. LBJ championed landmark legislation to help level the playing field at the federal level while forces of hate brought the hammer down even harder.

For the last 40 years, our country has become more divided and easier to control. We have been turned from informed citizens into mindless consumers. We didn't hear too much in the news on May 4th this year, but that was the 38th anniversary of American troops killing four American students at Kent State. Where is our outrage? Where did our memories go? Has the social compact outlined in the Constitution completely broken down since 1968? Is that all it took - treats, toys and time? Bread and Circus indeed.

Our long-simmering discontent has been turned into hope this year by a transformational candidate for president.

Barack Obama describes a governing majority for the first time in the last 60 years of American politics. A motivated electorate consisting of republicans, democrats and independents designing a strategy for a modern and forward-thinking America based on common sense and best practices from around the globe. This silent majority will elect Barack in November and give him a filibuster-proof Congress.

The real work begins in January 2009.

There and Back Again


An interesting comment by one of my fellow TPM inhabitants on the I'm Done blog by one_wilson (brilliant, by the way) led me to this thought:

Was the democratic primary designed this year to go to all 50 states in advance of the 50 State Strategy that Howard Dean described for the general election, both as a candidate and when he took over the DNC?

If by design or by happy coincidence, the race that Barack is running  against Hillary Clinton is the exact same race he will run against John McCain in follwoing a 50 State Strategy.  The primary was a grueling warm-up against an extremely capable opponent.  He is now hitting his stride, ready to turn around and do something he just finished doing.  He has probably exmained from each and every mistake he made in each and every state in the union, modifying his final gameplan.  All the groundwork is in place.  All the infrastructure remains on stand-by.  Millions of local volunteers in every state will bust ensure his election is a landslide, a true mandate to govern. 

McCain will be ten steps back once the race against him officially starts.  It's going to be a massacre of epic proportions.
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jason everett miller

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  • Website: www.jasoneverettmiller.com
  • Location Washington DC
  • Party Republican (Bull Moose 2.0)
  • Politics Progressive conservative. I believe we need governing policies that are based in common sense and not dogma. An evolution of society and not a revolution that seeks to tear everything down and start from scratch. We don't have enough time for that nonsense.

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  • Favorite Blogs TPM. Much easier to get everything in one place than visiting a million blogs every day. Who has time for that?
  • Favorite Books Too many to list. Reading The Years of Rice and Salt by Kim Stanley Robinson. Just finished the Squandering of America by Robert Kuttner. Probably the best explanations of our issues and some possible solutions for them.
  • Favorite Quotes "A long habit of not thinking a thing wrong, gives it a superficial appearance of being right, and raises at first a formidable outcry in defense of custom." - Thomas Paine, Common Sense

    "It behooves every man to remember that the work of the critic is of altogether secondary importance, and that, in the end, progress is accomplished by the man who does things." - Teddy Roosevelt

Bio

I started my professional life as a union carpenter in Reno before joining the United States Navy in 1991 as an assistant ship's journalist and a deck seaman. I covered high-profile events around the globe, from Hurricane Andrew disaster in 1992 to the discovery of USS Yorktown off of Midway Island with Bob Ballard in 1998. My final tour of duty at Combat Camera Group Pacific was as a field producer in support of a worldwide mission of military documentary production.

I left the Navy in 2001 and moved across the country to start my first business with my long-time best friend Mikah Sellers.  We started a specialized communications firm in Washington DC called Hancuff Miller. After a short but successful partnership, we both decided to pursue other opportunities following the Dot.com Bomb. I spent the next several years as a freelance multimedia designer, web developer and screenwriter. I also wrote five feature-length scripts during this time, earning a bachelors degree in graphics and multimedia design from Capella University and a Masters in Producing for Film & Video at American University.

In 2006, I gathered together my educational background, technical tools and business acumen to start my second company, Metamorphosis Media, with Marcus Scott. The company completed a number of projects for non-profit clients such as Academy of Hope, Mosaica and the Conservation Fund. It was at Metamorphosis that I discovered the enormous benefit that technology and story-telling could provide to the non-profit, charity and NGO communities. I maintain a relationship with Metamorphosis as a senior consultant with the firm, but no longer support their day-to-day operations.

I live with my wife and two dogs in Washington DC.  My extracurricular activities include filmmaking, screenwriting and blogging.

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