Inside that Conservative Tea Party
For those of you who think that conservatives are Luddites and only liberals have really mastered the tools of the digital age, listen to what happened to me on Friday.
Sick as a dog, I was lying in bed around 6 PM with my BlackBerry watching the chat on Twitter. I'd been following Newt Gingrich for awhile and I noticed he'd been chatting with Michael P. Leahy, the founder of something called Top Conservatives on Twitter.
As I lay sneezing and wheezing, Leahy was, before my eyes, using Twitter to organize dozens of rallies across the country to protest the economic policies of the Obama administration all under the heading of a National Chicago Tea Party. The reference to the Windy City is, of course, a homage to Rick Santelli's cri de coeur. Leahy notes that other conservatives had been toying with the idea of a tea party, pre Santelli, including Michelle Malkin, Glenn Reynolds and the Managing Editor of the American Spectator J. Peter Freire. But it was Santelli's screed combined with Twitter that brought it all together so quickly.
The speed with which Leahy found people to sponsor events, design a logo,even come up with Revolutionary War reenactors was startling.
Just a week later, on Friday, conservatives will gather in about 35 cities across the country to fight what they see as profligate policies that reward irresponsibility.
I spoke with Leahy this afternoon. He was at his home near Nashville. Raised in an Irish Catholic family in Oswego, New York--he tells me that he's actually third cousins with Sen. Patrick Leahy, the Vermont Democrat--the 54-year-old went to Harvard undergrad and Stanford business school. An entrepreneur, he worked in enterprise systems and computer marketing and became a conservative in the mid 80s having grown up in a JFK-admiring home. Now he's published a few conservative tomes and devotes considerable energy to Top Conservatives on Twitter.
By now everyone knows Twitter but what's less well known is the so-called hashtag or tick tac toe symbol that often accompanies Twitter messages. It's used to identify a message so that it can be easily grouped with other like minded souls. On Sunday, for instance, I Twittered some comments about the Oscars and ended each post with "#oscars"
In the conservative world, #TCOT is the Good Housekeeping seal of approval. Karl Rove uses it regularly. So does Newt. If you want to be in the conservative dialogue that's where you go. It's now the most popular hashtag on Twitter. All of this makes Leahy an important facilitator in the conservative movement.
I'm not sure what will become of these rallies. I know I don't agree with Leahy's claim that Obama is "moving us toward European socialism." I think Hank Paulson of Goldman Sachs and the Bush administration started the government interventions and any president would have continued them in this climate. And I don't really see how tax cuts and less government will get us out of this mess. But the ability to fire up a nationwide protest movement so quickly is impressive to me and should be a reminder that liberals have no monopoly on technology and innovation.


















# = pound sign.
If all repugs call it the tic-tac-toe symbol then there's not much to worry about.
February 24, 2009 1:42 PM | Reply | Permalink
No, this is a pound sign: £
This is a hash, a number sign or an octothorpe: #
Please quit calling it a pound sign.
February 24, 2009 2:15 PM | Reply | Permalink
Doesn't it seem there's a bigger point than the name of the crosshatch thingy? Conservatives hardly have a handle on everything that's gone wrong for them, but they are right about the technology gap, and only a fool thought they wouldn't go after it. Such tactical advantages in politics tend to be short-lived. Their vaunted GOTV operation was overtaken by Democrats in a short time. Our grassroots technical advantage was never going to last.
February 24, 2009 2:42 PM | Reply | Permalink
I always heard of it referred to as a pound sign myself. Especially on those stupid computer generated "customer service" lines when at the end of the day you wind up talking to someone who is clueless and uninformed in india.
This obviously is a more interesting and informative debate than cooper's long, boring and virtually unreadable post. Friday was a good day for posts.
February 24, 2009 2:47 PM | Reply | Permalink
In the USA, you'll frequently hear "or press pound for assistance" in automated menus. # is the key referred to in that case.
But then, in the USA, if one asks a spouse to pick up 5 pounds of sugar at the store, there's no question that we're speaking of weight rather than monetary value.
You can complain to Ma Bell about it, if you like.
We could also argue whether a bonnet is or is not a type of hat.
February 24, 2009 3:59 PM | Reply | Permalink
Here is a link on the derivation of the term pound sign associated with the symbol #.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Number_sign
Ah, a link and a short explanation. Works wonders.
February 24, 2009 2:51 PM | Reply | Permalink
It's only not a pound sign if you think there's a "u" in "color."
February 24, 2009 3:48 PM | Reply | Permalink
Tell that to credit card companies and automated help menus. They all refer to it as the "pound sign".
February 24, 2009 3:49 PM | Reply | Permalink
Not in the UK ... it's all "please press hash".
February 24, 2009 4:01 PM | Reply | Permalink
£ is the symbol for pound sterling and lira.
February 24, 2009 4:01 PM | Reply | Permalink
ability to fire up a nationwide protest movement
Um, there's no evidence, and won't be, until Friday, whether there is any such thing as a "nationwide protest movement". Let's see what size that "nationwide protest movement" has on Friday, shall we?
I think some skepticism about this is warranted, particularly in light of the poll numbers (exception Rasmussen, of course) that indicate that people are in favor of the stuff that RICK SANTELLI:POPULIST!!@#! opposes.
February 24, 2009 1:46 PM | Reply | Permalink
Don't worry, CT. Even if there's ten prople there, the Matt Coopers and the MSNBCs of the world will treat it as representative of a true "grass roots" revolution in the making, and laud the converative restoration just arund the corner.
February 24, 2009 2:18 PM | Reply | Permalink
Isn't that the truth.
It's as if many people who make their living "commenting" on politics in DC have their fingers jammed firmly in their ears while they chant "I can't h-e-e-e-e-a-a-a-a-r you!" over and over and over.
Data be damned.
The conservatives have organized a massive, gigantic earth-rattling PROTEST for Friday.
February 24, 2009 2:51 PM | Reply | Permalink
That should be an interesting scene on friday. I hope there is nationwide coverage of all the ten grey heads storming the doors at their nursing homes to get into the streets and protest for cutting their own benefits. Very interesting scene.
February 24, 2009 2:56 PM | Reply | Permalink
Those rich old white guys can get rowdy, now. Remember the frenzy they worked themselves into over Sarah at the RNC? Well, many of them have made a complete recovery and are ready to rumble again.
February 24, 2009 3:50 PM | Reply | Permalink
True, can you imagine the frenzy they will get worked up in at the Lousiana convention when they nominate stormy daniels? Total suckers for a pretty face. Then back to the oxygen tanks and playing bingo.
February 24, 2009 4:15 PM | Reply | Permalink
I don't have a Blackberry and have been happily oblivious to Twitter. I don't know why I clicked on that TCOT link, but I did, and this is what shows up:
http://twitter.com/retiredfirecapt/statuses/1245881887
Sick. I hope the FBI is knocking at his door right now.
February 24, 2009 2:04 PM | Reply | Permalink
So these idiots think that the founding fathers were protesting "socialism?" Uh, newsflash guys: you got taxation with representation, it's just that the people didn't want you representing them. Suck it up.
February 24, 2009 2:06 PM | Reply | Permalink
I don't know what the hell twitter is. Does it do hand in hand with texting - because I don't do that either. Never sent or received a text in my life.
February 24, 2009 2:08 PM | Reply | Permalink
Thanks for the insight into the twitter/conservative nexus, Matt.
I, for one, have been happily oblivious to that data stream. My perception was that it was merely a digital "ego wall", more akin to facebook friend totals than a medium where serious data is exchanged(distributed?). Thanks for the example of how the "Tea party movement" originated and gestated in that medium. What is apparent is that twitter can be a useful tool in evaluating the authenticity of the various conservative "grass root" manifestations we will witness as the Obama administration continues.
Perhaps twitter needs my attention. So long as reading conservative twitter(er)s is not as painful as either listening to Rush or reading Malkin, then I guess it's tolerable.
February 24, 2009 2:21 PM | Reply | Permalink
Sounds as if Leahy got rich and his stinginess gene, inherited no doubt from some distaff pirate branch of the family, took over and he became a Repugant overnight.
February 24, 2009 3:28 PM | Reply | Permalink
I followed the link that NPickert provided. Damn those people scare me. I'm a little scared for the president. There were quite a few replies that sounded ominous to me. Like maybe they are planning something.
I know most of them couldn't find there way out of a paperbag, but stupid people do stupid things. I sure hope that someone in the Whitehouse is watching the posts.
February 24, 2009 3:54 PM | Reply | Permalink
Doesn't anyone have a problem with the GOP connecting their discontent with Obama's policies and somehow equate it with the Boston Tea Party. Can't we send someone down to these 35 cities to hand out pamphlets that talk about the historical significance in detail? Not to mention the fact that the Tea party was one of many incidents this led to a rebellion against the British. Is the GOP having a tea party in order to equate it with rebelliousness? If it is just for publicity then let's send some people down there to film all of these events. We can edit the footage to reflect the subtext of why this sort of non-sense is not productive towards solving the pressing issues facing our communities and our nation.
February 24, 2009 4:52 PM | Reply | Permalink
Ah, the disabilities I have with my dyslexia! All these years I've been taking a maul to the old Heidleberg when I needed help. And it never worked, and neither does the Heidleberg, any more.
February 24, 2009 5:01 PM | Reply | Permalink