Friday Quotes - The Goracle
Rolling Stone recently interviewed Al Gore in a piece title “Citizen Gore” - and the discussion ranged from climate change, expectations of President Obama, and digital deomcracy. Here are some quotes from
that piece.
Mark Seliger
photo from Rolling Stone.
RS: So we’re starting to see the kind of digital democracy you envisioned when you entered Congress as an “Atari Democrat”?
AG:
The Internet is now getting close to the stage where it will be possible for it to eclipse television, making it possible for people to really participate in representative democracy. But we’re not there yet. We’re still at a stage where TV is completely dominant in our political culture, which enables those with a lot of money to exercise enormous influence in the political system.
RS: Is that why online activism hasn’t been able to galvanize action on climate change?
AG
: It’s the quintessential example of how the broad public interest is directly contrary to the passionately held special interest of large carbon polluters. The entire world is waiting for the United States to get its act together and become a champion for the broad public interest in saving the future of civilization. But the system is still so dysfunctional and the influence of these special interests is so obscenely great that they have paralyzed the political system to the point where it’s not responding to the most powerful public interest of all: survival for future generations.
RS: But can’t the same social-networking tools Obama used to mobilize voters be used by carbon polluters to defend their interests?
AG:
I don’t think it’s an accident that every major progressive reform movement is based on the Internet. The nature of the medium is such that it invites new ideas and a regular challenge to orthodoxy. And that’s a good thing for human civilization at this stage of history, where we’re confronting this brand-new reality, where the relationship between the species and the planet has been radically altered. We have to quickly find a new pattern, one that doesn’t continue the process of destroying the ecosphere on which human life depends. Eventually, as the Internet eclipses television, politics will emerge at a higher level of complexity where the individual’s role is restored. But the individual has to fight for it. And the individual has to feel like it’s worth fighting for.
* This story was originally published as a post from the marketing blog "Down To Earth." Read all stories from this blog