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Kansas Nerd Uses Net To Shake Up Political Fundraising

Posted by kdawson on Sat Aug 16, 2008 02:21 PM
from the will-it-still-work-once-everybody-is-doing-it dept.
ghostlibrary sends a note about Sean Tevis, an information architect in Kansas, who is running for state representative with the help of an xkcd lookalike cartoon and grassroots Net-based fundraising. Tevis had garnered more than 6,000 contributions, most of them small, from around the country, far out-fundraising his opponent. Major news outlets have picked up the story as a harbinger of 21st-century Net-based political campaigning. Reader ghostlibrary adds, "As a bonus, Tevis cites xkcd intentionally (rather than just ripping it off without crediting it) and, well, it's actually funny."
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  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday August 16 2008, @02:24PM (#24627769)

    "Strangely, he won the election with a +5, Insightful."

  • by Anonymous Coward on Saturday August 16 2008, @02:25PM (#24627789)
    How about some links to the guy?

    Tevis' website [seantevis.com] and the comic in question [seantevis.com] should get most people started.
  • by fitten (521191) on Saturday August 16 2008, @02:26PM (#24627795)

    and donated even though I don't live in his state and I typically don't vote Democrat (don't vote Republican, either). We need new blood in political office... people who are a little more 'in' with technology, etc.

  • by Xenographic (557057) on Saturday August 16 2008, @02:26PM (#24627799) Homepage Journal

    Dammit. And here I was hoping we could elect BHM...

    Although, I guess BHO is only one letter off. Or two, depending on your metric.

  • Why? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by xZgf6xHx2uhoAj9D (1160707) on Saturday August 16 2008, @02:38PM (#24627875)

    I still have no idea why anyone would give this guy money or vote for him. Is it just because he's a nerd?

    Let's look at his education policy [seantevis.com]. Apparently his entire platform on education is "we should have the best schools". How would he go about making that happen, you ask? Why it's simple! By making sure they're the best, of course!

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      I assume that based on his other platforms, he's going to increase the quality of schools by setting performance standards for teachers and ensuring they aren't squandering the funding they're getting.

      You hear that Sean? I have an education policy for you, and it'll only cost you a cup of coffee.

    • Re:Why? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Meshugga (581651) on Saturday August 16 2008, @02:51PM (#24627969)

      Exactly.

      Also, an eye-opener was, that that same guy originally had some weird attitude about immigrants, a la "american jobs only for american people", which he switched, when a huge cryout from the /. rolled over him...

      And I really think he already was mentioned on /. some time (weeks-months) ago, at least I recall a particular cartoon, that with the 20$ thing.

      Please chaps, please think twice before giving a guy money just because he is "from the internets".

      And please stop political advertising on /., it really sucks, no matter who it is.

      • Re:Why? (Score:5, Insightful)

        by ShadeOfBlue (851882) on Saturday August 16 2008, @03:05PM (#24628069)

        While I haven't donated, I say give the guy a chance. Has he thought everything through? Probably not, but our political system is filled with the merely ignorant to the truly cretinous caricatures or corruption. If he wins I'll be interested in following his story, see how an outsider does.

        Or to put it another way, do we have good reason to put much faith in this guy? No, but we have a whole lot of reasons to not put any faith in the other guys.

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          Well, while there is nothing wrong with having a good technology policy and so earning the election and funding bonus for (almost) being a nerd, there is something wrong with getting money through it AND indulging in policies about topics like immigration in the way he did. Irritating that he didn't leave neither his original policy ("american jobs for american people"), nor his reaction to the community ("ok, now i see my primary source of funding (the internets) doesn't like that, so i revert and remove i

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          Nah. He is like "I don't have a policy on immigration, so give me money for my policy on technology." - but indeed, he HAD and very probably still has a policy on immigrantion. But where can I read about it?

          After all, the whole guy goes into office, not just the part of him with the cool technology policy and the comic.

    • by Legion_SB (1300215) on Saturday August 16 2008, @03:23PM (#24628187) Homepage

      ... someone running for a state representative spot isn't posturing as having the answer to every single problem?

      This is a problem with politics. What we need in government are people who know a lot about certain fields, who are willing to listen to others who know a lot about other fields.

      Instead, as the parent post so painfully illustrates, what we as voters do is vote for the people who claim to have ALL the answers. And guess what? The ones who claim to know the answers to everything are the ones who don't know crap about anything.

    • Re:Why? (Score:4, Informative)

      by greg1104 (461138) <gsmith@gregsmith.com> on Saturday August 16 2008, @03:26PM (#24628205) Homepage

      Well, look at his opponent's issues page [arlensiegfreid.com] and you'll find even less than that. According to vote smart [votesmart.org], the incumbent has voted in line with the Kansas Association of School Boards only 10% of the time in 2006, despite his claims of supporting "Quality Education". It's hard to imagine Sean doing worse.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      Yup, this is exactly why I donated to his opponent.

      Why should a guy get elected just because he happens to be a geek? How about electing someone who has a clue about getting things done.

    • Re:Why? (Score:4, Funny)

      by B3ryllium (571199) on Saturday August 16 2008, @05:34PM (#24629251) Homepage

      Great, just what we need. OOP.

      Objective-Oriented Politics.

      $KansasSchools = new SchoolSystem( 'Kansas' );
      $KansasSchools->setBest( true );
      $KansasSchools->save();

  • View Source (Score:5, Interesting)

    by zerocool^ (112121) on Saturday August 16 2008, @03:11PM (#24628111) Homepage Journal

    View page source (on his xkcd-style ad) for a hidden message to geeks.

  • by mariushm (1022195) on Saturday August 16 2008, @03:38PM (#24628315)

    Here's the actual cartoon on his blog:

    http://seantevis.com/kansas/3000/running-for-office-xkcd-style/ [seantevis.com]

  • by seantevis (1346003) on Sunday August 17 2008, @02:29AM (#24632481)
    We've been on a few sites, but making it onto /. is something special.

    Running for state rep means earning the trust of many voters in a few short months. Word of mouth goes a long way, but voters can't be reached effectively by email. The net's contributions make it possible for me to keep up a full time campaign at five nines while still keeping my day job.

    I decided to run because my current state rep needed to retire. The 15th district needed someone better. I want to show the politicians in Topeka just how much difference a geek can make.

    With your help I got their attention. Keep it up; we plan to show those people the power of technology. Keep checking the blog [seantevis.com] for updates and new comics.

    -Sean
    sean@seantevis.com
      • Agreed. I'm also not donating, because I'm not a US citizen (nor do I even live in the US). But, if I was ALLOWED to donate, I almost certainly would. Same applies for Barack Obama.

        Now, some people reading this may ask, "why would this guy donate to a politician in a country he doesn't live in?" (or even, "a 'minor' politician in a state he's never even been to?"). The answer is actually pretty simple - the more politicians, ANYWHERE that support the same things I agree with, makes the world a better place in my eyes. Maybe one day I'll want to (or need to) visit Kansas. If I do, then in some way, the laws and policies of the place may have an effect on me. Or maybe I'll meet an American tourist over here, and become good friends - they might just happen to be from Kansas, and I'm always in favour of my friends having a better place to live!
        It's a small world, and almost everything, everywhere, affects almost everything else, everywhere else.

      • by YesIAmAScript (886271) on Saturday August 16 2008, @03:28PM (#24628235)

        His district. Not even a micropayment's worth.

        Let me put it this way, me and my buddies here in Silicon Valley could easy drop many thousands (hundreds of thousands if we do it as a group) on political races in Alabama, selecting candidates that represent our views, trying to make behave the way we want (pro-choice, etc.)

        But that wouldn't be right. Everyone is entitled to select representatives that represent them, and not those who live thousands of miles away.

        This person should be working within his community. That's where he's going to have effect anyway.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          Let me put it this way, me and my buddies here in Silicon Valley could easy drop many thousands (hundreds of thousands if we do it as a group) on political races in Alabama, selecting candidates that represent our views, trying to make behave the way we want (pro-choice, etc.) But that wouldn't be right. Everyone is entitled to select representatives that represent them, and not those who live thousands of miles away.

          Last time I checked candidates were elected based on the number of votes they received,