Vote.Com: How Big-Money Lobbyists and the Media Are Losing Their Influence, and the Internet is Giving Power Back to the People Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Vote.Com: How Big-Money Lobbyists and the Media Are Losing Their Influence, and the Internet is Giving Power Back to the People Book

Vote.com will undoubtedly make some readers wonder what the heck Bill Clinton ever saw in Dick Morris, the political consultant who was a driving force in the president's "triangulation" towards a more conservative political agenda. At the heart of the book is a bold pronouncement: people are going to start voting on the Internet, Morris declares, and the powers that be are going to have to listen. But Morris's understanding of the Internet is so muddled, and his representation of "voting" so misleading, that the book is difficult to take seriously. Let's take, for example, his claim that the Internet is eliminating intermediaries. Yes, the Net has made it possible for consumers to do some purchasing directly. But when Morris asserts that "we are increasingly buying our clothing, food, pharmaceuticals, books, compact discs... without ever setting foot in a store," he's only half right. It's true that you're not physically traveling to a store to make these purchases, but online retailers do not always cut out the middle man--they're just different kinds of stores. Morris's book ignores economic reality in many other key ways. He believes, for example, that "the Internet will do for journalism what free agency has done for baseball players," by which he apparently means that journalists will become rich and powerful and able to set their own agendas. The reasoning is flawed: even with free agency, ballplayers depend upon team owners to hire them to practice their craft, and the salaries are widely divergent. Journalists who try to become one-man online enterprises will find that the success of Matt Drudge is not necessarily a harbinger of the future. (For that matter, Drudge's only real financial success came when he allied himself with big-media conglomerates--and his moment in the sun seems to have vanished along with the clamor for Bill Clinton's impeachment.) Morris similarly believes that all news outlets will become equal online: "Users will find their way to any site to read a story that strikes their interest. The brand name will count for little." While his belief in the willingness of online users to dig relentlessly for information is admirable, it's just as likely that corporate agreements between traditional media outlets and portals like Netscape, AOL, and Yahoo! will ensure that most people see a version of online news that's primarily a "new and improved" version of the same old product. And let's not forget that huge sectors of the populace aren't even on the Internet yet. There's plenty about Vote.com that's laughable, like Morris's repeated invocation of "the X Generation," but the biggest joke of all may be the very notion of "Internet voting." Boiled down to its essence, the concept is nothing more than self-selecting opinion polls. Expressing one's opinion isn't necessarily the same thing as voting, and the results so far have been mixed. (Remember when a Howard Stern sidekick became the choice of the masses for People's Sexiest Man Alive?) Yet Morris gazes into the future of "direct democracy" with starry eyes: "What small size and intimate geography permitted ancient Athens to accomplish, the Internet will let America and the world accomplish." (Perhaps somebody should point out to Morris that ancient Greece was only a democratic paradise if you were lucky enough to be a citizen; women, slaves, and the working classes didn't have it as well off.) There's also a bunch of material in Vote.com about how Bill Clinton's "unimpeachment" represents the death knell of old media power, which Morris attempts to piggyback onto his proclaimed rise of new Internet power. His political analysis in those chapters is sharper, but it doesn't do much to rescue the book from its most fundamental flaws. --Ron Hogan Read More

from£18.72 | RRP: £10.30
* Excludes Voucher Code Discount Also available Used from £12.57
  • Product Description

    Forget everything you think you know about politics.In Vote.com, a revolutionary new book, Dick Morris identifies an overwhelming new force in American politics - the Internet.On his popular Web site of the same name, Morris envisions a world in which current political institutions, special interests, and the media are forced to return power to the people.The overwhelming public support for President Clinton during the impeachment hearings, via the Internet, changed the way Congress and the media consider the electorate.In the process, the fifty million people who log onto the Web every day re-invented our government.Dick Morris, the master of polling, spin, and television advertising, explains how anyone with access to a computer is now directly involved in the political process and can contact representatives directly and get their voice heard by those who are listening intently to everything the new medium has to offer.Who knows better than bestselling author Dick Morris where America is headed?His uncanny sixth sense for analyzing the shifts in the public's moods was the driving force behind Bill Clinton's 1996 presidential re-election campaign.Vote.com is his manifesto for the "Fifth Estate," a term he uses to describe the amalgam of Internet technology and the new voters who will no longer stand by passively while the media and the old-school institutions tell them what they think, feel, and believe.AUTHORBIO: Dick Morris started his political career working in Democratic Party politics on Manhattan's Upper West Side.His long association with President Clinton began in the late 1970's and continued for twenty years.He has also worked as an advisor to Senate Majority Leader Trent Lott and other Republicans.Time magazine referred to him as "The most influential private citizen in America...a gleeful genius."He lives in New York City.

  • 1580631630
  • 9781580631631
  • Dick Morris
  • 1 August 2000
  • Renaissance Books
  • Paperback (Book)
  • 256
As an Amazon Associate we earn from qualifying purchases. If you click through any of the links below and make a purchase we may earn a small commission (at no extra cost to you). Click here to learn more.

Would you like your name to appear with the review?

We will post your book review within a day or so as long as it meets our guidelines and terms and conditions. All reviews submitted become the licensed property of www.find-book.co.uk as written in our terms and conditions. None of your personal details will be passed on to any other third party.

All form fields are required.