Originally Posted by
ZenNMotion
Wow, I never expected blowback on this. Let me first apologize for being a poor messenger, as I don't think it's possible that anyone here could disagree about the goal of the campaign- to bring a monster to justice. If that's what's being debated then we really do have some work to do. J44ke, I purposely wanted the video to speak for itself and the campaign with being a little cryptic- the point being to look at a better (compelling) perspective than I could provide in a few lines. The transparency of focus, who is behind the project, and the agenda are well covered in the video if you watched it, if not there are ample links to get more info if you're inspired or angered. In this case, flame the messenger (me) and not the campaign or confuse the goal with the use of social media- it's essentially a young (age) campaign. That's what the kids do nowadays, makes me feel like a dinosaur in the age of mammals. And J44ke, I certainly had no intention of implying any self-righteous "you're not stretched"-- hell, I'm not stretched either to a lot of issues and perspectives either, it's a big world with no moral high ground for me to occupy. Stretching in this case means only a moment of awareness that atrocities are being committed in a part of the world that is largely closed to journalists and the media; don't worry you're still a good person if you don't know much about it.
If you're still reading, davids "I find the rhetoric around "changing the world" through "connectedness" interlocked with the goals of this campaign more than a little troubling" - well sorry for that. Don't overthink it, the connectedness is simply that the thousands of children and women abducted murdered and raped by Kony's "troops" are powerless to do much about it and we (you and me) are in a position to improve that reality. Maybe I'm off base, but I interpret "troubled" as angry. I'm not a completely naive crackpot, I've spent time in Northern Uganda/Eastern Congo, seen the villages without boys, seen the mutilations and yes there is a multidimensional and complicated backstory here with Joseph Kony. As there is/was with Bin Laden in another part of the world, yet we nearly universally accept him as evil worthy of being taken out. We just haven't heard much about Kony in the Great Lakes because it hasn't been reported. Without a military to be embedded with, the region is a difficult if not dangerous place for reporters to get to. But it still matters, right? Davids, I enjoyed sharing a great conversation over a meal and a great ride at Ballers, you're a great dude with a good heart, I look forward to it again.
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