BREAKING: I Actually Like a Republican
So apparently there was some big Orange Festival-Carnival-Dance-To Do or something in Houston that anyone who is anyone goes to….the same night as my signing. Brilliant timing right?
Actually, yes. I’m always secretly happy for a small intimate crowd because you can actually have deep conversations with people. I had quite a few last night. One guy marched up, barked a few questions at me including “WHAT VCS DO YOU KNOW?” to which I blankly stared and finally asked how long he had. I mean, it’s pretty much been my job for ten years to know as many as possible. It’s a bit like asking an Eskimo to describe all the snowflakes he’s ever seen. Said guy also informed me if you had an innovative new drill bit you could start a company in Houston. Otherwise, you leave. Period. Not a single good software developer to be found in the city limits. He was there for “free babysitting” and then getting the hell out. And then he marched off. As someone who loves efficiency and bold statements, he was a man after my own heart.
Olivia and I also got personality tests that showed—among other things—we have no secrets and my husband is like candy to me: The sweetest part of my life, but it can also give me a toothache at times. Also, Olivia sees problems in life like a little chipmunk she can solve by patting them on the head. (Delusional!) I see them as a big grizzly bear on hind legs charging at me. What do I do? MACE THE BITCH! (Bad ass!) We lifecasted the “readings”….posts to come later.
But I have to say the single best conversation I had was with David Wallace, with whom I shared the event. David wrote “One Nation Under Blog” and is the former mayor of Sugar Land, Texas. He’s a Texas republican who was introduced to me by my new BFF Erica O'Grady as the man who will one day be President. Another republican Texan as President? You can understand my hesitancy to shake his hand.
But it was perfect at this moment in American history and my own life to do an event where politics and Web 2.0 were colliding. David’s book is about how Web 2.0 is determining the future of politics; my book chronicles the rise of those very technologies. He’s a politician who can’t stop thinking about the Web and its impact. I’m a tech reporter who can’t stop thinking about this upcoming election and its impact. We probably could have talked for about 45 hours, each wanting to somehow can-opener the other’s brain and just cherry-pick the contents.
From the conversations we did have, I have to say W has given Texas republicans an unnecessary bad name. David isn’t a fear-based, reactionary politician. Although terrified by the ugly side of the net-- think pedophiles lurking on MySpace and anonymous bloggers calling him a drug dealer-- as mayor David worked to understand the net and educate parents and schools how kids should be careful using it—not lobby banning it or somehow trying to regulate it. He’s also an avid Twitter user—writing his Twitters himself, not outsourcing it to a staffer. (Wait: does that mean he’s a terrorist?)
During our public chat—which is Qik’ed below—I prefaced a lot of obnoxious statements with “I’m just a crazy San Francisco liberal…” as my way of apologizing in advance for the jerky partisan statement-masquerading-as-a-question I was about to ask. (The recording stops before I go too far, sadly.) One of the things I just had to know was his opinion of McCain picking Sarah Palin as a running mate. He said he was horrified and said we could talk about it more later. We did. And I was impressed with how many issues a crazy San Francisco liberal and a Texas Republican politician could actually agree on. Perhaps the most important thing we agreed on: We both voted for Obama. Boo-ya. I left with a huge appreciation and hope that a non-Karl Rove republican party actually exists in America in larger numbers than it seems and that maybe Sarah Palin isn’t the future of the party—maybe people like David are.
I also got a copy of his book, which I’ll read and review once, um, Erica ships it because apparently I waltzed right out of Caroline Collective leaving it on the table.
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It is going to be fun to watch the Republican party fight it out. I hope those like David Wallace are able to take control back, or go rogue and start a new party!
If anything, Support of Sarah Palin helps me determine those Republicans I can't have a political conversation with. Makes it easy!
Posted by: Nancy King | November 02, 2008 at 08:34 PM
The Republican party's identity crisis will hit full steam if they lose the election. With approval ratings clearly showing a massive chunk of unhappy Republicans it's no wonder they will have to regroup and rethink what their party is about, other than doing whatever it takes to win elections. It's also hard to run on a platform of, "vote for me -- we want to create a government that does as little as possible."
Posted by: Andy | November 03, 2008 at 06:23 AM
Hey Sarah! You and Olivia make quite the dynamic duo. It was great meeting you both and I'm glad you enjoyed the personality test. I just watched your interview with John Hanson on Yahoo TechTicker, good stuff. Things are going to be tougher for enterprise software companies more than ever, but that's the problem that comes with shifty software pricing. Well, if you and Olivia are ever in Houston again, let me know. You two are AWESOME!
Posted by: Glenn Gutierrez | November 04, 2008 at 10:34 AM
Howdy from TX...
Hope you had a good time down here in TX and thanks for making the trip down here to Houston. I'll revise my statement a bit in saying there are no good SW guys/gals here, but they are so rare here that they don't have peers at their firms and therefore don't progress they way they could somwhere else. I missed part of your talk and so maybe you had covered that in the start. Sorry about the barking - I blame my upbringing :). If you know anyone at Kayne Anderson please ping me.
thanks
jr
Posted by: JR | December 08, 2008 at 11:43 PM