How Social Media swayed me to vote for Obama

Published by Karen Snyder on

I heard a word on TV last night that I don’t think I have ever heard on TV before. “LAYAWAY.” It’s certainly not a new concept — I’ve just never heard it on a TV ad. K-Mart is advertising to “start your holiday shopping early, put it on layaway and you’ll have it in time for Christmas.”

My husband’s parents amassed a small fortune despite having a modest income and raising 9 children. Whenever I asked Dave how they did it, he said “they grew up during the Great Depression.” For the first time in my life I actually understand this mentality. I am very fortunate I don’t have to make any tough choices (yet) but I chat with the security guard at our office who had to stop taking his law school night classes because the cost of gas.

Younger Americans are going to be affected by the economy. The cost of college is skyrocketing, and recent Business School grads will find that there are no jobs available.

I was planning to vote for McCain until about a month ago. The choice of Sarah Palin as running mate was disappointing, but I am strongly opposed to big government because I have had experience working with unmotivated, uninspired Federal workers. They are not rewarded for taking risks, only punished when things go wrong. I worked for a Federal contractor and I saw how they stretch out a project — the longer it takes, the more money they get. This is why I want my tax dollars to stay local; I am suspicious of “big government.”

But I was swayed by the passion and enthusiasm I see in the user-generated content on YouTube — GenY LOVES Obama. I also saw the fanatical support on my Facebook network (Gen X), and through the people I follow on Twitter. Several of my good friends (Fay Mark, Karen Henke and Mary-Dixie Carter) were rabid Obama supporters from the start. The social network “My.BarackObama.com” helped them reach out to people like me.

Times are tough, and we’re probably only seeing the beginning. When people are losing their homes, their savings, and the promise of a prosperous future, the only thing that is going to keep them going is hope. This is why I voted for Obama. But I might not have really seen the passion people have for Obama if it weren’t for my online social networks.

I got inspired to write this blog post when I read this article from Wired: Propelled by Internet, Barack Obama Wins Presidency


1 Comment

Karen Henke · November 6, 2008 at 11:42 am

We are entering new political territory here. A candidate propelled by the social network will also be compelled to answer to it. The next 4 years will see a major transformation in how people like us have the opportunity to express our opinions about policy and become better informed about it.

I’m also hoping that the participation of young voters will put their issues on the agenda. Deficit spending is stealing their future! Now that they have some political clout, I hope they use it to demand more financial accountability!

Comments are closed.