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I hung out with Omaha at a picnic held by various successful factions of the Democratic party, met with a senator, a representative, and a county councilmember, ate some really good hamburgers and listened to some fairly good, but excessively amplified, folk music.

I discovered that there is a difference between wonk and geek. Wonk is defined as "a person preoccupied with arcane details or procedures in a specialized field," and that might sound geeky, it's not, really. There's a connotative difference that leads wonks to being very different beasts.

Geekiness is rarely exhausting. When geeks get together in a room, they turn the music down and set to exploring a problem space. The coalition of minds is always greater than its parts; geeks exchange information rapidly, cut each other off as they strive for conclusions, and seek solutions to the problems they have set for themselves and each other or, quite often, discuss the scope of the problem space and the potential pitfalls of enlarging it. Geeks might go home tired, but they are rarely exhausted; usually, an encounter with fellow geeks in exhilirating.

In contrast, wonkiness is often exhausting. It's also somewhat discordant. Geeks, for example, would never allow the music to be so loud as to discourage communication. If anything, I suspect the music came from the Democratic tradition of being a bottom-up, "many concerns all sorta moving in the same direction" institution. But working through that wore me out.

A failure of geek is lessons learned, not mortal blows. A good geek is allowed to fail, as long as progress toward a minimum viable product until a fatal assumption is hit, at which point the project diverges, the useful features and lessons are kept, and a new minimum viable product target is set.

A failure of wonk, however, often comes with loss of reputation and power that can be devastating. The people on your blackberry stop answering the phones, and rebuilding a network can take years. Dealing with people constantly has to be exhausting, even for the most social person, especially when you're tracking a number of people larger than your monkeysphere. Makes me wonder if David Brooks's observation on how socially wrecked most congressmen are fits into this observation: they've attenuated the monkeysphere they need to be human, turning that space in the mental rolodex over to remembering the power relationships they have to maintain. Wonkiness is still engaged in a certain turf-warring mindset that comes with dealing with both people and power.

When I expressed this discovery to someone, she said, "But that's not what this is about. We're not here to solve anything. This picnic is just for fun." And then she immediately turned around and asked the senator what could be done to get the health care reform issue moving through Congress once more.

And that was typical. Everyone wanted to talk about how to solve the problem of the new, angry and disruptive elements appearing at town hall meetings and so forth. There were good suggestions. They were just hard to hear over the pointless folk singing.

Date: 2009-08-10 05:39 pm (UTC)
ext_3294: Tux (Default)
From: [identity profile] technoshaman.livejournal.com
*sigh*

The way to deal with terrorists of any sort - kaboomy or simply vocal as these ones are - is to actually *address* their concerns. Don't give them any reason to get all rowdy, or at least give them reasons not to be that don't involve repression.

These wonks just want to deal with the symptom, not the problem

(The *problem*, of course, is that between Big Pharma and the Trial Lawyers' Association, Congress is 0wn3d, and they're not *about* to become un-bought.)

It has become obvious that the Fix is In: FISA, torture, status quo ante for the TSA, and now so-called healthcare reform carefully written so that the fat cats in their ivory towers who care nothing for patients but are all about the Almighty Dollar will get their pound of flesh out of our collective backsides no matter what...

Revolution at the ballot box has failed.

Date: 2009-08-10 07:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] darrelx.livejournal.com
Darn those disruptive Folk Singers! They must have been organized and financed by conservative action groups.

Oh... wait... maybe they were just singing.

Date: 2009-08-10 07:31 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] elfs.livejournal.com
Oh, I'm sure whoever invited him meant well.

Democrats have always been good at shooting themselves in the foot. I just despair that Republicans have apparently learned that skill.

Excellent Distinction

Date: 2009-08-10 07:51 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Excellent distinction between the two types.

The most fun group get-togethers I've yet attended are a dozen to two dozen writers over dinner. These used to happen (probably still do, I just don't attend any more) at Comicon. The amount of creativity in the repartee and jokes tops anything else for me.

--DB_Story

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