― 1 file link ―

---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: "Jen Pahlka" <j...@codeforamerica.org>
Date: Jan 12, 2017 11:44 PM
Subject: [brigade-organizers] The President's final ask of us
To: "brigade-capta...@codeforamerica.org" <
brigade-capta...@codeforamerica.org>, "Brigade Organizers" <
brigade-organiz...@codeforamerica.org>, "Brigade Community Organizers" <
brigade-community-organiz...@codeforamerica.org>, "Delivery Leads" <
delivery-le...@codeforamerica.org>, "Brigade Storytellers" <
brigade-storytell...@codeforamerica.org>
Cc: "Christopher Whitaker" <christop...@codeforamerica.org>, "Nicole
Neditch" <nic...@codeforamerica.org>

Dear Coders for America of all stripes,

I had the honor and privilege of attending President Obama’s farewell
speech on Tuesday. As my friends drew me forward through the crowd of
thousands, I found myself among the hundreds close enough to the podium to
feel like every word the President said was said directly to me. True, he
has the preternatural ability to make everyone, no matter how close or far
away, feel deeply personally connected. But this night was special, and
many of the words he spoke felt directed right at me, to be shared with all
of you. And for us to act on, together.

Before I tell you about last night, let me remind you of a bit of Code for
America history. Back in 2009, I was working on the Gov 2.0 Summit along
with my now-husband Tim O’Reilly. We were inspired by the notion that the
principles and values of the web — not has it had been but as it was
becoming, reemerging as a fundamentally participatory medium — could be
applied to the difficult job of governing our country, just as those
principles in action had helped to mobilize and organize hundreds of
thousands of people to elect our first black President.
​ ​
That President had in turn created the roles of Chief Technology Officer
and Chief Information Officer, and filled those roles with Aneesh Chopra
and Vivek Kundra, respectively. Both men were working with us on the
content of the conference, and sharing with us secondhand what their boss,
the President, thought the agenda should be. On one conference call, Vivek
shared with Tim that the President thought these ideas about government as
a platform were good ones, but that he thought the outcome of all this
thinking about the future of government in a digital age should go beyond
talk and be more than just a conference. He didn’t specify what he meant in
that moment, but he challenged us as the conference organizers to take this
further, to act. His words came to me second hand (or maybe even third, I
don’t recall), but they stuck with me. Our President had asked for
something, and it felt like our duty to provide it. Code for America was
born in part from his words.

So much good has come from the President’s words and the actions they
inspired through this movement. Actions taken by tens of thousands of
people: everyone on the Code for America team, volunteers in Code for
America Brigades and other groups around the country, 150+ fellows, our
partners and allies in local government, our brothers and sisters in
federal government, especially those in USDS, 18F, the Presidential
Innovation Fellows program, and the agencies they serve. But last night,
the President’s words gave us new marching orders, and they must now
inspire their own actions.

Most of what he said was not new, and was meant to strengthen our resolve
to continue what we started. Let’s start with those words.


*“Change only happens when ordinary people get involved.”*
In 2009, when I first quit my job to start Code for America, it was clear
that government needed to change how it operates to be relevant and
effective in a new era defined by digital communications and capabilities.
Eight years later, there’s no denying that’s happening, and that it
wouldn’t have happened without a whole lot of ordinary people who became
extraordinary when they decided change was not someone else’s job. Some of
them decided to take a chance on a crazy program called Code for America,
and some of them continued on in government afterwards. Michael Evans was
the first Code for America fellow to take a job in government after
graduating, and today he’s still making City Hall work better for
Bostonians as a designer and program director. Others decided to organize
their communities around this vision, and formed local Brigades and Hack
Nights. Jill Bjers was one of those, and today the volunteers she and Jim
Van Fleet organize build and maintain ways for the people of Charlotte, NC
to interact with their city government that are simple, beautiful, and easy
to use. Still others have built companies that bridge the gap to the 21st
century for government. Dan Getelman, Tiffany Chu, Sam Hashemi and Danny
Whalen are doing that at Remix, wowing the world of public transit two
years after completing successful Code for America fellowships. Each of
these people and many thousands more decided change was up to them — and
look at the change we have made, together!

More of the President’s words last night reflect how I feel about this
community we’ve built:

*What a radical idea, the great gift that our Founders gave to us. The
freedom to chase our individual dreams through our sweat, and toil, and
imagination — and the imperative to strive together as well, to achieve a
common good, a greater good.*

That’s what I see when I picture the Code for America network: each of us
chasing dreams of the change we want to see in the world, connected around
the idea of a common good, a greater good. But I also hear in the
President’s words a call to do better.


*If something needs fixing, then lace up your shoes and do some organizing.*
Our nascent network is valuable, but it isn’t yet as well organized as it
could be. We have work to do to frame and cultivate the connections between
Code for America’s activities within our brick walls and the work of
Brigades, other volunteers, digital service units in governments at all
levels, startups and established companies, procurement reformers, and the
pipeline of tech talent into government. We need to study Becky Bond and
Zack Exley’s Rules for Revolutionaries and create the ways in which
everyone who believes in the vision of government that works for the
American people in the 21st century can help bring that vision to life,
meaningfully. We need to honor the big ambitions of our community and make
the big asks. I challenge our team to rise to that occasion this year, and
to find ways to fulfill the promise of Code for America as a platform for
anyone who wants to be a part of this change.

Here’s another thing the President wants us to do better: unite. Last
night, he continued to signal his unflagging commitment to treat the
incoming administration with respect. He admonished the audience clearly
and firmly when his remarks about the upcoming change in power were met
with boos from a loyal audience.


*In 10 days the world will witness a hallmark of our democracy. (Audience
boos.) No, no, no, no, no. The peaceful transfer of power from one
freely-elected President to the next. I committed to President-Elect Trump
that my administration would ensure the smoothest possible transition, just
as President Bush did for me.*
Then, he repeatedly called for us to reach beyond our comfort zones and
seek understanding with people whose political beliefs might differ from
our own.


*For too many of us it’s become safer to retreat into our own bubbles,
whether in our neighborhoods, or on college campuses, or places of worship,
or especially our social media feeds, surrounded by people who look like us
and share the same political outlook and never challenge our assumptions.*
The President asked us to find common ground and “a basic sense of
solidarity” with people with whom we may disagree.


*Understand democracy does not require uniformity. Our founders argued,
they quarreled, and eventually they compromised. They expected us to do the
same. But they knew that democracy does require a basic sense of
solidarity. The idea that, for all our outward differences, we’re all in
this together, that we rise or fall as one.*
We in the Code for America community are incredibly well-equipped to find
common ground. In fact, we’re standing right on it. On Monday, I met with
Congressional staff on the budget committee, armed with a passionate plea
to continue and even invest further in the USDS and 18F, only to find my
plea was unnecessary. These and other Republican leaders already know that
digital competence in government is good for the American public, and
they’re already looking for ways to double down on it in all the areas I
care deeply about. Instead of talking about why or what, we spent the
meeting talking about how.

Then we snuck over to the Capitol, where a friend who works for the
Republican leadership gave us an inspiring behind-the-scenes tour. This
friend has been a an active supporter of Code for America and our movement
for years, while working for Republican leaders in Congress. Whenever I see
this friend, I am reminded that I don’t compromise my values when I work
with someone whose political beliefs differ from mine. In fact, I’m doing
what I’m supposed to do as a citizen, and what the President wants me to do
and has tried so hard to do himself. Now we as the Code for America
community must find courage and do this actively.

We are also incredibly well-equipped to build on this common ground because
of the core values and practices of Code for America. Learning to
communicate and work with people who think differently than you is an
experience common to every Code for America fellow, Brigade member,
government partner, and member of our staff. Every one of us has
encountered people we believe “just don’t get it” when it comes to how
government should operate in a digital age. Every one of us has found ways
to not just reach those people and convince them of what we have to offer,
but to realize what THEY have to offer us, and to learn as much as we
teach. Perhaps this is exactly the training we needed to rise to the
occasion of this moment in our nation’s history.

There are many other things the President said last night that will stay
with me my whole life, including the incredible feelings of solidarity,
love, and hope that pervaded the vast room (along with the inevitable
tears). But there is one more marching order I will call out.


*So regardless of the station we occupy; we all have to try harder.*
Everyone in that room felt this, I believe, but it was another moment when
I was absolutely certain the President was staring into my eyes and
speaking directly into my ears. For all the pride I have in what we have
achieved, we don’t get to choose the size and shape of the challenges we
face, and as a nation, we are facing some biggies. I am going to have to
try harder, continuing to close any gaps in the alignment of our goals and
our team, and continuing to build the base of support we need. And everyone
at Code for America and in our network is going to have to try harder and
to set bigger goals, the most important of which is how to grow our reach
and prove our relevance. We have to serve and work with more people, and we
have to hold true to the mantra of “with, not for.” As we grow, we must
hold ourselves accountable to increasing our leverage, not just plugging
holes. We must strive towards scale, and we must scale through networks and
communities because we cannot achieve what we were meant to achieve without
the help of everyone who is willing and able.

President Obama ended his speech with an ask:


*I do have one final ask of you as your president — the same thing I asked
when you took a chance on me eight years ago. I am asking you to believe.
Not in my ability to bring about change — but in yours.*
As I said in the beginning, his words were directed at me, but for me to
share with all of you. YOU have the ability to bring about real change at a
massive scale. The President believes it. I believe it. And I’m asking you
to believe it too.

Yours,
Jen


​

--
Jennifer Pahlka
Founder/Executive Director, Code for America
mobile: 415 420 2933 <(415)%20420-2933>
Support Code for America in your end of year charitable giving!
https://www.codeforamerica.org/donate

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
"Brigade Organizers" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an
email to brigade-organizers+unsubscr...@codeforamerica.org.
To post to this group, send email to brigade-organiz...@codeforamerica.org.
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/a/codeforamerica.org/group/
brigade-organizers/.
To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/a/
codeforamerica.org/d/msgid/brigade-organizers/CA%2BnbXmvgWg4TZ-
5oSfik8wPVOQMkPso0CvrWZ0aTapAjsoE3zA%40mail.gmail.com
<https://groups.google.com/a/codeforamerica.org/d/msgid/brigade-organizers/CA%2BnbXmvgWg4TZ-5oSfik8wPVOQMkPso0CvrWZ0aTapAjsoE3zA%40mail.gmail.com?utm_medium=email&utm_source=footer>
.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/a/
codeforamerica.org/d/optout.

― 1 file ―

  📎 IMG_20170110_195209.jpg  (2mb)
      http://groups.dowire.org/r/file/hhKKpsXY4QFJ9Nvgy8uDbPMpNHv-a5aC-2C1g58u/


――
View topic http://groups.dowire.org/r/topic/4Ex4n2sOXxqyoX5PkqdLQt
Leave group mailto:newswire@groups.dowire.org?subject=Unsubscribe

Reply via email to