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		<title>Philadelphia Yearly Meeting’s Interim Meeting: Getting a horse to drink</title>
		<link>https://www.quakerranter.org/getting_a_horse_to_drink/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Martin Kelley]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 15 Sep 2010 19:40:20 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.quakerranter.org/?p=835</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[This past weekend I gave a talk at the Arch Street Meetinghouse after the Interim Meeting sessions of Philadlephia Yearly Meeting. Interim Meeting is the group that meets sort-of monthly between yearly meeting business sesssions. In an earlier blog post I called it “the establishment” and I looked forward to sharing the new life of [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This past weekend I gave a talk at the Arch Street Meetinghouse after the Interim Meeting sessions of Philadlephia Yearly Meeting. Interim Meeting is the group that meets sort-of monthly between yearly meeting business sesssions. In an earlier blog post I called it “the establishment” and I looked forward to sharing the new life of the blogging world and Convergent Friends with this group. I had been asked by the most excellent Stephen Dotson to talk about “<a href="http://www.quakerquaker.org/events/finding-fellowship-between">Finding Fellowship Between Friends Thru The Internet</a>.”</p>
<p><img data-recalc-dims="1" decoding="async" src="https://i0.wp.com/www.martinkelley.com/skitch/Martin_at_PYM-20100915-154516.jpg?w=640" alt align="right">I was curious to return to Interim Meeting, a group I served on about half a decade ago. As I sat in the meeting, I kept seeing glimpses of issues that I planned to address afterwards in my talk: how to talk afresh about faith; how to publicize our activity and communicate both among ourselves and with the outside world; how to engage new and younger members in our work.</p>
<p>Turns out I didn’t get the chance. Only half a dozen or so members of Interim Meeting stuck around for my presentation. No announcement was made at the end of sessions. None of the senior staff were there and no one from the long table full of clerks, alternate clerks and alternate alternate clerks came. Eleven people were at the talk (including some who hadn’t been at Interim Meeting). The intimacy was nice but it was hardly the “take it to the estabishment” kind of event I had imagined.</p>
<p><img data-recalc-dims="1" decoding="async" src="https://i0.wp.com/www.martinkelley.com/skitch/The_audience-20100915-154642.jpg?w=640" alt align="right">The talk itself went well, despite or maybe because of its intimacy. I had asked Seth H (aka Chronicler) along for spiritual support and he wrote a <a href="http://www.quakerquaker.org/profiles/blog/show?id=2360685:BlogPost:31346&amp;commentId=2360685:Comment:31673&amp;xg_source=activity">nice review</a> on QuakerQuaker. Steve T, an old friend of mine from Central Philly days, took some pictures which I’ve included here. I videoed the event, though it will need some work to tighten it down to something anyone would want to watch online. The people who attended wanted to attend and asked great questions. It was good working with Stephen Dotson again in the planning. I would wish that more Philadelphia Friends had more interest in these issues but as individuals, all we can do is lead a horse to water. In the end, the yearly meeting is in God’s hands.</p>
<hr>
<p><em>Below are observations from Interim Meeting and how the Convergent Friends movement might address some of the issues raised. Let me stress that I offer these in love and in the hope that some honest talk might help. I’ve served on Interim Meeting and have given a lot of time toward PYM over the last twenty years. This list was forwarded by email to senior staff and I present them here for others who might be concerned about these dynamics.</em></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p><strong>GENERATIONAL FAIL: </strong></p>
<p>There were about seventy-five people in the room for Interim Meeting sessions. I was probably the third or fourth youngest. By U.S. census definitions I’m in my eighth year of middle age, so that’s really sad. That’s two whole generations that are largely missing from PYM leadership. I know I shouldn’t be surprised; it’s not a new phenomenon. <em>But if you had told me twenty years ago that I’d be able to walk into Interim Meeting in 2010 and still be among the youngest, well…</em> Well, frankly I would have uttered a choice epithet and kicked the Quaker dust from my shoes (<a href="https://www.quakerranter.org/2003/09/the_lost_quaker_generation/">most of my friends did</a>). I know many Friends bodies struggle with age diversity but this is particularly extreme.</p>
<p>WHAT I WANTED TO TELL INTERIM MEETING: <a href="http://www.quakerads.com/publishers/quakerquaker-org">About 33% of QuakerQuaker’s audience is GenX and 22% are Millenials</a>. If Interim Meeting were as diverse as QuakerQuaker there would have been 16 YAFs (18–35 year olds) and 25 Friends 35 and 49 years of age.<em> I would have been about the 29th youngest in the room–middle aged, just where I should be! </em>QuakerQuaker has an age diversity that most East Coast Friends Meetings would die for. If you want to know the interests and passions of younger Friends, Quaker blogs are an excellent place to learn. There are some very different organizational and style differences at play (<a href="https://www.quakerranter.org/emergent_church_movement_the_younger_evangelicals_and_quaker_renewal.php">my post seven years ago</a>, <a href="http://lambswar.blogspot.com/2010/09/bridging-generational-divide-in.html">a post from Micah Bales this past week</a>).</p>
<hr>
<p><strong>DECISION-MAKING</strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The first part of the sessions was run with what’s called a “Consent Agenda,” a legislative measure where multiple agenda items are approved en masse. It rests on the idealistic notion that all seventy-five attendees has come to sessions having read everything in the quarter-inch packet mailed to them (I’ll wait till you stop laughing). Interim Meeting lumped thirteen items together in this manner. I suspect most Friends left the meeting having forgotten what they had approved. Most educators would say you have to reinforce reading with live interaction but we bypassed all of that in the name of efficiency.</p>
<p>WHAT I WANTED TO TELL INTERIM MEETING: Quaker blogs are wonderfully rich sources of discussion. Comments are often more interesting than the original posts. Many of us have written first drafts of published articles on our blogs and then polished them with feedback received in the comments. This kind of communication feedback is powerful and doesn’t take away from live meeting-time. There’s a ton of possibilities for sharing information in a meaningful way outside of meetings.</p>
<hr>
<p><strong>MINUTES OF WITNESS</strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Two “minutes” (a kind of Quaker statement/press release) were brought to sessions. Both were vetted through a lengthy process where they were approved first by monthly and then quarterly meetings before coming before Interim Meeting. A minute on Afghanistan was nine months old, a response to a troop level announcement made last December; one against Marcellus Shale drilling in Pennsylvania was undated but it’s a topic that peaked in mainstream media five months ago. I would have more appreciation of this cumbersome process if the minutes were more “seasoned” (well-written, with care taken in the discernment behind them) but there was little in either that explained how the issue connected with Quaker faith and why we were lifting it up now as concern. A senior staffer in a small group I was part of lamented how the minutes didn’t give him much guidance as to how he might explain our concern with the news media. So here we were, approving two out-of-date, hard-to-communicate statements that many IM reps probably never read.</p>
<p>WHAT I WANTED TO TELL INTERIM MEETING: Blogging gives us practice in talking about spirituality. Commenters challenge us when we take rhetorical shortcuts or make assumptions or trade on stereotypes. Most Quaker bloggers would tell you they’re better writers now than when they started their blog. <em>Spiritual writing is like a muscle which needs to be exercised</em>. To be bluntly honest, two or three bloggers could have gotten onto Skype, opened a shared Google Doc and hammered out better statements in less than an hour. <em>If we’re going to be approving these kinds of thing we need to practice and increase our spiritual literacy.</em></p>
<hr>
<p><strong>THE ROLE OF COMMITTEES</strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>The second part was Interim Meeting looking at itself. We broke into small groups and asking three questions: “What is the work of Interim Meeting,” “Are we satisfied with how we do this now?” and “If we were to make changes, what would they be?.” I thought to myself that the reason I ever go to events like this is to see dear Friends and to see what sparks of life are happening in the yearly meeting. As our small group went around, and as small groups shared afterwards, I realized that many of the people in the room seemed to agree: we were hungry for the all-to-brief moments where the Spirit broke into the regimented Quaker process.</p>
<p>One startling testimonial came from a member of the outreach committee. She explained that her committee, like many in PYM, is an administrative one that’s not supposed to do any outreach itself–it’s all supposed to stay very “meta.” They recently decided to have a picnic with no business scheduled and there found themselves “going rogue” and talking about outreach. <em>Her spirit rose and voice quickened as she told us how they spent hours dreaming up outreach projects. Of course the outreach committee wants to do outreach!</em> And with state PYM is in, can we really have a dozen people sequestered away talking about talking about outreach. <em>Shouldn’t we declare “All hands on deck!” and start doing work?</em> It would have been time well spent to let her share their ideas for the next thirty minutes but of course we had to keep moving. She finished quickly and the excitement leaked back out of the room.</p>
<hr>
<p><strong>FOLLOW-UP THOUGHTS AND THE FUTURE OF THE YEARLY MEETING</strong></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<p>Now I need to stress some things. I had some great one-on-one conversations in the breaks. A lot of people were very nice to me and gave me hugs and asked about family. These are a committed, hopeful group of people. There was a lot of faith in that room! People work hard and serve faithfully. But it feels like we’re trapped by the system we ourselves created. I wanted to share the excitement and directness of the Quaker blogging world. I wanted to share the robustness of communication techniques we’re using and the power of distributed publishing. I wanted to share the new spirit of ecumenticalism and cross-branch work that’s happening.</p>
<p>I’ve been visiting local Friends Meetings that have half the attendance they did ten years ago. Some have trouble breaking into the double-digits for Sunday morning worship and I’m often the youngest in the room, bringing the only small kids. I know there are a handful of thriving meetings, but I’m worried that most are going to have close their doors in the next ten to twenty years.</p>
<p>I had hoped to show how new communication structures, the rise of Convergent Friends and the seekers of the Emerging Church movement could signal new possibilities for Philadelphia Yearly Meeting. Toward the end of Interim Meeting, some Friends bemoaned our lack of resources and clerk Thomas Swain reminded them that with God there is no limitation and nothing is impossible. Some of the things I’m seeing online are the impossible come to life. Look at QuakerQuaker: an unstaffed online magazine running off of a $50/month budget and getting 10,000 visits a month. It’s not anything I’ve done, but this community that God has brought together and the technological infrastructure that has allowed us to coordinate so easily. It’s far from the only neat project out there and there are a lot more on the drawing boad. Some yearly meetings are engaging with these new possibilites. But mine apparently can’t even stay around for a talk.</p>
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		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">835</post-id>	</item>
		<item>
		<title>Pass the hummus, please, and by the way: are you a fed?</title>
		<link>https://www.quakerranter.org/pass_the_hummus_please_and_by/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Martin Kelley]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 22 Dec 2005 19:33:34 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.quakerranter.org/?p=601</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[It seems that every day brings new revelations from mainstream media about governmental spying on Americans. MS-NBC started the ball rolling on the 14th when they informed us that the Pentagon had a database of “protesters including the Raging Grannies and a dozen or so Quakers in Florida”:http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10454316. This must have prompted the New York [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>It seems that every day brings new revelations from mainstream media about governmental spying on Americans. </p>
<p>MS-NBC started the ball rolling on the 14th when they informed us that the Pentagon had a database of “protesters including the Raging Grannies and a dozen or so Quakers in Florida”:http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/10454316. This must have prompted the New York Times to publish a story they had been sitting on for a year: the scoop that Bush had ordered the super-secret “National Security Agency to start evesdropping on Americans”:http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/15/politics/15cnd-program.html following the 9/11 terror attacks. It’s revelation was an FBI agent’s email complaining about “radical militant librarians [who] kick us around”:http://www.ala.org/al_onlineTemplate.cfm?Section=alonline&amp;template=/ContentManagement/ContentDisplay.cfm&amp;ContentID=111469. Two days later we received the almost-humorous news that the Department of Homeland Security was hard at work monitoring the “Massachusett’s inter-library loan system “:http://www.southcoasttoday.com/daily/12 [UPDATE: this has been “revealed to be a hoax”:http://www.southcoasttoday.com/daily/12–05/12–24-05/a01lo719.htm by the student]. Trying to outdo the DHS in ridiculous, we learned on the 20th that “the FBI has been infiltrating vegan potlucks”:http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/20/politics/20fbi.html. Today it turns out the “New York City Police Department”:http://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/22/nyregion/22police.html has been doing its own extensive investigations into protesters. They even apparently staged mock arrests in an attempt to incite violence (their contribution to the self-parody has been to send officers undercover on bicycle protests).</p>
<p>Are we surprised by all this? Well, not really. The fears unleashed after 9/11 ignited a firestorm of paranoia in the ranks of spydom. Nonviolence.org got a call from the U.S. Secret Service when Osama bin Laden posted to the board that he wanted to kill President Bush (well, actually we’re pretty certain it was a acne-faced fourteen year old procrastinating on his geometry homework). When I shot “shot photos of a scuffle at a Biodemocracy protest a few months ago”:http://www.nonviolence.org/articles/2005/06/biodemocracy_pr.php a Philadelphia police detective was in my office an hour later wanting to see it (the “melee” was harmless except for a policeman with heart conditions who took that moment to have a heart attack).</p>
<p>While some monitoring and prudence is indeed necessary, what ties together the string of stories this week is the randomness of the targets. It’s as if the agencies had lost all sense of judgement. Anyone critical of the war (or even mainstream culture: witness the vegans) was considered a threat. All leads were investigated, no matter how silly. </p>
<p>While invading American’s privacy is upsetting and unwarranted, the greatest danger is the sheer mass of irrelevant information that’s been collected. What’s an agency to do with reams of data on bicycle riders and Quakers? Who’s watching the flight schools and fertilizer depots while Agent Nincompoop is trading hummus recipes with the cute vegan with the nosering?</p>
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		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">601</post-id>	</item>
		<item>
		<title>The Left Wing Conspiracy Revealed by Nonviolence.org</title>
		<link>https://www.quakerranter.org/the_left_wing_conspiracy_revea/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Martin Kelley]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 10 Dec 2004 12:45:27 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.quakerranter.org/?p=565</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Nonviolence.org readers may not be aware that my personal site has been the talk of the political internet for the last few days. Since posting an “account of getting a phone call from a CBS News publicist”, I’ve been linked to by a Who’s Who of blogging gliteratti: Wonkette, Instapundit, The Volokh Conspiracy, Little Green [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Nonviolence.org readers may not be aware that my personal site has been the talk of the political internet for the last few days. Since posting an “account of getting a phone call from a CBS News publicist”, I’ve been linked to by a Who’s Who of blogging gliteratti: <a href="http://www.wonkette.com/politics/personalities/for-sale-blogger-cheap-027350.p">Wonkette</a>, <a href="http://instapundit.com/archives/019731.php">Instapundit</a>, <a href="http://volokh.com/archives/archive_2004_12_07.shtml#1102546784">The Volokh Conspiracy</a>, <a href="http://littlegreenfootballs.com/weblog/?entry=13877_CBS_Recruiting_Anti-War_Bloggers">Little Green Footballs</a>, <a href="http://ratherbiased.com/news/content/view/518/2/">RatherBiased</a>, etc. For a short time yesterday, the story was a part of the second-ranked article on Technorati’s Politics Attention index.</p>
<p>A hack from CBS News called me to say they were doing a program on an issue that’s central to Nonviolence.org’s mandate: conscientious resistance to military service. After looking over the material, I thought the interviews of resisters who have fled to Canada would be interesting to my readers and so wrote a short entry on it. Thinking it all a little funny that a publicist would care about Nonviolence.org, I mentioned the incident in the “Stories of Nonviolence.org” section of my personal site. One by one the leading political sites of the blogosphere have run the story as further proof of the vast left-wing mainstream media conspiracy. It’s rather funny actually.</p>
<p>I have to wonder is who’s kidding who with all this feigned outrage? For those missing the irony gene: the Nonviolence.org PayPal account currently has a balance $6.18, the bulk of which comes from the last donation–$5.00 back on November 20th. My corner of the left wing conspiracy is funded by the vast personal wealth I accumulate as a bookstore clerk.</p>
<p>Wonkette’s pages advertise “sponsorship opportunities,” she’s a recent cover girl on <em>New York Times Magazine</em>, her husband is an editor at <em>New York</em> magazine and in October she cashed out her blogging fame for a $275,000 advance for her first novel (“It’s not Bridget Jones does Washington, it’s Nick Hornby does politics”: good grief). Eugene Volokh has clerked on the U.S. Supreme Court (for Sandra Day O’Connor), teaches law at UCLA and just had a big op-ed in the <em>Times</em>. Instapundit’s Glenn Reynolds teaches law at the University of Tennessee, has served on White House advisory panels, and is a paid correspondent for MSNBC. Yet he, like the others, calls a two minute phone call “recruiting”?</p>
<p>I’m beginning to think the real interest comes from the fact that this top tier of bloggers is totally in bed (literally) with the MSM. Their income comes from their connections with media and political power. Their carefully-crafted fascade of snarkish independence would crumble if their phone logs were made public. They’re not really blogging in their pajamas, folks.</p>
<p>By mentioning the existance of blog publicists, I’ve threatened to blow their cover. Pay no attention to the men behind the curtains: my social gaffe was in publicly admitting that the mainstream media courts political blogs. <a href="http://blog.derekrose.com/2004/12/cbs-courting-bloggers.html">Kudos to journalist Derek Rose</a> on admitting the practice:</p>
<blockquote><p>But why shouldn’t a news organization’s publicity department court bloggers? As a MSM member, I get emails from TV flacks all the time promoting their scoops. From ABC, for example, I’ve received emails regarding a tape they got of the Beltway sniper’s call to the Rockville police; Barbara Walters’ Hillary Clinton interview; and their ‘Azzam the American’ video … as well as a Rush Limbaugh drug laundering story that never panned out. I even got attention from publicists when I was working for a newspaper that didn’t have a 20th of the circulation of Instapundit…</p></blockquote>
<p>Rose aside, there’s incredible distortion in the “reporting,” a term I have to use very loosely. Wonkette says “Kelley claims that a CBS minion put the screws to him to post something about a ’60 Minutes’ package on conscientious objectors” yet all readers have to do is follow the link to see I never said anything like that. Why do the cream of bloggers feel like a posse of self-absorbed seventh graders? When I started Nonviolence.org back in 1995, I thought the brave new political world of the internet might be <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0074119/">All the President’s Men</a>. Boy was I wrong: it turns it’s just <a href="http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0097493/">Heathers</a>. God help us.</p>
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		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">565</post-id>	</item>
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		<title>The Berg questions few are asking</title>
		<link>https://www.quakerranter.org/the_berg_questions_few_are_ask/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Martin Kelley]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 May 2004 23:46:37 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Federal Bureau of Investigation]]></category>
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					<description><![CDATA[I am shocked and horrified by the decapitation of Nicholas Berg in Iraq, but not for the chest-puffing reasons the folks at Fox News are. U.S. military proxies held Berg without charges for an extended period of time and there are too many questions about when he was released and who he might have been [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I am shocked and horrified by the decapitation of Nicholas Berg in Iraq, but not for the chest-puffing reasons the folks at Fox News are. U.S. military proxies held Berg without charges for an extended period of time and there are too many questions about when he was released and who he might have been released to. I’m not one for conspiracy theories but there are real questions as to how Berg ended up in front of those anonymous, hooded butchers. Whatever the answers, the U.S. military is involved in his detention, as is the FBI (who made him miss a plane that was supposed to take him out of Iraq last month), as is the U.S. government back home who didn’t cooperate with his family to get him out of there.<br>
My major piece on this is over on the main Nonviolence.org site: “US military proxies held Berg before decaptiation; who were his executioners?”:http://www.nonviolence.org/articles/000340.php<br>
I’m sure to get even more hate mail than usual for this but I’ll also be watching the mainstream media coverage. I only know of many of these details because Berg was local and Channel 10 News gave background to Berg’s detention. Here’s my prediction from past experience: this story will be too hot for the mainstream media to question for a few days and then it will only be to report that there are some nutcases asking questions. Only after a few days of this kind of second-hand question will the national media drop the fascade and start asking the questions themselves. It should be a fun week ahead.</p>
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		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">77</post-id>	</item>
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		<title>History of Nonviolence.org, 1995–2008</title>
		<link>https://www.quakerranter.org/history_of_nonviolenceorg_1995/</link>
					<comments>https://www.quakerranter.org/history_of_nonviolenceorg_1995/#respond</comments>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Martin Kelley]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Fri, 13 Oct 1995 12:01:10 +0000</pubDate>
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		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.quakerranter.org/?p=636</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Nonviolence.Org was founded by Martin Kelley out of a home office way back in 1995. Over the 13 or so years of its existence, it won accolades and attention from the mainstream media and millions of visitors. It’s articles have been reprinted in countless movement journals and even in a featured USAToday editorial. From 2006: [&#8230;]]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[
<p>Nonviolence.Org was founded by <a href="http://www.martinkelley.com/">Martin Kelley</a> out of a home office way back in 1995. Over the 13 or so years of its existence, it won accolades and attention from the mainstream media and millions of visitors. It’s articles have been reprinted in countless movement journals and even in a featured <span class="caps">USAT</span>oday editorial.</p>



<p>From 2006:</p>



<blockquote class="wp-block-quote is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>The past eleven years have seen countless internet projects burst on the scene only to wither away. Yet Nonviolence.org continues without any funding, attracting a larger audience every year. As the years have gone by and I’ve found the strength to continue it, I’ve realized more and more that this is a ministry. As a member of the Religious Society of Friends I’m committed to spreading the good news that war is unnecessary. In my personal life this is a matter of faith in the “power that takes away occassion for all war.” In my work with Nonviolence.org I also draw on all the practical and pragmatic reasons why war is wrong. For more personal motivations you can see at <a href="http://quakerranter.org/">QuakerRanter.org</a>, my personal blog.</p>
</blockquote>



<h3 class="wp-block-heading">A Nonviolence.org Timeline</h3>


<div class="wp-block-image">
<figure class="alignright"><a href="http://web.archive.org/web/19961112113145/http://nonviolence.org/"><img data-recalc-dims="1" decoding="async" width="300" height="163" src="https://i0.wp.com/www.quakerranter.org/wp-content/uploads/1995/10/The_Nonviolence_Web_and_Google_Chrome.png?resize=300%2C163&#038;ssl=1" alt="Screenshot from 1996 via Archive.org" class="wp-image-39054" srcset="https://i0.wp.com/www.quakerranter.org/wp-content/uploads/1995/10/The_Nonviolence_Web_and_Google_Chrome.png?resize=300%2C163&amp;ssl=1 300w, https://i0.wp.com/www.quakerranter.org/wp-content/uploads/1995/10/The_Nonviolence_Web_and_Google_Chrome.png?w=566&amp;ssl=1 566w" sizes="(max-width: 300px) 100vw, 300px"></a><figcaption class="wp-element-caption">Screenshot from 1996 via <a href="http://web.archive.org/web/19961112113145/http://nonviolence.org/">Archive.org</a></figcaption></figure>
</div>


<p>In 1995 I was editor at an activist publisher struggling to adapt to a rapidly changing book world. Many of the independent bookstores that had always supported us were closing just as printing costs were rising. The need to re-invent activist organizing and publishing for the 1990’s became obvious and I saw the internet as a place to do that. One of the earliest manifestos and introductions to the Nonviolence Web was an essay called <a href="https://www.quakerranter.org/1995/08/the_revolution_will_be_online/">The Revolution Will be Online</a>.</p>



<p>I began by approached leading <span class="caps">U.S. </span>peace groups with a crazy proposal: if they gave me their material I would put it up on the web for them for free. My goal was to live off of savings until I could raise the operating funds from foundations. “Free typesetting for the movement by the movement” was the rallying cry and I quickly brought a who’s-who of American peace groups over to Nonviolence.org. I knew that there was lots of great peace writing that wasn’t getting the distribution it deserved and with the internet I could get it out faster and more widely than with traditional media. For three years I lived off of savings, very part-time jobs and occasional small grants.</p>



<p><em>Nonviolence.org</em> developed into a web portal for nonviolence. We would feature the most provocative and timely pieces from the <span class="caps">NVW</span>eb member groups on the newly-redesigned homepage, dubbed “Nonviolence Web Upfront.” A online magazine format loosely modeled on <a href="http://www.slate.com/">Slate</a> and the now-defunct <em>Feed </em>magazine, it also contained original material and links to interesting threads on the integrated discussion board. With these popular features, <em>Nonviolence.org</em> attracted a growing number of regular visitors. The combined visibility for member groups was much greater than anyone could obtain alone and we earned plenty of awards and links. Some media highlights of the era included a <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/library/cyber/week/022198nonviolence.html">New York Times</a> tech profile, a featured guest Op/Ed in <em><span class="caps">USA</span> Today</em>, and an interview on Oliver North’s nationally syndicated radio show.</p>



<p>But this model couldn’t last. A big problem was money: there’s were too few philanthropists for this sort of work, and established foundations didn’t even know the right questions to ask in evaluating an internet project. <em>Nonviolence.org</em> was kept afloat by my own dwindling personal savings, and I never did find the sort of money that could pay even poverty wages. I took more and more part-time jobs till they became the full-time ones I have today. At the same time, internet publishing was also changing. With the addition of blogging features and open-source bulletin board software, <em>Nonviolence.org</em> continued to evolve and stay relevant.</p>



<p>Through the early 2000s, <em>Nonviolence.org</em> continued to be one of the most highly-visible and visited peace websites, being highly ranked through the first Gulf War <span class="caps">II, </span>the biggest <span class="caps">U.S. </span>military action since the web began. This model of independent activist web publishing was still critical. The <em>Nonviolence.org</em> mission of featuring the best writing and analysis continued until 2008 when Martin finally mothballed the Nonviolence.org project and sold the domain.</p>
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