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Arnault Coulet

The White House - Blog Post - Facts Are Stubborn Things - 0 views

  • Facts Are Stubborn Things
  • As part of our effort to push back on the misinformation about health insurance reform, we've launched WhiteHouse.gov/realitycheck. It's full of videos and tools you can use to share the facts with your friends and family. Check it out.
Rem Palpitt

State of the Union 2.0: The Illusion of Democracy? - 1 views

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    whitehouse-logo-mar09.pngBoth YouTube and the White House announced today that this year's State of the Union address will be broadcast on the YouTube channel Citizentube, as well as streamed live and broadcast to your iPhone. In addition to these Internet broadcasts, both announced that the average Joe or Jane Citizen would get a chance to ask the president some questions this time around, by way of a contest on Google Moderator.
stan mag

La Maison Blanche et le chiffre du jour - 0 views

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    Un chiffre, un seul, pour expliquer l'importance de la réforme du système de santé. Quand les données bruts n'ont plus de sens...
stan mag

The White House - Blog Post - Transparency and Open Government - 0 views

  • phases: Brainstorming, Discussion, and Drafting.
  • weblog in a discussion phase. On June 15th, we will invite you to use a wiki
  • Regulations.gov Exchange
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    Thursday, May 21st, 2009 at 1:00 pm Transparency and Open Government Vivek Kundra, our Chief Information Officer, and Beth Noveck, Deputy Chief Technology Officer for Open Government, explain the Open Government Initiative On January 21, 2009, his first full day in office, the President issued a Memorandum on Transparency and Open Government and called for recommendations for making the Federal government more transparent, participatory, and collaborative. As Valerie Jarrett, Senior Advisor to the President says in the video below, we are proud "to announce an important next step in this historic call to action - one that will help us achieve a new foundation for our government - a foundation built on the values of transparency, accountability and responsibility." The Administration is committed to developing those recommendations in an open fashion. Consistent with the President's mandate, we want to be fully transparent in our work, participatory in soliciting your ideas and expertise, and collaborative in how we experiment together to use new tools and techniques for developing open government policy. Today we are kicking off an unprecedented process for public engagement in policymaking on the White House website. In a sea change from conventional practice, we are not asking for comments on an already-finished set of draft recommendations, but are seeking fresh ideas from you early in the process of creating recommendations. We will carefully consider your comments, suggestions, and proposals. Here's how the public engagement process will work. It will take place in 3 phases: Brainstorming, Discussion, and Drafting. Beginning today, we will have a brainstorming session for suggesting ideas for the open government recommendations. You can vote on suggested ideas or add your own. Then on June 3rd, the most compelling ideas from the brainstorming will be fleshed out on a weblog in a discussion phase. On June 15th, we will invite you to use a wiki t
stan mag

Bourse d'innovation de la Maison Blanche - 0 views

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    La maison blanche cree un systeme d'innovations en duo public-prive> Simple et audacieux 
Rem Palpitt

The Obama Disconnect: What Happens When Myth Meets Reality - 1 views

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    As 2009 comes to a close, and with it, the first year of the Obama administration, one big question seems to be hanging over the man who said he had "The Audacity to Hope," and promised his supporters "Change We Can Believe In." That question can be summed up with two simple pictures.
Rem Palpitt

The Obama-Clinton One-Two Tech-Powered Public Diplomacy Punch - 0 views

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    This isn't the first time a State Department has supported a president. It's part of the job description. But technology seems to be greasing the wheels on that relationship. One or two runs below Clinton, there's tech-driven symbiosis afoot. Take Obama's speech last week in Accra, Ghana. It's a great example of how, using new media, two DC powerhouses are feeding off one another's efforts. A taste of what we're talking about here
Rem Palpitt

Democracy 2.0 Awaits an Upgrade (NYTimes, via @fondapol) - 0 views

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    President Obama declared during the campaign that "we are the ones we've been waiting for." That messianic phrase held the promise of a new style of politics in this time of tweets and pokes. But it was vague, a paradigm slipped casually into our drinks. To date, the taste has proven bittersweet.
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