Ralph Benko, a self-described agent of the vast right-wing conspiracy, spent two years researching MoveOn.org's "secret blueprints" and smuggled them out in book form: "The Websters' Dictionary: How to Use the Web to Transform the World."
The World Wide Web, although it is in the hands of a relatively few people, has transformed political advocacy and politics radicall.
Here's proof:
-$10 million "money bombs" for a fringe GOP candidate by an obscure music promoter
-$30 million collected from small donors at the drop of a hat
-$180 million into a congressional election cycle by an invisible online advocacy group
-$500 million raised online by Obama from 3 million small donors
Sounds like a fairy tale. But it's where we are.
A new World Wide Web – "Web 2.0" – has swept across the political landscape. Unfortunately, it is part of what flattened the GOP in the last election.
It's also part of what will restore the GOP, and America, to greatness.
The Web caught the right flatfooted – consider the half-billion dollars in campaign contributions to My.BarackObama.com. There have been a few rare dramatic conservative success stories (such as Newsmax itself, in fact). These have been mostly on the news and commentary side.





































Liberals like to boast about their technological superiority, but that’s easy to do when one is receiving millions of dollars from a former Nazi collaborator like Soros, for example.
On the other hand, it is important for conservatives to use the internet to expose problems, offer solutions, and, most importantly laugh at their enemies. I hope this text helps people do just that.