Twitter’s utility for protests, now evident in Iran, debuted in St. Paul during RNC

By Chris Steller
Monday, June 22, 2009 at 10:23 am

Iran has proven the headline prescient, even if the terminology needed tweaking: “The revolution will be Twittered.” That was the title of Tom Elko’s Sept. 9, 2008, Minnesota Independent post about how Twitter messages (technically, “tweets” that were “tweeted”) came in handy during protests outside the Republican National Convention in St. Paul.

Elko noted a then-staggering number of RNC-related tweets: 17,000. Last week, one estimate pegged the number of tweets related to Iran’s election and the subsequent protests at nearly a billion.

MnIndy sampling of RNC tweets showed that St. Paul’s protests had some of the same confusion and enthusiasm, if not the gravitas, seen in recent demostrations in Tehran:

Police: “You must go to the left.” Protester: “Your left or ours?” 6:31 PM Sep 4th from web

Overheard at May Day cafe: “Dude, I totally got tear gassed. It was fucking awesome.” 11:57 AM Sep 3rd from web

Overheard from excited Mpls policeman, “So I shot him with impact round a[nd] he just fucking dropped!” 6:51 PM Sep 1st from web

Here’s one area in which St. Paul exceeds Tehran, for now. The roster of arrested journalists in Iran is as yet not quite half as long as those arrested during the RNC — though with much more serious implications for the people detained.

Comments

1 Comment

Nigel Parry
Comment posted June 22, 2009 @ 4:41 pm

It seems like every 10 years there’s a leap in technology appropriation by activists.

The first time e-mail was used as key protest information media was during the Tiananmen Square protests in China in 1989, two decades ago.

The first time the Web was used as an alternative news tool by activists was during the September 1996 Clashes in the Occupied Palestinian Territories.

And social media, aka Twitter, finally rose up and dominated activist communications during the 2008 RNC.

An archive of 2008 RNC Twitter feeds can be found here: http://tinyurl.com/rnc2008twitter


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