What Is This “Twitter” You Speak
Of?
Part Two of Two
By Jonathan Rogers
The pro-life movement has always
excelled at seizing any
opportunity to help us in our
work of organizing more
effectively and educating the
public at large on the life
issues. Over the last year, the
rise of Twitter in mass media
and political activism has
opened a powerful, virtually
cost-free new medium for us to
take advantage of. NRLC, for
example, tweets at
http://twitter.com/nrlc.
Twitter,
first founded in 2006, exploded
in popularity in 2009. Since
then mention of it in news
stories seems almost ubiquitous,
everything from Scott Brown’s
victorious Senate campaign in
Massachusetts, domestic unrest
and protests in Iran, to the
death of Michael Jackson. Yet
with newscasters, bloggers, and
techno-geeks abuzz (a-twitter,
perhaps?), big questions remain
for the average laymen.
Most importantly, what is it?
Contrary to what its countless
millions of devoted users
believe, other millions of
people more get along fine
without Twitter. Take an
informal poll among your friends
and relatives, and you’ll
probably receive responses
ranging from “absolutely love,”
to “don’t care,” to “don’t
understand,” to “never heard of
it.”
That said, along with Facebook,
Twitter is an informational
goldmine with incredible
networking potential. It is one
of those tools which allow
underfunded pro-life groups to
compete with pro-abortionists,
flush with money. Twitter has
found widespread acceptance
among politicians, activists,
media outlets, and anyone trying
to push their message to the
general public. Increasingly,
pro-lifers are creatively using
Twitter in ways we will explore
below.
So What Is Twitter?
In a nutshell, Twitter is a free
web site where users create a
simple profile and post short
messages (“tweets”) of 140
characters or less. Users
“follow” each other to view each
other’s tweets. The tweets of
users that you follow appear on
your main page, and vice versa.
The real virtue of Twitter is
how the technology is used. When
its usage is properly understood
and harnessed, Twitter can be a
powerful information-sharing
tool as well as a wonderful way
to recruit new pro-lifers.
For example, Twitter can easily
be accessed via a mobile phone
with a basic text messaging plan
(standard text messaging fees
usually apply). As a result, a
user can see—anytime and
anywhere—what the people they
are following are talking about.
It could be information as
trivial as a friend’s tweet
about a trip to the dentist, or
as important as a breaking news
headline or a vote.
I use Twitter to follow other
NRLC employees, state pro-life
groups and chapters, and major
news outlets. Taking the bus
into work every morning, I view
what people are tweeting on my
mobile phone , so that by the
time I arrive, I already have a
rough idea of the day’s major
news stories. Twitter’s first
big utility is as a source of
instant news gathering in this
passive sense.
But there are far more important
uses of Twitter for pro-lifers.
Twitter can act as free
advertising for a pro-life
chapter or as an
organizing/educational tool. If
your chapter is putting on an
event, tweet about it to remind
your followers. (For example,
“Stop by Collin County RTL’s
table at the County Fair next
Friday in the main pavilion.
Sign up for our raffle, see our
signature ad project.”)
You can also repeatedly update
Twitter to keep followers
informed of changing information
as it happens. (“Just confirmed
our speaker for the annual
banquet. “Remember to RSVP
quickly, only fifteen tickets
left.”)
If your chapter has any other
web-based projects, you can send
a tweet with a URL link in it to
let people know that you’ve
uploaded new material. (“State
affiliate press release on
recent legislative vote, read it
here…”)
Twitter is also extremely useful
as an almost instantaneous phone
tree. If there’s an important
vote pending, you can tweet
about it in addition to calling
and e-mailing your list of
pro-lifers. (“Re-tweet this:
Congress about to vote on
critical issue, go to
www.nrlactioncenter.com to
send a message to your
representative.”)
These are just a few suggestions
for using Twitter to advance our
Movement. If you start a Twitter
account, be sure to use it as
cautiously and accurately as you
would any other media or
web-based information outlet.
Be sure to follow us at
http://twitter.com/nrlc.
Part One
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