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It's a digital rumor
mill as potent as a high school grapevine. The main difference: the
topic is politics rather than sex.
Growing steadily since its creation in 2001,
www.lipolitics.com has become both an independent venue for "the
people" to voice their opinions and a thorn in the side of some
elected officials. And while Long Island's broadest electronic
political network and debate forum may not be taken seriously by
some government leaders, nobody can deny its ability to break news
before reporters do or remind voters why they should be angry with
their elected officials.
In one post, from Oct. 11, 2002, an author
identified as Kenny b says, "Frank Petrone—Huntington Supervisor—now
a Democrat. Welcome to the Dem party, Frankie. Bring those donuts
with you, would ya?" The official public announcement that Petrone
switched parties would not be made for another week.
The cheeky message is one of more than 40,000
posts on one of the website's 11 message boards about politics on
the Island. Although Anthony Manetta, the site's operator, spent
"not a dime in advertising," the site has good word-of-mouth, and
averages 2,200 visitors a day. That hasn't yet translated into
profits for its founder.
Manetta, founder of Lindenhurst political
consulting firm Roosevelt Strategies Group, realized the need for
such a forum when he was working on campaigns for local politicians
and found no place to debate local politics online. While a few
local political parties have message boards of their own, none are
as inclusive or widely used as lipolitics.com. "If you want your
voice to be heard, that's the place to do it," says Manetta, who is
23 years old.
But if lipolitics.com has its fans, it also has
its detractors, including many of the political figures who are
often skewered in its posts. Manetta never checks the truth of
posted messages. A policy notice warns visitors that lipolitics.com
accepts no liability for inaccurate, racist, or slanderous
messages—or anything else that might offend.
To be sure, the site offers more than just the
message boards. There are links to every major and minor local
political party, a list of upcoming events, contact information for
every level of government, and various other resources, including
interviews with politicians by Marty Shwartz, a former journalist
and party leader.
But it's the Drudge Report-like boards, where
rumor and passion fly high, that draw people in. According to
Manetta, the most-talked-about politicians are Nassau County
Executive Tom Suozzi, Nassau Legislator David Denenberg (D-Merrick),
New York State Assemblyman Philip Ramos (D-Brentwood) and, at least
up until now, Bill Cunningham, who just lost the Democratic primary
for Suffolk County executive. Other hot topics include the
Farmingville and Huntington illegal immigrant issue and Newsday's
reporting.
Because most users post under pseudonyms, they
can become especially uninhibited, although the site's operators do
"try to keep the civility." Threatening language is automatically
removed, as are messages that are reposted in every forum. If an
elected official requests that a "thread," or series of posts on a
topic, be removed because the information is inaccurate, the site
will do so. But sometimes the damage is done.
Recently, several posts alleged that Ramos was
facing trial for assault, a charge Ramos emphatically denies. "I
haven't been in a fight since high school," he says. After following
up on the posted rumor, the Press found that the case in
question was in fact a slip-and-fall—a lawsuit filed by someone who
had stumbled in Ramos' home. Ramos, a former Suffolk County police
detective, says that while it is "freedom of expression that makes
this country great," he suggests that the site is a "forum where
people can put out misinformation and use [it] for political spin."
Ramos says the last time he checked the site was when he was
campaigning.
Nassau County headquarters One West Street
recently made headlines for blocking lipolitics.com from the server,
thus preventing employees from joining the anonymous political
free-for-all. Nassau County Information Technology Commissioner
Craig Love says the site was blocked because of foul language, not
any political agenda, and that Suozzi himself had not requested the
block. Suozzi declined to comment for this story.
Legislator Denenberg says, "I can't help what's
said about me on that site. I simply don't go on or let people talk
to me about it. There's no reason for it." He adds that while he has
heard plenty of people talk about the content of the message
boards—some of which was true, some not—people who post on the site
"might be more than just political junkies." Some can be individuals
with a political ax to grind, Denenberg says. He adds that while he
never has and never will visit the site, he has been contacted
several times by the press regarding information on lipolitics.com.
Reporters from various news sources have used
tips found on the site. Both Newsday and Suffolk Life
have quoted posts, or at least attributed information to
lipolitics.com.
Manetta says he's been threatened on at least
five occasions with lawsuits because of the lively political banter,
but that none was ever actually filed. With names like WantaghDem,
Joe Nassau, Machine Politician and Suzie Q, it can be hard to find
out just who an individual poster is.
A user of the site since its early days, Kimberly
Wilder—one of the few who use real names—says that the site "levels
the playing field." The Babylon resident and board member of the
executive committee of the Green Party of New York State describes
the site as "the best grassroots device to promote free speech and
dialogue about local government issues." She adds that she knows
elected officials are watching the site, because when she bumps into
them, they comment on her posts. Wilder says she also uses the site
to try to round up support for issues or encourage activism.
Ultimately, anonymous messages should be taken
with a grain of salt, and sometimes that means salty dialog. If
nothing else, lipolitics.com is spicing up Long Island politics. |