Power to the people
By Annette Kingsbury
STAFF WRITER
In the 1860s, Abraham Lincoln suffered the slings and arrows of nasty political cartoons. In 1964, a black-and-white TV ad showed a mushroom cloud over a child picking daisies, implying that presidential candidate Barry Goldwater would use the nuclear bomb in Vietnam.
In the digital age, you don't have to have money, access to the media or party connections to make waves in politics. Anyone with a camera phone and Internet access can get involved in a big way.
Rochester Hills retiree Bruce Fealk has forced people to pay attention to his campaign to unseat incumbent Congressman Joe Knollenberg, R-Bloomfield Township. A liberal, Fealk has put up his own Web sites, hosts a cable TV show and engages in good old-fashioned demonstrating, such as showing up at the Rochester Christmas parade in a big papier mache likeness of Knollenberg
http://www.michiganprogress.blogspot.com">Michigan Progress
http://www.votenoonjoe.blogspot.com">Vote No On Joe
http://www.retirejoeknollenberg.com">Retire Joe Knollenberg
http://hometownlife.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20080110/NEWS17/801100420/1034">Click here for the rest of the story