The process – not the rhetoric – of change.

If change is to come, we cannot return to business as usual. We have seen so many elections that promised hope and more responsive government. And time and again, we have returned from our polling places to our homes and just waited for change to come. This time, something must be different.

What do you do when your nonpartisan organization's message becomes the rallying cry of a major political campaign?

So little of the stuff you read in the opinion pages of the daily newspapers is truly original thinking. Most of it is just a regurgitation of what's been said a million times before. So major kudos to Tim Wu for his piece in the New York Times entitled "OPEC 2.0."

It really got me thinking about something I hadn't previously thought about at all: Are we creating – or, have we already created – a new kind of OPEC that has a monopoly on how we get our information?