Quote from Redshak:
I realize a lot of work has gone into that web site....
Yet, who is the audience?
We have about 30 seconds to communicate a non-technical message to the public....
Traders already know the FTT is a bad idea.
The public is for the FTT because they think "Wall Street" is going to pay the tax. There is where the problem is.
Most people are not technical, sad to say. They want a simply slogan, sound byte, an easy concept, or a visceral pleasure (revenge, outlet for anger).
The FTT proponents are giving them that.
I don't think that web site is going to change anyone's mind who is for the FTT. To them it is an emotional issue, not a technical one.
Sorry, just my opinion.
Target audience: Opinion-makers, opinion-leaders. People who need facts and resources, fast.
http://financialtransactiontaxes.com seeks to put reliable, credible resources at your fingertips...immediately. It seeks to ensure that, under the crush of a deadline and amidst the noise and fury of the Robin Hood advocates, reality isn't forgotten because it's unseen.
If you want to do direct battle with pro-FTT forces for public opinion via YouTube, you will need to produce videos that go viral not because of their message, but because of their entertainment value.
Think about it. Pro-FTT forces don't have facts or logic on their side; they have emotion. Those swayed by pro-FTT types aren't looking for facts or logic; they're swayed by emotion.
That's why attempts at persuasion based on facts and reason will be futile--and, quite possibly, counter-productive. And why, instead, direct public appeals will succeed only if they succeed in manipulating public emotions just as effectively as Robin Hooders have.
Or more effectively, really, as pseudo-populism always sells itself...at least for while. Of all the great demagogues of the left or the right (Lenin, Hitler, etc), none have pole-vaulted to power appealing to public interest in sane, constructive public policy that conflicts with populist quackery.
Anyway, back to YouTube. For a prime example of what you'll be up against, check out Richard Curtis' "Banker interview" video with Bill Nighy. I'd post the link here, except I know you can Google.
Watch how Curtis first sets up his straw man and then ignites him. Brilliant, all the more so as Curtis' "argument" in favor of the tax is idiotic; his straw-man banker is a moron and, clearly, neither Curtis nor Nighy have the faintest idea what they're talking about. Nevertheless, the production values are tippy-top; lighting, set-design, make-up, scriptwriting/directing from the team that brought you "Four Weddings and a Funeral," "Notting Hill," etc.
If you're not ready to go mano-a-mano with Richard Curtis on the field of YouTube and to WIN, I think you're best off focusing on those in the business of shaping policy.
Bottom line: Entertain the people and you'll have the people...or a lot of the people. Lecture the people and you'll just piss them off.