Here's the intro video from the U.S. Department of State's YouTube Channel:Good afternoon, everybody. I wanted to welcome you to the first edition of Briefing 2.0. Let me first start off by thanking everybody who submitted questions to us, who placed some trust in us, and the fact that we�re going to try to answer your questions. So here we are. We�re going to answer your questions.
I want to respond to one thing up front. In some of the write-ups about this, kind of in the run-up to this briefing, a couple folks remarked on, in my video I said, you know, this is going to be fun. And they said, well, you know, it�s foreign policy; there�s nothing fun about foreign policy. And I just wanted to explain what I meant.
It�s fun for me because this is part of something I started three years ago when I first came in here, and I have a great team that�s been working with me. And it�s one of the things that we want to do is use technology and its applications to try to change the way the State Department communicates, not only with the press but also with the public. And this is an opportunity for the public to directly ask me questions, and maybe somewhere on down the line other people questions, and for you to get answers back.
And I think this is part of a general trend in the way that government and its publics communicate with one another, and it�s going to change over time. I think, inevitably, there has to be more interaction. There can�t be all this change and ferment going on outside the walls of government, and then government kind of continuing to operate as it has for the past 200 years. So that has to change. It�ll change eventually, and hopefully this is one small part of that change.
I�ve brought in a piece of paper. I just want you to know, all it has is the names and the locations of the people asking questions. I don�t know what the questions are, so I�m going to see them for the first time along with you.
And here's the first briefing:
Very, very interesting. They also have a blog.
Brings up a few questions:
- Social Studies Teachers: Don't you think this gives you some ideas for some assignments? Shouldn't you have your students submitting questions to the State Department?
- District Internet Filter Czars: If you're blocking YouTube, isn't this yet another argument why, if you don't unblock it altogether, you at least need teacher overrides for the filter?
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