Some campaign slogans of Barack Obama (from
http://www.afriprov.org/index.php/news-archive/443-campaign-slogans-of-barrack-obama-in-the-us.html):
2. “Change” versus “More of the Same”
3. "Vote for Change"
4. "Change We Can Believe In"
5. "Our Time for Change"
6. "It's about Time. It's about Change"
7. "Stand for Change"
8. "Organize for Change"
9. “We are the change we’ve been looking for. Change can’t happen without you.”
10. "I’m asking you to believe. Not just in my ability to bring about real change in Washington. I'm asking you to believe in yours."
11. "A leader who can deliver change"
12. "Change in America doesn't start from the top down. It starts from the bottom up."
16. "A New Beginning"
20. " America , we cannot turn back. We cannot walk alone."
21. "We must pledge once more to walk into the future."
"Neomania - Excessive liking for Change/Newness" (
http://pmohanchandran.wordpress.com/2008/07/27/manias)
"Our species suffers from a widespread condition that one might call neomania, the absurd fascination with new things and the belief that every innovation will completely transform the world." - John Bedell,
http://www.bensozia.com/benideas/lewontin.htmlChange/newness is so beloved in modern culture that the term neomania is almost unknown. Thanks to Nassim Taleb, I learned of it. I was unaware of it myself and had been looking for a term to describe this phenomenon. As with Nassim's coined term "antifragility," neomania describes a common phenomenon that is rarely if ever spoken of or even recognized. The Obama campaign has successfully exploited America's obsession with the allegedly "new and improved."
Another example of neomania in action was the early hype regarding the Segway:
“Segway will be to the car what the car was to the horse and buggy.” — Dean Kamen, quoted in Time on December 2, 2001
“If enough people see the machine you won’t have to convince them to architect cities around it. It’ll just happen.” — Steve Jobs, quoted in a book proposal
"IT, also code-named Ginger, is an invention developed by 49-year-old scientist Dean Kamen, and the subject of a planned book by journalist Steve Kemper. According to Kemper's proposal, IT will change the world, and is so extraordinary that it has drawn the attention of technology visionaries Jeff Bezos and Steve Jobs and the investment dollars of pre-eminent Silicon Valley venture capitalist John Doerr, among others."
IT - G.I.N.G.E.R - Architects Will Build Cities Around it - What Is 'IT'? by PJ Mark (original source: Inside.com) http://www.bibliotecapleyades.net/ciencia/secret_projects/project282.htm
"British police said Monday that the owner of the company that makes the Segway (James Heselden) was found dead after falling off a cliff … on a Segway."
From Hype to Disaster: Segway’s Timeline, September 27, 2010, 1:15 PM