Edition


Vol. 48, No. 2

In this Edition

by LOU ZICKAR One of the storylines in Washington this year has been the inability of Congress and the President to come together on some of the key challenges facing our nation.

The Holy Grail of Defense Reform

The former Pentagon comptroller looks at the elusive effort to fix the acquisition system at the Department of Defense and shares his insights on the latest reform effort today.

The Scope of the Challenge

With the House Armed Services Committee launching an effort to fix the Pentagon’s broken acquisition system, a look at the importance of the effort and the obstacles blocking reform.

Hollow Arguments on Military Entitlements

The former Senator from Wyoming argues that it’s not just the Pentagon’s acquisition system that needs reform – the military entitlement system needs fixed, as well.

The Fiscal Fantasy Behind U.S. Defense Strategy

According to this defense expert, military planning needs to be based on fiscal reality instead of unrealistic budget assumptions that call for more spending than we can afford.

Two Visions, One Reality

The President and Congressional Republicans have very different views about the future of America’s nuclear weapons complex. Who is right?

A Q&A with Mike Rowe

The host of TV’s Dirty Jobs discusses the lessons he’s learned from America’s workers, the value of the skilled trades, and how the definition of what constitutes a “good job” has changed.

Republican Reboot

A look at the effort to bridge the gap between the technology sector and the conservative political sector.

A Necessary Investment

Federal spending on basic research has not only saved lives over the years, but has also resulted in medical breakthroughs and helped fuel America’s economic growth.

The Risks of Rescue

Amid calls for the U.S. military to get involved in the rescue of 200 school girls held hostage in Nigeria, this terrorism expert explains why a rescue attempt would be a mistake.

Ripon Profile of Kelly Ayotte

“Among other issues, we care about jobs and the economy, fiscal responsibility, a strong national security, and school choice. These are issues that are a priority for Republicans, and we’re on the right side of these issues.”

Republican Reboot

How Lincoln Labs is getting Silicon Valley to think differently about the GOP

We founded Lincoln Labs in 2013 to bridge the gap between the technology sector and the conservative political sector. Our mission is to create and support a community of like-minded individuals who desire to advance liberty in the public square with the use of technology.  Since we started, we have hosted hackathons, special events, and had a large presence at the 2014 SXSW Interactive Conference in Austin, Texas. We’ve created a national database of over 3,000 “conservatarian” technologists, built a community based on issues, and are narrowing the communication gap between conservatives and Silicon Valley. In less than one year, Lincoln Labs has emerged as the preeminent organization mapping and supporting a liberty-based technology community all over the nation.  Despite the narrative peddled by the media or inside the Beltway, the tech sector has a vibrant conservatarian community eager to engage. The relationships we build will better position conservative campaigns and causes to continue to solve problems, not complain about them. We are the only group taking action at this critical intersection.

Republican Convention in Tampa, FloridaDespite the narrative peddled by the media or inside the Beltway, the tech sector has a vibrant “conservatarian” community eager to engage.

Through our events, and specifically through our first annual conference this summer – which we are calling Reboot and will feature keynote addresses by Senator Rand Paul and House GOP Conference Chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers — we are taking on the exciting challenge of gathering and engaging many of the country’s brightest minds to discuss how we bring the best of tech and politics together. The generational gap between the conservative political community and the technology community is vast. But it is not unbridgeable. We are building the connection between policy makers and technology shakers to bring about informed and relevant policy. 

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If there is one thing we can all agree on, is that many of our most pressing public policy issues need new and innovative solutions. We only need to look as far as the latest headlines to know that government, even in the early 21st century, still relies on old ideas, old beliefs and old solutions to solve modern problems. 

Think about any large and long-standing government program – Social Security or Medicare – all of which perform poorly, are highly inefficient and rife with waste, fraud and abuse. Technology can and should be a critical component in modernizing some government programs – increasing effectiveness, reducing cost and ultimately making sure they perform as well as possible for citizens and taxpayers.

Technology can and should be a critical component in modernizing some government programs – increasing effectiveness, reducing cost and making sure they perform as well as possible for citizens and taxpayers.

In the past decade, conservative and libertarian causes have been slow to adopt and develop technology products to communicate with their key constituencies and make their efforts more effective. We desperately need some of the bright young minds available in Silicon Valley and in other tech hubs around the country, to help revitalize our movement and give conservative values a new face and new perspective.  The technology sector – and technologists, be they developers, designers or any of the new roles being created everyday, is a uniquely optimistic environment. It is a solutions-based world in which problems are examined, dismantled and fixed with often simple and elegant solutions.  We hope Lincoln Labs and our efforts are a starting point for what libertarians and conservatives can and should do with technology. Now is the time to address our country’s biggest problems and utilize the tech sector to do it.  We are very excited at the prospect of being at the vanguard between conservatarians and Silicon Valley. Our problems may be large and complicated – but utilizing technology to help solve them is key. The solutions we can create are only constrained by the limits of our imagination and the energy we’re willing to commit to solving them.

Garrett Johnson, Aaron Ginn and Chris Abrams are the founders of Lincoln Labs.