Now I do not want worthy yeoman blogger Dawson to start thinking we at Samizdata are picking on him, but over on Random Jottings, there is a hysterical exchange regarding delectable überpundit Ann Coulter. A ‘must read’.
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Now I do not want worthy yeoman blogger Dawson to start thinking we at Samizdata are picking on him, but over on Random Jottings, there is a hysterical exchange regarding delectable überpundit Ann Coulter. A ‘must read’. The illuminated and transcendent John Weidner on Random Jottings tells all you benighted PC users that computer use need not be synonymous with masochism (though being a libertarian, I naturally have no problem if that is actually why you use a PC… hey, different strokes for different folks). I am slowly matching velocity with the world after an absence due to technical problems, something I may expostulate on later. So much has happened I hardly know what to comment on first. So I’ll just pick one… There seems to be quite an interesting discussion circulating the blog world about The Meaning Of Life, The Universe and Everything and Our Place In It. As I have not yet seen anyone tell it as I sees it and I’ve not much else to do with a Friday Night Sniffle (as opposed to a Saturday Night Fever), I have all the excuse I need. A reader of Patrick Ruffini pointed out blogs are not newsgathering organizations. I agree with that. Of course if the phenomenon continues to grow that may become less and less true. I live in Belfast for example. If blogs existed ten years ago, my reportage would have been first-hand man on the scene calibre. I once posted a report to a mail list while watching the fires of Unionist rioters springing up all over the city while I was stranded in a 6th floor office in the middle of a “no man’s land” between neighborhoods in North Belfast. I watched the pall of smoke grow thicker and thicker until I could no longer see the lights of the city centre less than a half mile away. Someday when there is a blog on every block they may well become the primary source for raw news. But for now that is not why blogs exist and it is not why they are a force to be reckoned with all out of proportion to their size and readership. Most of what we call “the news media” is simply the infrastructure that gathers facts, photos and documents. It is the mundane and sometimes extremely dangerous collection of raw data. Doing this well requires global resources. It used to be one of the primary functions of news before the advent of the Superstar TV Newsman. In the early stages of this transformation there were newsmen like Walter Cronkite who were respected because they were good at what they did and were clearly part of their own culture. It didn’t take the network news long to discover the power they could wield by deciding what would be reported with what slant. Some say the turning point was the Kennedy/Nixon debate. A change in camera angle, a slight difference in which images are selected and which are not… and you can pick the winners and losers, the innocent and the guility and set the national and perhaps even the global agenda. If one major outlet pushes a story as the lead, all the others typically follow it or find related stories. While it is true that print media and radio had done the same with considerable success for many decades, they did not have the profound subconscious story telling ability of imagery on their side. Although we laugh at the what if satires of CNN and D-Day or Pearl Harbour, we should perhaps be profoundly grateful that they did not then exist. Over time the star system led to a more paternalistic news system. It became more about deciding what the news was to be. If the newsmen are Stars and know what we should consider important then we inevitably end up with their beliefs and prejudices buried in that selection. Intentional or not, the effect is equally bad. It has reached the point where the relevance of a story to the public is of less importance than the relevance to the political beliefs of the media personnel. Of course all bets are off if there is a human interest story of no importance whatever (such as the OJ Simpson Trial). It will be the lead simply because it is an extremely profitable form of entertainment. Media is a business and there nothing wrong with that. Many millions of people love soap operas. But this is not an effective way to keep a citizenry informed. That is where the blog revolution comes in. Blogs are anarchic. The entry cost is low and falling so anyone who wants can jump in. If the new blogger has ideas and communicates well they will collect a readership; if they grow tired of it someone else with similar ideas will take up the slack and the readership. Any thought that can be thought will be written, rewritten, torn apart and reassembled a hundred times. The better the idea, the more relevant and interesting and important it is, the more widely it will spread… regardless of to whose interest or detriment it is. That is the glory of Chaos. If we look at the current war we see time and again that the Media Formerly Known as Major have been called to task over their spin and over the central framework of the Story they decided to tell. A decade or two ago, I and others would have grumbled to our mates in the local and said they were getting it wrong. But we would have left it at that because we had no voice in the matter. After enough repetition of the Story, we might come to agree with it or at the very least begun to argue within the designated framework of the Story. That is what classical rhetoric is all about for those who know what it is. It is also what Marxists called the Dialectic. Now don’t get me wrong. I do not believe that the global media is going to shrivel up and die. It serves a purpose. Journalism was once and can once again be an honourable profession if it goes back to its’ roots and forgets the Star thing. Someone has to go out and collect the raw data. What has changed is who makes the decision on what the data means, what is important and to what use it should be put. That is now the niche of the blog. All Hail Eris! Alas but that vertiable babe of the bloggistas and erratic contributor to the Samizdata, Natalie Solent is out of action with a broken computer. We will have to manage without our daily fix of her sardonic Frédérique Bastiat impersonations until she can shell out for the repairs. Visit her blog and donate vast sums of money to her. I just spotted this muslimpundit blog mentioned on Instapundit.
Way to go! I have always believed that there is a large body of rational, reasonable and moral Muslims living in the west who did not subscribe to the crap spewing out of the mouth’s of some of their community ‘leaders’. Now we know that is indeed the case! Over on Mind over what matters, fellow bloggista Jay Zilber makes a remark that caught my eye whilst I was surfing the mimetic waves looking for interesting tubes and eddies in the zeitgeist:
Interesting. So September 10th. Yes, I know exactly what he means. Yeah, you…Dawson of Dawson.com… Your e-mail address link is phucked. Fix it or we will send Natalie Solent and her well armed husband around to sort you out. I just watched the BBC news and must admit it was an admirable performance. Given that Kunduz has fallen, the Marines are outside Kandahar, and the al Qaeda have been pretty much annihilated… they still managed to come up with a full report of utterly negative tripe. They dwelled on a precision strike that hit a Northern Alliance position by mistake. Now the US forces have been hitting targets on the mark nearly 98 percent of the time. So the news chose to show one of the two out of the most recent hundred. They talked at length about 4 British troops that were injured and the possibility of the US now sustaining significant casualties, as if there weren’t already 9000 casualties. The BBC at least had the decency to show workers in the underground of the WTC, although the negativity even came through on that. One got the impression the presenter felt showing the clip was an onerous “fairness” duty forced from on high. Of course they focused on the mistakes that allowed prisoners at Mazar-e-Sharif to retain weapons, and again to dwell on one known American casualty there. And of course they panned their camera over a burning Red Cross truck. I have a few choice words for the BBC media. You are spiteful, biased, hateful people and I very much hope the public stops listening to you and instead gets their news through alternative sources. We are winning dramatically. Weapons targeting has been awesome in its’ pinpoint accuracy. The low level of misses and errors has simply been enough to leave any honest watcher with their jaw hanging. Any honest watcher that is. There don’t seem to be many of those in the media these days. We’ve succeeded in breaking the back of the al Qaeda and killing them off in droves (which makes Mazar-e-Sharif count as a success) while causing incredibly few casualties to innocents. We’ve brought down an oppressive regime in an amazing tour-de-force of military and diplomatic prowess. There is simply very little that one can complain about without being utterly petty. Which they are. The chatterers are under such pressure they are even making snide comments on the air about it. To paraphrase George W Bush: “We’ve smoked ’em out and we’ve got ’em on the run.” So let’s keep the pressure up fellow bloggers! The monopoly has ended. News can be a remote, impersonal thing. We see stories about outrages in some far off land and we are duly outraged… and then we move on to the the next thing. Although I live in London at the moment, I used to work in the World Trade Centre and I was there briefly last June, so I must say I took the events of 11 September rather hard, but for others who actually witnessed it, the experience must have been altogether more appalling. My ex-girlfriend lives in New Jersey and watched the entire horror unfold from her bedroom window. But even so, eventually life moves on. Jay Zilber on Mind over what matters writes a thoughtful little personal reflection on this subject along with a dramatic photograph that does indeed put it all into perspective. I saw this on Natalie’s blog and it was just too good not to share:
Whilst I am far too modest to tell anyone how many notches I have on my bed’s headboard, someone can reasonably add two more notches now that Dale and Natalie have lost their virginity by blogging (presumably the ‘someone’ in question is the seemingly omnipresent ‘Joe Blogs’… who obviously ‘swings both ways’ it would seem, unless Joe is short for Josephine). Good to have you (oops) both aboard. Regarding the Samizdata displacing the Libertarian Alliance Forum, I don’t think so. A blog is not really as interactive as a forum and thus suggests we post in a less ‘immediate’ way. I think blogging is more akin to sending a letter to the editor of some dead tree publication. When we blog, we are letting the world know what we think either by re-posting something we have found of interest or, primarily, by writing our own editorial on the events that are of interest to us as critically rational individuals. I regard a forum such as the LA-F as more akin to public conversation. Like Dale Amon, I lose my co-blogging virginity today, indeed at this moment. That’s like not with for any tabloid journalists reading this. If any are, keep reading. You might learn something for a change. Many hear will have heard me gushing on about (a) blogs and (b) being paid for them as the Wave of the Future etc. The “being paid” bit strikes me as important because only money can transform the provision of decentralised, unmediated news from a hobby of the intelligentsia to a major former of opinion. We need a system where you can, without effort, pay a tiny sum to read a web page. But it’s not all good news. An obvious problem is that of preaching only to the converted. If the “team” list under the toilet sign at the top of the screen all contribute, this blog looks likely to become the Real Libertarian Alliance Forum. I find this somewhat worrying, and not only because it’ll make Mario Huet feel bad as his numbers go down through no fault of his own. We’ll all become – dare I invoke Banquo’s ghost? – atomised. BTW I have set up my own blog at http://nataliesolent.blogspot.com. I don’t think my blogspot’s evolutionary niche lies in discussion. Rather I aim to just post comments about news stories and thoughts that interest me. So my dears, don’t be sad that I haven’t invited you, because I haven’t invited anyone. All I want in life really is to be a James Bond supervillain and have a cool wall of TV screens. My Birman cat already fits the part beautifully. |
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