Archive - 2006
November 15th
McMeme
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 11/15/2006 - 17:45My secret is out.
Brenda at Wild Berries and other random thoughts... writes:
Aldon, who I think exists as a renegade meme on the net and morphs into human form when Colin summons him from the classroom laptop. I guess that would make him a "McMeme."
What Really Really happened
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Wed, 11/15/2006 - 09:46(Cross posted at My Left Nutmeg)
It seems to me that people attempting to describe what happened with any campaign is an awful lot like blind people trying to describe an elephant, to the person touching the trunk it feels like a hose, to the people touching the tail, it feels like a snake, etc.
Everyone has their own perspective and their own reasons for expressing their perspective. The beltway Dems didn’t do enough to help out. The beltway Dems did too much and it drove away Republicans. The campaign listened too much to beltway consultants. The campaign didn’t listen enough to beltway consultants. The campaign didn’t listen enough to volunteers. The campaign paid too much attention to volunteers. The ads weren’t good enough. Too much focus was on Media, Advertising, Field, etc. Ned went to too many DTC meetings. Ned didn’t go to enough DTC meetings. Ned went to too many rallies. Ned didn’t go to enough rallies. Ned’s didn’t speak enough on specific issues. Ned spoke too much about certain issues. The list is endless.
In many ways, it boils down to, “If only people had listened more to me, and the campaign had been run my way, things could have turned out differently.” I know what it feels like. I have my list of things that I think the campaign should have done differently as well.
Yeah, it would be good if we could all learn from this, but perhaps a good starting point is learning to listen to those around us, instead of trying to beat people over the heads with our own opinions. Yeah, it feels good to get it all out. After all, this is part of the grieving process, and we do need to grieve so that we can regroup and fight the next battles.
Yeah, there were people that I got angry at and got frustrated with. However, at the final big staff get together, we went around the room and talked about what was most important to us about the campaign. That was a very wise and helpful thing. I said something about how we all came together as a community that cared for each other and worked together to make our state and our country a better place. It might not always feel that way, but I think that is really the important part of what happened. If we focus on that and use it to work together going forward, then Ned and all of us really did win.
Thank you to everyone who helped us win and who are helping to make it an enduring victory.
November 14th
Post-Modern or Neo-Romanticism blogging?
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Tue, 11/14/2006 - 11:49(Cross posted at Greater Democracy)
Last night, I attended Colin McEnroe’s Class on Blogging. It was partly a debrief for people after the Lamont campaign, yet it was also another chance to talk about the wild wild west of the internet and whether or not bloggers are journalists or not. While this is the sort of discussion I’ve listened to too many times over the past few years, Colin and his class always manage to make it vibrant, interesting, and to bring out a new twist.
Last night slothsinabox floated the idea of bloggers as being some sort of Neo-Romanticism movement. Spazeboy joked about this by putting a picture of Fabio on his blog, which prompted slothsinabox to write up a blog post expounding on what she meant.
It is a very good blog post. I agree with some of what she is saying but I think it needs to be pushed further. Slothsinabox spoke about the movement away from “carefully vetted ideas constructed with a keen eye toward objectivity, attention to societal expectations and norms, and the practice of approaching all literary production, acts of authorship and thought with a critical lens.” She expressed concern that “Ultimately, it becomes a question of whether, … we as untrained individuals really have a grasp of how to read with a critical lens and how to write with a nod toward social responsibility.”
She ties it together with this: “This brings us to a basic Lockean and Hobbesian debate--is man basically good, or basically bad? Can we trust individual bloggers' ethics”.
This then, ties into a meta discussion I tried to get going in the class. There was a bit of a discussion about how to handle trolls on blogs. Do you not allow comments at all? Do you only allow comments from authenticated users? Do you block certain IP addresses? Do you moderate comments, either before or after the fact? I suggested that an important part of this is the process of establishing societal expectations in an online environment.
Perhaps some of the neo-romanticism is that we are interacting in new media where the societal expectations haven’t been clearly defined. We are in the process of defining those expectations, and there are not the clear sources of authority that exist in other social settings. After all, how many people do you know that have taken graduate level courses in blogging? I guess this takes me back to some sort of post-modern perspective. Societal expectations, ethics, critical lens, and even the way we chose to organize information are social constructs.
As an aside, I would encourage people, especially those involved in library sciences, to check out David Weinberger’s blog post, Why Dewey's Decimal System is prejudiced. We also talked a lot about blogging from a U.S. perspective. I tried to tie in a global perspective, pointing to Global Voices.
So, I do believe that the advent of the internet has given us a wonderful opportunity to look at the social constructs around us, to question them, and to perhaps build new constructs. I recognize the dangers in this that slothsinabox fears. Yet to me, that argument sounds too close to why we shouldn’t have a democracy. Is man basically good or bad? Can we trust untrained individuals to elect leaders that will find the common good? Or should we have some sort of oligarchy or benevolent dictator to make sure that are social constructs are properly defended.
Me? I believe in democracy, both politically and in our communications online. So, I embrace a mix of neo-romanticism and post-modernism, which I recognize is likely to lead to yet another new orthodoxy. Yet, I will fight for democracy and encourage people to question norms as long as I can.
November 13th
vlogs from frontline housing activists
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 11/13/2006 - 11:44I also wanted to quickly highlight another site for politically aware videos: Homeless Nation's Videos.
More Second Life Machinima
Submitted by Aldon Hynes on Mon, 11/13/2006 - 00:18
Today at RootsCamp in Machinima, specifically making politically aware Machinima in Second Life. One of the things that turned me on to the possibility of politically aware machinima was The French Democracy. I’ve often pointed others to this. Tonight, Hiro Quasimodo spoke and mentioned these movies: Jean-Charles de Menezes, An Unfair War
and An American Baby in Iraq
I’ve played a little bit SL based Machinima. My latest effort was filming a Tech Soup party in Second Life on July 18th. Before that, on July 7th, I had taken this clip in my first successful test of Second Life Machinima.
To produce this, I used Fraps. My first upload didn’t work, but when I converted it to MPEG-1 format, it worked nicely.