Blogs

Transformation

(Cross posted at Greater Democracy)

Don't be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. (Rom 12:2)

I’ve been thinking a lot about this ever since the shooting at the Amish schoolhouse several weeks ago. Of all the groups of people that epitomize the idea of not being conformed to this world, the Amish are near the top. I’ve also been thinking about it a bit after some of my recent encounters of some of the negative aspects of group-think online.

A year or so ago, I was at a meeting of grassroots activist leaders in Burlington, VT. We had had a great day talking about ideas and strategies of how to change our country for the better. At the end of the day, we took a boat ride out on Lake Champlain. It was a beautiful day and at one point we gathered near the bow of the boat. One person was bewailing the inside the beltway consultocracy. I posed the question of if we are successful, how we will avoid falling into the same trap that they did and becoming the new insiders. This gave the leader of the group a moment of pause, and I hope that it still causes people to pause.

Early on in the Lamont campaign, when I was the person responding to emails at the ‘info’ account, one person spoke about how Sen. Lieberman had changed. He had lost touch with his constituents and become part of the beltway problem. The writer asked how I knew that Ned wouldn’t do the same thing. I admitted that I didn’t know that. I went on to say that based on my knowledge of Ned, I doubted that would happen, but I also said that if it did, then perhaps in 18 years, I would be working for some new young challenger.

As we launch into the 2008 presidential contest, are blogs going to be part of a new netroots based consultocracy, or will we be able to continue to renew our minds and transform ourselves? I am hoping for the later, but at times, I have my doubts.

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Blogging, the person, the image and the audience

I wrote the following as a comment on another blog, but I think it stands on its own pretty well, so I'm including it here.

I think you are hitting a bunch of important issues here. Why do we blog? I’ve often suggested that for many writers, independent of the medium used, and I include myself in this category, we write because we must. It is part of who we are. It isn’t about audience.

Yet, nonetheless, our audience affects how we present ourselves. It changes us. In a lot of ways it isn’t really any different than how our audience affects us in terms of what we wear or say when someone tells us that they like the outfit we have on, or our new haircut.

Yeah, visuals matter. It affects whether or not people pay attention to what we are saying, and while we may not write for an audience, there is something satisfying to know that someone is reading what you are writing and the words aren’t simply disappearing into a bit bucket.

It would be nice if appearances didn’t matter. It would be nice if our blogs were judged not by the color of the background but by the content of the words. Unfortunately, we haven’t yet achieved that dream.

So, keep on writing. It changes you and that can be a good thing.

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Political Homphily, monocultures and CLP

Over at Connecticut Local Politics Genghis has posted in interesting discussion about centrists and moderate in response to a piece by Jane Hamsher at Firedoglake. I wrote a comment on CLP, but it turned out to be pretty long, and I thought I’d post it here as well.

While I greatly respect Genghis for running this site and for his efforts to get people to interact across ideological borders, I end up here from a different perspective.

First, I think the quote, “People who are engaged political junkies tend to have strong opinions and they want to interact online with others who are like minded” is pretty accurate. I think it goes beyond left and right. It includes the center and people who might be better described as existing off a simple left-center-right continuum.

It also exists beyond the realm of politics. Sociologists talk about homophily, or the tendency of people to group with other people that are similar. For an interesting take on this, I would encourage you to read An Epidemic of Homophily

In its most virulent form, we see people from close-knit social networks personally attack anyone who criticizes a member of their network. It often feels to me as if that dynamic occurs here too often.

Many people are suggesting the political homophily leads to extremism. It seems to me that this is really just a particular form of the problem with monocultures. For those not acquainted with the problem of monocultures, I would encourage you to think about the Irish potato famine. The Irish potato crop lacked diversity, or hybrid vigor, making it susceptible to being wiped out by a virus. Personally, I think that political discourse that doesn’t promote a diversity of opinions runs into similar dangers.

This was, to me, an important part of I believe both Lamont and Schlesinger’s messages. We need a more vigorous political discourse. We need politicians that will engage in that discourse. I think if people are going to honor the contributions of Ned Lamont (or Alan Schlesinger), it should include being willing and eager to have an open discourse with people of differing opinions.

I also wanted to talk a little bit about bridging social capital and bonding social capital, which Robert Putnam does a great job of describing in his book Bowling Alone. However, this has turned into a much longer comment that it should be, so let me simply sum things up. People do tend to gather with others who are like-minded. It isn’t an issue of left-center-right; it is human nature. However, if we wish to make our country a better place, we need to rise about these simple tendencies and embrace a site like this where left, center and right, ideally, can interact respectfully and learn from one another.

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A Low Carbon Turkey

Every Thanksgiving, we engage in an annual tradition where we watch parades sponsored by department stores trying to capture the attention of consumers at the beginning of the holiday shopping season and we then consume more food than we really need. Others spend their time writing screeds encouraging us to look at a Native America view of the day.

Then there are always the efforts to get people to think about, and do something about hunger and homelessness, in Philadelphia, in Westport, CT and in Williamstown, MA for example.

For me, I am looking at Thanksgiving from new perspectives. Are you having a ‘low carbon’ Thanksgiving? Recently, I heard a global warming activist claim that the average bite of food travels 2000 miles to get to our mouths. He spoke about how this was yet another aspect of our dependence on foreign oil. To put things into perspective, that is just about as far as the pilgrims traveled to get to the new world.

Since then, I’ve found people talking about a lower carbon diet. A great example is from TerraBlog about Low Carbon Beer.

Kim and I are now searching for various low carbon foods. We set out to find a turkey that was raised locally. The closest we got this time around was one raised in Pennsylvania. We did get some honey from an apiary a few towns away, and we are searching for other food that is closer to home. Hopefully our Christmas goose will come from a place even closer to home.

This thanksgiving I am thankful for the food I will receive. I am thankful people that have helped me think in new ways about our country, the people who were here before us and the people that will be here generations later. I am thankful for everyone who is out trying to make the lives of the people around them a little bit better, and I’m thankful for my wife cooking, what I trust will be a great lower carbon turkey.

ANONYMITY, PERSONAE, PSEUDOYNMS

Colin’s class is talking about ANONYMITY, PERSONAE, PSEUDOYNMS. This is an old topic that academics have been writing about for years, and I even have a few posts about it up. I would encourage people to check out my entry, Pseudonymity and Anonymity online that I wrote last year. In it, I talk a little bit about pseudonyms that Charles Dodgson, Samuel Clemens, and W. Mark Felt used, long before people used pseudonyms on MOOs.

I talked a little bit about Gursting. Check out SocioAnthro SIG Transcript for the Online Reading Group. As another random resource, I would encourage people to check out Impression Formation in Cyberspace: Online Expectations and Offline Experiences in Text-based Virtual Communities. While it was written about MOOs, it applies pretty well to blogs as well.

Brenda asks, “So what happens when the face-to-face disappoints? I imagine it’s quite a letdown.”. When I’ve met people whom I’ve known and become good friends with online face to face for the first time, I’ve often been surprised, but never disappointed. They don’t look at all the way I imagined them. I think it ties nicely into Dr. Jacobson’s paper. Even when they are gender-benders presenting in a gender different from their ‘real’ gender, or when I’ve found them particularly physically unattractive, I’ve not been disappointed. Instead, I’ve come to appreciate them for the quality of their thoughts as they present them online.

You know, thinking about it, we might be better off if we met and developed friendships with people via text before we ever meet them face to face. It might go along way to breaking down prejudices and generally making our world a better place.

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