piles



piles, originally uploaded by Aldon.

In response to Colin McEnroe's column, "As Free Speech Fades, My Piles Grow", I thought I should post a picture of my current workspace.

The size of the piles can be explained in terms of us having moved in about a month ago.

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“letting the catchy and snarky become the enemy of the good”

As I sat napping on my porch overlooking Fountain Street as it pours into New Haven, my wife came by to adjust the blanket over my knees. She stopped to “gently shake my shoulder and wake me up and tell me I was right”.

No, I haven’t written any brilliant article about the prospects of Britney Spears doing an “insightful portrayal of Nora Helmer in Ibsen's "A Doll's House."” If I were writing that line, I might have suggested Britney, Lindsey and Paris in a modern adaptation of Checkov’s “Three Sisters”. But I digress.

What I am referring to this morning is Colin McEnroe’s brilliant column this week in the Hartford Courant, As Free Speech Fades, My Piles Grow.

Colin’s describes the Doninger case as “a douche bag in a coal mine or a canary in a douche bag” and relates it to the Senate passing an amendment to condemn MoveOn for “letting the catchy and snarky become the enemy of the good” in their advertisement illustrating the flaws of Gen. Petreaus.

Kim told me, “Look honey, your not completely off your rocker, even Colin is saying the same sort of things you wrote in your blog.” Here, I’m referring to my blog post, Responses to incivility, where I compared Avery’s case not only to the Senate’s latest amendment, but also to the tasering of the student in Florida.

Feeling fully actualized now that a noted personality has said something similar to what I’ve been blogging, and having been given an opportunity to indulge in a little self aggrandizement, let me MoveOn to the phrase that caught me attention. (I’ve already repeated it twice) “letting the catchy and snarky become the enemy of the good”.

It reflects part of the reason I’m spending more time napping on my porch overlooking Fountain Street and less time engaged in some of the hand-to-hand verbal combat in the political blogs. There are some great masters of catchiness and snarkiness in the political blogosphere. Yet I also worry that many of the let their catchiness and snarkiness get in the way moving their causes forward.

So, I will keep doing things like putting pictures of my ‘Team Avery’ shirt up on Wordless Wednesday to get all the stay at home moms and homeschoolers to stop for a moment and wonder what is going on with our schools. I know the homeschoolers particularly appreciate that.

One online friend has taken this even further. He named Avery Hero for a Day, and then went on to set up Team Avery on CafePress as another part of the fundraising to help cover the cost of the appeal. Please, buy a shirt, donate, and join us at Poets and Writers For Avery in Litchfield on October 14th.

Yes, the whole case is a bit of “a douche bag in a coal mine or a canary in a douche bag”, but to borrow from Pastor Niemoller, “First they came for the gamers, and I did not speak out because I was not a gamer. Then they came for the Bloggers and I did not speak out
because I was not a Blogger…”

I hope I didn’t just let the catchy and snarky become the enemy of the good. I hope you join the good fight to resuscitate the canary in the douche bag.

Random Stuff

Lebanese Nights writes, I love Ramadan... ...because it's the only time I eat with my family on the same table at the same time!!

In honor of whichever comedian did great sportscast that included the line, “Slaughterhouse 5, Kent State 4”, “Little Rock 9, Jena 6”

Today, we went to the Guilford Fair. New photos are up at http://www.flickr.com/photos/aldon/ ref=me>Flickr.



The Guilford Fair, originally uploaded by Aldon.

I finally got around to setting up Blogrush. You can see it in the lower right hand corner.

Enough for now, it’s been a long day.

More on MoveOn

Yesterday, I wrote about the amendment to an appropriations bill which complained about MoveOn. I compared the actions of Sen. Cornyn to that of Superintendent Schwartz in the Avery Doninger case. They both have reacted in ways that have empowered their opponents. In Avery Doninger’s case, people have been contributing to her defense fund. I hope you do the same. In the MoveOn case, they sent an email today saying they’ve already received half a million dollars in response to the criticism they’ve been receiving and hope to break a million. If you can contribute a little bit there as well, please do. I would hope that people look at these two examples before they make a federal case of people expressing contrary views.

While I would not have used the phrase ‘General BetrayUs’ in pointing out that Petreaus appears more interested in his own advancement than in the general good of our country, I think MoveOn is doing an important job of getting people to look at his apparent sycophancy. Conservatives are trying to distract people from focusing on Petreaus’ sycophancy by focusing on a poor choice of words. This is a pretty common tactic and it is not unlike Superintendent Schwartz trying to get people to avoid looking at her anger management issues and financial management issues by trying to focus on a poor choice of words by Avery Doninger.

Yet there are a couple important issues with MoveOn that bear looking at. Many progressives that I know of complain the traditional broadcast format of communications that MoveOn uses. MoveOn sends out all the emails. People have spoken about feeling not heard when they respond, and unless you get to some MoveOn event, you don’t ever communicate with other MoveOn members. Even if you do attend a MoveOn event, the connections rarely seem to go beyond the event.

Yet there is an even more interesting issue that has been brought up about MoveOn. MoveOn uses events, like Sen. Cornyn’s ill-advised amendment, to do effective fundraising. Their emails are also very effective in getting members to contact rules making organizations to express opinions about a proposed rule.

Dr. Stuart W. Shulman, Director of the Sara Fine Institute School of Information Sciences at University of Pittsburgh has an interesting paper, Perverse Incentives: The Case against Mass Email Campaigns where he explores the efficacy of mass email campaigns to federal rules making bodies. It is still a working draft, but it raises several interesting issues.

should we welcome, resist, or seek to steer this drift towards an unreflective and non-deliberative form of click-through democracy?

The quote from the beginning of his paper reflects conclusions that he appears to have already arrived at, that these emails generate unreflective and non-deliberative responses. In his research he has been studying the responses of numerous people to various requests from online advocacy organizations and notes that in most cases, people simply forward the message that has been sent them. In some cases, they add a little additional information.

He spends a lot of time explaining his methodology, but ends up noting that

Nonetheless, MoveOn commenters are most likely to modify their form letters with the types of comments regulators least need to hear, while they are much less likely to focus on core economic or scientific issues that are the statute-mandated basis for a decision.

Now there is nothing to say that MoveOn couldn’t approach its email blasts in a manner that would encourage members to contribute new information from personal experiences that would be relevant to the rule making process. Let’s hope that they move in that direction. We are still finding our way around online advocacy and there are many lessons to be learned. Hopefully people will learn from Dr. Shulman, as well as Sen. Cornyn, Superintendent Schwartz in how better to deal with the world of online advocacy.

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Setting up shop in Second Life

Staying with my thought that Second Life today is like what the web was in 1994, I bit the bullet and set up my first shop in Second Life. I don’t have anything in particular that I want to sell. I just wanted a little space of my own where I could create things with a little permanence and see what happens.

My new Second Life home is here. Stop by and say hi.

Now, let me talk a little bit about setting up shop in Second Life. Being an old techie, I tend to think in terms of servers and all of that, and I think there are some interesting parallels between webservers and Second Life servers.

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