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Beware the host of babbling bloggers
Columbus Dispatch ^ | December 29, 2005 | Kathleen Parker

Posted on 12/31/2005 6:38:42 AM PST by Loyal Buckeye

Of all the stories leading America’s annual greatest-hits list, the one that subsumes the rest is the evolution of information in the Age of Blogging.

Not since the birth of the printing press have our lives been so dramatically affected by the way we create and consume information.

What is wonderful and miraculous about the Internet needs little elaboration. We all marvel at the ease with which we can access information, whether reading government documents previously available only to a few, or tracking down old friends and new enemies.

It is this latter – our new enemies – that interests me most. I don’t mean al-Qaida or Osama bin Laden, but the less visible, insidious enemies of decency, humanity and civility: the angry offspring of narcissism’s quickie marriage to instant gratification.

There’s something frankly creepy about the explosion we now call the blogosphere – the "electroniverse" where recently wired squatters set up new camps each day. As I write, the number of blogs (Web logs) and bloggers (those who blog) is estimated in the tens of millions worldwide.

Although I’ve been a blog fan since the beginning, and have written favorably about the value added to journalism and public knowledge thanks to the new "citizen journalist," I’m also wary of power untempered by restraint and accountability.

Say what you will about the mainstream media, but no industry agonizes more about how to improve its product, police its members and better serve its communities. Newspapers are filled with carpal-tunneled wretches, overworked and underpaid, who suffer near-pathological allegiance to getting it right.

That a Jayson Blair of The New York Times surfaces now and then as a plagiarist or a fabricator ultimately is testament to the high standards tens of thousands of others strive to uphold each day without recognition. Blair is infamous, but also gone.

Bloggers persist no matter their contributions or quality, though most would have little to occupy their time were the mainstream media to disappear tomorrow. Some bloggers do their own reporting, but most rely on mainstream reporters to do the heavy lifting. Some bloggers also offer superb commentary, but most buzz and blurt like caffeinated adolescents.

Even so, they hold the same megaphone as the adults and enjoy perceived credibility owing to membership in the larger world of blog grown-ups. These effete and often clever baby "bloggies" are rich in time and toys, but bereft of adult supervision.

Spoiled and undisciplined, they have seized the stage, a privilege granted not by years in the trenches, but by virtue of a three-pronged plug and the miracle of WiFi. They play tag team with hyperlinks ("I’ll say you’re important if you’ll say I’m important") and shriek "Gotcha!" when they catch some weary wage earner in a mistake or oversight. Plenty smart but lacking in wisdom, they possess the power of a forum, but neither the maturity nor humility that years of experience impose.

Each time I wander into blogdom, I’m reminded of the savage children stranded on an island in William Golding’s Lord of the Flies. Without adult supervision, they organize themselves into rival tribes, learn to hunt and kill, and eventually become murderous barbarians in the absence of a civilizing structure.

What Golding demonstrated and what we’re witnessing as the blogosphere’s offspring multiply is that people tend to abuse power when it is unearned and will bring down others to enhance themselves. Likewise, many bloggers seek the destruction of others for their own self-aggrandizement. When a mainstream journalist stumbles, they pile on like so many savages, hoisting his or her head on a bloody stick as Golding’s children did the fly-covered head of a butchered sow.

Schadenfreude – pleasure in others’ misfortunes – has become the new barbarity on an island called Blog. When someone trips, whether Dan Rather or Judith Miller, bloggers are slavering for a public flogging. Incivility is their weapon and humanity their victim.

I mean no disrespect to the many brilliant people out there – professors, lawyers, doctors, philosophers, scientists and journalists who also happen to blog. But we should beware and resist the rest of the egogratifying rabble who contribute only snark, sass and destruction.

We can’t silence them, but for civilization’s sake and the integrity of information by which we all live or die, we can and should ignore them.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bias; bloggers; columnists; internet; jaysonblair; kathleenparker; msm; weblogs
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To: Riley
There is an apparent blindness to one's own biases and shortcomings in the trade.

I believe it is also fear. The media still claims they hold a patent on integrity and that their job is to seek out the truth no matter where it leads. For years we, the public, were supposed to accept this just because they said it. Until the internet they could claim that role but do anything they wanted because unless you had access to the media you couldn't challenge them effectively. The Dan Rather fake document scandal was a shot across their bow. They can no longer do anything they want without a challenge, and this has them terrified. It's kinda what wiretap technology did to the Mafia. Unfortunately, just as with every old institution, instead of cleaning their own house the MSM will simply go on the offensive and attack the competition. Their days are numbered.

61 posted on 12/31/2005 8:36:07 AM PST by Casloy
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To: Loyal Buckeye
Newspapers are filled with carpal-tunneled wretches, overworked and underpaid, who suffer near-pathological allegiance to getting it right sensational headlines and the Democratic Party, truth be damned.

There -- I fixed it.

62 posted on 12/31/2005 8:39:02 AM PST by freedumb2003 (American troops cannot be defeated. American Politicians can.)
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To: Loyal Buckeye
"Newspapers are filled with carpal-tunneled wretches, overworked and underpaid, who suffer near-pathological allegiance to getting it right."

If only that were true. Ms Parker must live in a very tight bubble.

63 posted on 12/31/2005 8:40:02 AM PST by norwaypinesavage
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To: Riley
People who constantly extoll the worth of the free flow of information, carping and complaining that the flow of information now bypasses their 'gatekeeper' role. It's 'free-er' now. What's wrong with that?

Simple - just like with so many other things that they they profess to hold high, the left's reverence for the First Amendment is nothing but a lie. The truth is much closer to what Kathleen Parker doesn't quite dare to say right here - they think the First is really a "collective" right, just like they think the Second Amendment is a "collective right" that applies only to the individual state National Guard forces (the "militia" in their view).

In Parker's view, us rabble are simply too ignorant and uneducated to properly use the First Amendment, and that as a result it should be restricted only to the press, true (as in leftist) academics, and enlightened "artists" who give us such masterpieces as photos of crucifixes dunked in urine and eight-year-old children decked out in bondage gear with bullwhips sticking out of their asses. If nothing else, the blogosphere is revealing these "elites" as the hypocrites they really are when it comes to "free speech."

64 posted on 12/31/2005 8:43:08 AM PST by CFC__VRWC ("Anytime a liberal squeals in outrage, an angel gets its wings!" - gidget7)
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To: Loyal Buckeye
I don't know who this whining little girl is, but she or someone close to her has obviously been raked over the coals recently.

So much angst over what in her mind is a bunch of meddling kids getting in the way of the "Adult" media. "carpal-tunneled wretches, overworked and underpaid" Oh Dear, Oh My! Talk about spreading the manure with a caterpillar tractor. It would be hilarious if not for the artificial gravity she brings to the matter.

Although I suppose artificial gravity is what one gets when dealing with this poor misguided "Journalists" artificial intelligence.
65 posted on 12/31/2005 8:46:12 AM PST by Dr.Zoidberg (Whats with the Marquis of Queensbury Rules bullsh*t, we fight for our very survival! Fight Dirty!)
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To: Riley

Just on the off-chance that the author will read this thread- a word about bias is in order.

I am biased. I admit it. I am a Conservative, and I tend to see things from within that paradigm. I usually agree with other Conservatives and disagree with Liberals. But, contrary to the journalism racket's conventional wisdom- I am not an imbecile that needs to be told what to think, or how I should interpret events of the world around me.

But when I see (as an example) two Congressmen- one Republican and one Democrat- who have committed some identical breach of ethics under the exact same circumstances, the Republican (R) will be splattered all over the front page above the fold, and the Dem's coverage will be buried inside. You know how we know he's a Dem (absent mining Google)? The party affiliation usually isn't mentioned at all.

What do you think that says to us about the paper? If the political polarity in the above example were reversed, it would be equally reprehensible, and would identically speak to the credibility of the paper.


66 posted on 12/31/2005 8:48:53 AM PST by Riley ("Bother" said Pooh, as he fired the Claymores.)
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To: manwiththehands
We live in marvelous times. I'm of the opinion that the Internet is the best thing to happen to our freedom of expression since the invention of the printing press. It's just a whole lot faster.

Good observation. Some things I like about net forums & blogs are that factors that carry so much weight in the other media, that have no bearing on accuracy and truth, such as physical appearance, quality of voice, charisma and presence etc., are nullified.

So someone that is scrawny, bed ridden, pain wracked, stringy haired and with a tinney sounding voice but who is providing more insightful, accurate observations can compete with the tall, dark, handsome, buffed, jock with the booming voice and commanding presence. [who now is a motivational speaker cuz he doesn't know squat about anything].

67 posted on 12/31/2005 8:52:29 AM PST by Lester Moore (The headwaters of the islamic river of death and hate are in Saudi Arabia.)
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To: doc30
The overall impression I have with this article is that the author
feels blogs are putting journalists under a very powerful
microscope and she doesn't like it.


I can't help but wonder if this is why the medical field is so
slow to adopt more technology for patient management/records...
I'd guess bumbling doctors don't want even better patient documentation
and good docs just don't want to be bothered with the investment of
time/energy to get up to speed.
68 posted on 12/31/2005 8:58:32 AM PST by VOA
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To: Loyal Buckeye
Newspapers are filled with carpal-tunneled wretches, overworked and underpaid, who suffer near-pathological allegiance to getting it right.

more like beyond pathological allegiance to getting it left.

69 posted on 12/31/2005 9:00:58 AM PST by Always Right
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To: VOA

I think you are right. No one is 100% perfect in their job performance. Everyone makes mistakes. Most are small, even trivial, but so can be serious. When the public demands 100% perfect performace, the stress is too great for most people, especially if they are held accountable for any deviation, regardless of degree, from 100% perfection. Bloggers are doing it to journalists and the trial lawyer and patients are demanding it of doctors. The bar that is being set is idealistic and unattainable.


70 posted on 12/31/2005 9:19:21 AM PST by doc30 (Democrats are to morals what and Etch-A-Sketch is to Art.)
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To: Loyal Buckeye

The panicked squeals of the media elite are SO soothing.

Never before has there been an actual "Marketplace of Ideas" so accessible, cheap, and self-regulating.


71 posted on 12/31/2005 9:23:32 AM PST by ko_kyi
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To: Loyal Buckeye
Newspapers are filled with carpal-tunneled wretches, overworked and underpaid, [...]

That sounds to me like an admission of exploitative business practices. Maybe the usual style of hit-and-run smear-job, out-of-context 'investigative reporting' is in order.

72 posted on 12/31/2005 9:26:57 AM PST by Riley ("Bother" said Pooh, as he fired the Claymores.)
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To: Loyal Buckeye
Today her article visits the spy scandal. Her best line: "But the privilege of debating our constitutional rights requires first that we be alive."

Can't argue with that. :-)

http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/opinion/columnists/orl-parker3105dec31,0,4509608.column
73 posted on 12/31/2005 9:31:27 AM PST by JoeSixPack1
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To: Loyal Buckeye
Say what you will about the mainstream media, but no industry agonizes more about how to improve its product, police its members and better serve its communities. Newspapers are filled with carpal-tunneled wretches, overworked and underpaid, who suffer near-pathological allegiance to getting it right. We can’t silence them [bloggers], but for civilization’s sake and the integrity of information by which we all live or die, we can and should ignore them.

A "blogger", by definition, is a single person who publishes his own opinions on his own web page. As such, his powers are rather limited and his opinions are not necessarily more valid than any other person you happen to meet.

What the Old Media avoids like the plague is the mere mention of the "F-Word".

Forum.

That is exactly what FreeRepublic is and that is exactly what exposed the attempted fraud by CBS in RatherGate.

A Forum, unlike a blogger, is the collective knowledge of thousands of individuals, from all over the World, with tens of thousands of man years of real world experience in everything from computer fonts to law to medicine to business to baking to landing an F-14 on the deck of a carrier.

That is a level of expertise that no Old Media research department can ever hope to duplicate.

In regards to fact-checking, a false fact posted on our Forum on Post 36 will have several rebuttals by Post 59.

The only way that Old Media can can puff itself up in comparison to the Forum is to set up a "blogger" straw-man and then proceed to beat the stuffing out of it.

Forums do not try to replace media as they do not have to dedicated resources need to collect news at the source.

Forums, however, have stripped the Old Media of its monopoly on the global dissemination of information and have therefore stripped Old Media of its ability to falsify facts with total impunity in order to advance their very thinly veiled political bias and agenda..

74 posted on 12/31/2005 9:32:00 AM PST by Polybius
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To: JoeSixPack1

Hopefully, journalists one day will see the merit of applying the same standard to voting. Then the Democratic Party is finished. :-)


75 posted on 12/31/2005 9:33:34 AM PST by Riley ("Bother" said Pooh, as he fired the Claymores.)
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To: Cboldt
Fortunately, what the author advicates happens naturally, as most readers DO dismiss the snarks, sasses and twits.

Unfortunately, Parker defines the terms "snarks, sasses and twits" far more broadly than we do. She means everyone outside the journo/intellectual elite.

76 posted on 12/31/2005 9:33:49 AM PST by Constitutionalist Conservative (Have you visited http://c-pol.blogspot.com?)
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To: JoeSixPack1

That's actually a pretty good article.

My comments on the article posted on this thread stand but I call them as I see them, and one at a time.


77 posted on 12/31/2005 9:43:19 AM PST by Riley ("Bother" said Pooh, as he fired the Claymores.)
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To: Glenn
Being just a work-a-day Johnnie, I am not fit to live.

Not exactly true. You exist to gratefully consume all that the Beautiful People produce.

78 posted on 12/31/2005 9:43:59 AM PST by Constitutionalist Conservative (Have you visited http://c-pol.blogspot.com?)
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To: Riley

Parker has been around a while. She actually makes sense, sometimes. :-)


79 posted on 12/31/2005 9:55:38 AM PST by JoeSixPack1
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To: Constitutionalist Conservative
Unfortunately, Parker defines the terms "snarks, sasses and twits" far more broadly than we do. She means everyone outside the journo/intellectual elite.

LOL. Well, after observing the lack of substance in the piece, in combination with the tone with which she delivered her opinion, I conclude that Parker is a snark.

Everbody gets to make their own value judgements, that's the beauty of it.

80 posted on 12/31/2005 10:06:13 AM PST by Cboldt
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