Posted on 10/15/2002 9:42:38 PM PDT by UltraConservative
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Oh, yes. The battle was long over by the time the left woke up to the fact that the stupid techies had done an end-run around their control of the print and broadcast media. Stories such as this are about two years late. But now the real battle begins on campus, and it's going to be bloody. The left declared victory in the Long March Through The Institutions about two decades ago at the university level, and is not going to give up their control without a fight. But I don't see them keeping the Internet off campus or succeeding in controlling access. The left invokes freedom and democracy constantly but when confronted with the real thing are incredibly threatened.
On the 'Net, liberal failure has been just as complete. While Matt Drudge's Web site receives nearly 5 million hits per day, liberal news sites are virtually non-existent. Salon.com is going the way of the dinosaurs, and Slate.com is a mere facade. The only liberal Web sites that get any hits are established television channels like BBC, CNN and ABC News. There are no major leftist commentary sites to compete with conservative monsters like Freerepublic.com and lucianne.com, where normal news followers can post their opinions on the story du jour. The left has been left behind on the Web.
It's the inability to compete that has the liberals so angry. They don't understand why people won't listen to elite intelligentsia dither about politics but gladly tune in to hosts like Sean Hannity, a former construction worker with no college degree. They rant and rave over the newest phenomenon -- weblogs, or bloggers, where ordinary folks comment on the news in real time, allowing true Rousseau-ian democracy to flourish. Why, they ask, do more people visit libertarian/conservative bloggers Andrew Sullivan and Glenn Reynolds than the soon-to-be-extinct American Prospect blogger, TAPPED?
Here's the answer: The left cannot survive criticism. It is easy for liberals to air their views when the audience cannot challenge them. Network news is a perfect example -- when Peter Jennings sympathizes with Palestinian suicide bombers, viewers can kick their televisions and scream at Jennings, but Jennings cannot hear them. If Jennings had a talk show, though, he'd have to deal with the views of his audience. Print media is similar. Maureen Dowd can write nasty things about President Bush but would be hard pressed to respond to a reader's challenge.
I have thought this too. There is no doubt in my mind that the Tom Daschle's, Al Gore's and Hillary Clinton's would shut us down in a heartbeat if they could find a way to do it. I am concerned more for radio though because I fear they will try to use the CFR legislation as an excuse to silence conservative political commentary nearing elections. Their ways of dealing with sites like FR are likely to be more underhanded.
And nuts add flavor and texture.
a month ago or so senator dasshole and nyt writer paul krugman bemoaned the left's inability to compete with talk radio and the internet.
they forgot to mention, of course, that the dems have controlled tv since its inception, all three and then four major networks, government financed npr and public television, hollywood, and most of the newspapers in the united states, not to mention the book publishing and distribution system, and the universities.
That says it all. - Tom
It doesn't matter any more. They didn't say anything about the Wellstone funeral party, either, but it was all that half the voters in the country talked about for the next week and a half, and it ended up costing the RATS the Senate. How did the public find out about it in the first place? Talk radio and the internet (with a little help from the left v. right bitchfests on all three cable news channels, where the conservatives brought it up every single night).
Basically, at this point the only people still being led around on a leash by ABCNBCBS and their local papers are the people that really don't care too much about anything. And those people don't vote, either.
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