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The Power Of These Words

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  • The Power Of These Words

    THE POWER OF THESE WORDS
    by Rick Salutin

    Rabble.ca
    Aug 17 2007
    Canada

    Essence of blogging. The challenge of the blogosphere leapt out in one
    line of David Rees's response to Michael Ignatieff's recent recantation
    of support for the Iraq war. Blogger Rees cited an Ignatieff passage on
    how the noble expectations of war boosters failed to materialize, which
    ended by saying war opponents "avoided all these mistakes." "Yeah,"
    Rees blogged, "you're right, they did.

    Do you know why? Because they're not retarded."

    That's it. The blogosphere is the schoolyard at recess-in the best
    sense. The great equalizer, where kids who play the game and get ahead
    in class, are cut down to size. A figure like Michael Ignatieff could
    spend his life without hearing anyone blow him a raspberry-as opposed
    to respectfully disagreeing, thereby affirming his gravitas.

    It's anti-respect for authority, the court jester, the kid in The
    King's New Clothes. It's not telling truth to power: It's telling
    power to screw itself. This is the radical democratic element in
    blogging: that possessors of power, including the power of opinion,
    don't necessarily merit their status at all. You cut them no slack
    and what you say, or hiss, gets out there. The wielders of power are
    not used to this treatment.

    Suppose the anti-respect movement succeeded. Then what would replace
    respectability? Is this a zero-sum game in which new opinionators
    would just move into the positions from which the pompous asses and
    "retards" were turfed? I find it distressing the extent to which this
    kind of prestige seems on bloggers' minds. You can see Daily Kos's
    founder Markos Moulitsas Zúniga practically pee himself when he's on
    The Colbert Report. Perhaps he's aware that people still spend far
    more media time with TV and radio (70 per cent) than the Internet
    (5 per cent). Sometimes the blogosphere feels like a reality show
    called Who Wants To Be the Next Super Pundit?

    I imagine a Kos-like response would be: Everybody gets to be the next
    super pundit, we are about the democratic right of all to express
    their views. I think this is less rebellious than it seems because
    in the end it would merely replace the opinions of a few with the
    opinions of many. The biggest problem, it seems to me, isn't elitism
    (which is a problem); it's individualism.

    IMHO, as they say, what's missing from the discussion is the issue
    of common sense versus individual opinion. A revolutionary change
    would not replace a few opinions with more and different individual
    views; it would arrive at opinions in a new, non-egocentric way, where
    people could meet without previously developed, hard positions, and
    work together on an issue. Such things happen, and they are usually
    practically oriented: Should we go on strike? Should we change the
    way things are done at the school?

    So the key myth isn't elitism, it's individualism, the idea that some
    lone genius will come up with the answers.

    Cleansing the term: A U.S. general let the cat out of the bag this
    week when he called massacres in Kurdish Iraq, ethnic cleansing and
    "almost" genocide, as if the two are much the same. But ethnic
    cleansing is far more widespread and ancient. In the sense of
    transfer of identifiable populations, it's almost coterminous with
    modern history. Why move people if you want to kill them rather than
    just rob them? (Unless you lack the death technology, in which case,
    forced marches, as in the Armenian genocide, will accomplish both.)
    Most partitions involve ethnic cleansing, as the UN knew when it
    partitioned Palestine in 1947 and Britain did when it divided India
    exactly 60 years ago. Iraq is being ethnically cleansed with two
    million internal and two million external refugees; as Yugoslavia
    was ethnically cleansed in the 1990s, with the collusion of NATO,
    in the holy name of whatever it was called at the time. Maybe eliding
    the two categories helps cover up the nature of these more ostensibly
    respectable cases. They don't deserve the fig leaf.

    Originally published in The Globe and Mail, Rick Salutin's column
    appears every Friday.

    --Boundary_(ID_TBD9Dojc8Dv5kqcajTu93w)--
    From: Baghdasarian
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