Aug 22

Thnks Fr Th Mmrs: The Rise Of Microblogging, The Death Of Posterity
by Paul Carr on Aug 22, 2010
http://www.paulcarr.com/thnks-fr-th-mmrs-the-rise-of-microblogging-the-death-of-posterity/

A poor life this if, full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare
– W.H. Davies, Leisure

A little over a week ago, I closed down all of my social media accounts, with the exception of Twitter, which I locked. The explanation I gave was that, in an age when everyone and their dog is sharing every aspect of their life, being a digital recluse is the new “Internet famous”.

Since then, some people have criticized my logic – pointing out that if I really wanted to be a digital recluse then I’d close Twitter too. By drawing attention to myself for becoming a semi-hermit, am I not just trying to have my social media cake and eat it too?

Perhaps. The truth is that there were numerous reasons for me wanting to dial down my use of social media, but presenting numerous arguments in one column is the kiss of death to a columnist. The neo-narcissistic benefits of locking Twitter were what finally made my decision, and so that was the reason I gave. The others would keep.

This morning, though, Leo Laporte wrote a hugely revealing blog post and, in doing so, artfully proved the misquoted maxim that the medium is the message. In short: Laporte discovered last night that, due to a glitch in Google Buzz, several weeks of his updates had failed to reach either Buzz or Twitter. The kicker? Not one of his tens of thousands of followers had noticed, or cared.

Leo’s response was a vow to turn his attentions back to his blog – a place where people visit specifically to read about Leo, and where they email in the hundreds if he skips an update. By contrast, he argues, people on Twitter are so busy broadcasting their own updates that they’re unable or unwilling to listen to others’.

But, while I certainly agree with Leo’s reasoning for abandoning Buzz and going back to macro-blogging, it was another – almost throw-away – line in his post that chimed most loudly with me.

“I should have been posting [on his blog] all along. Had I been doing so I’d have something to show for it. A record of my life for the last few years at the very least. But I ignored my blog and ran off with the sexy, shiny microblogs.”

Reading that line, I instantly felt Leo’s pain. When I was researching my most recent book – which mainly focusses on the events of the past three years of my life – I spent several days going back through my blog archives, plus Twitter, Facebook, Flickr and the rest – to remind myself of details and events that may have been missing from my more traditional notes. What I found – or rather didn’t find – shocked me.

Throughout my earlier archives, I was able to find lengthy, sometimes surprisingly personal, posts – recounting the highs and lows of starting companies, making and losing friends, leaving London, beginning to travel around America and Europe… and countless other published episodes that backed up, and enhanced the contents of my private notebooks. But then, as I clicked forward through the archives to more recent years, something odd happened. At a certain point, the number of posts in each monthly archive dropped off a cliff, particularly where details of my personal life were concerned.

The reason, of course, was that I’d started to use Twitter for that kind of personal stuff. Unperturbed, I moved my research attentions away from my blog archives and over to my Twitter archives – and that’s when I started to panic: for all the dozens of updates I wrote each month, there was absolutely no substance to any of them.

“I am learning a lot about pens.” reads one update from last year. What does that even mean? “Ok, that’s quite enough of all this. I’m going out”, reads another. Enough of all what? And where was I going? Of course, the fact that I’m a particularly boring tweeter doesn’t help, but look at anyone’s Twitter account and it’s the same story – 140 characters simply doesn’t give enough depth or breadth to commit events, memories or feelings to the permanent record.

I’m one of the lucky ones: I hand-write a lot – and I mean a lot – of notes. Recalling personal experiences is what pays my rent so I have dozens of Moleskine books full of memories to look back on. I also have a similar number of published columns and a couple of memoirs to refer to if my recollection gets patchy.

Others aren’t so fortunate. A decade or so ago, a new generation who would previously have kept diaries instead started to set up blogs. Sure those blogs may have been twee or self-absorbed or clumsily written or emo or just plain boring – isn’t that the joy of a diary? – but they at least required the writer to take the time to process the events of their life, and the attendant emotions they generated – before putting finger to keyboard. The result, in many cases, was a detailed archive of events and memories that they can look back on now and say “that was how I was then”.

And then along came micro-blogging – and, with a finite amount of time and effort available, the blog generation turned into the Twitter (or Facebook) generation. A million blogs withered and died as their authors stopped taking the time to process their thoughts and switched instead to simply copying and pasting them into the world, 140 meaningless characters at a time. The result: a whole lot of sound and mundanity, signifying nothing.

To argue for a mass switch back from Tweeting to Livejournaling (or Bloggering, or Movable Typing…) in the interests of the permanent record is as ridiculous as campaigning for everyone to abandon instant messaging and return to letter-writing. The fact is people are busy (or lazy, depending on your view of humanity) and for the vast majority, immediacy will always trump posterity.

But for those of us who have had reason to look back at the past few years – like me writing my book, or Leo having “woken up to a bad social media dream in terms of the content I’ve put in others’ hands” – the realisation is slightly terrifying: by constantly micro-broadcasting everything, we’ve ended up macro-remembering almost nothing.

Jun 21

"Public Opinion" by xkcd

Apr 20

It just isn’t good for people to mix nationalism and faith. It ends up with an incorrect view of history…and ultimately a misplacement of faith itself into politics like this…as exemplified in this video.

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Apr 09

Fox News is the largest news network in the United States, but they can’t report anything accurately.  Someone needs to coax them to remove the term “news” from their name.

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c
The Big Bang Treaty
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show Full Episodes Political Humor Tea Party
Mar 25

It really does blow my mind that Republicans think what they do. Especially things like believing he is a Muslim, though he has publicly always stated that he was a Christian. I think that it would be a ‘faux pas’ with Islam to claim Christ was God, wouldn’t it? Additionally, wouldn’t it be an irony to claim to be a Christ follower, when you are actually against him? The whole thing is crazy.

Mar 24

What is essentially domestic terrorism has been occurring in various locations where Democratic Congresspersons have been threatened and had their property damaged over this vote about health care reform. Notes left and verbal threats have pointed to this directly.

Domestic terrorism being defined as, “[involving] groups or individuals whose terrorist activities are directed at our government or people in US without foreign direction. Terrorism is the systematic use of terror especially as a means of coercion.” In this case coercion to repeal the new health care legislation via acts of violence and threats.

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Some of the people who have opposed this health care legislation have used a quote from Thomas Jefferson to justify their actions: “The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots & tyrants.” They often follow that quote with a statement like, “She’s looking very thirsty lately!” However, this type of ‘revolutionary’ sort of statement isn’t what Thomas Jefferson was saying. Let us break this down by year to demonstrate:

  • 1766 Sons of Liberty formed, meeting under a tree when they met…e.g. liberty tree.
  • 1773 Boston Tea Party
  • 1776 Declaration of Independence from British rule
  • 1781 Articles of Confederation – our first constitution
  • 1781-1789 governing body in the United States was the Congress of the Confederation made up of delegates appointed by the legislatures of the states
  • 1786 (Aug)-1787 (Feb) Shays’ Rebellion, made up of armed farmers angry about debt and taxation.  They also used the ‘Liberty Tree’ or a ‘Liberty Pole’ to symbolize their cause.
  • 1787 (Jan) Over 1000 Shaysites arrested.
  • 1787 (Feb) Those involved in Shays’ Rebellion came up against the local militia of Springfield, Mass. The government militia fired warning shots from cannons.  Two of the cannons struck persons of Shays’ Rebellion, killing 4 and wounding 20.  The remaining Shaysites fled.
  • 1787 (Sept) Constitution of the United States of America adopted
  • 1787 (Nov) Letter from Thomas Jefferson to William S. Smith contains the quote concerning Shays’ Rebellion
  • 1789 Bill of Rights introduced and in effect by Dec 1791
  • 1789-1797 George Washington Presidency
  • 1797-1801 John Adams Presidency
  • 1801-1809 Thomas Jefferson Presidency

Thomas Jefferson was referring to the Shaysites that happened to be killed as the “tree of liberty” being “refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants.”  Here is the full quote:

“God forbid we should ever be twenty years without such a rebellion. The people cannot be all, and always, well informed. The part which is wrong will be discontented, in proportion to the importance of the facts they misconceive. If they remain quiet under such misconceptions, it is lethargy, the forerunner of death to the public liberty. … And what country can preserve its liberties, if its rulers are not warned from time to time, that this people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. The remedy is to set them right as to the facts, pardon and pacify them. What signify a few lives lost in a century or two? The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time, with the blood of patriots and tyrants. It is its natural manure.”

Here is another explanation that I found recently from a blog called “The Rude Pundit”:

So, like, for a long time, as a threat to people in power, protesters trot out this line from Thomas Jefferson: “The tree of liberty must be refreshed from time to time with the blood of patriots & tyrants.” It’s been tossed back and forth between the left and right like a football at recess at the special school, although most often it’s proudly displayed by the yahoos in some extreme right wing nutzoid movements, be it militias or the townhall idiots. And it’d be a poignant quote, one that gets us back to our roots as a revolutionary society. Except that Jefferson was actually talking about the blood of ignorant people who rise up in arms against the American government, too. In fact, it was mostly their blood.

The entire letter makes this clear, and, as with so many things properly understood in relation to the Founders, it is stunningly prescient. Jefferson was talking to John Adams’ son-in-law about Shays’ Rebellion, a truly fascinating episode in the early history of the nation, pre-Constitution, but post-Revolution, where rural Massachusetts citizens rose up against the state’s government over issues of taxes and debt. They were crushed, of course, and many of the politicians of the time were all a-twitter with how this was an attack on liberty and how the rebels should be put to death.

And while he could be something of a drama queen in his rhetoric – well, really, they all could be (it’s the effect of long-term wig-wearing) – Jefferson’s essential message in his letter was, more or less, “Chill. Stupid people will act stupidly.” Or, as he put it, “I say nothing of it’s motives. They were founded in ignorance, not wickedness. God forbid we should ever be 20 years without such a rebellion. The people cannot be all, & always well informed. The part which is wrong will be discontented in proportion to the importance of the facts they misconceive. If they remain quiet under such misconceptions it is a lethargy, the forerunner of death to the public liberty.”

See, Jefferson was forgiving the dumb, saying it was better to have idiots uprising than to have no civic engagement at all. But we have to understand that they’re dumb and that the dumber they are, the more they will rage in their dumbness. Prior to the famous quote, Jefferson wrote, “We have had 13 states independent 11 years. There has been one rebellion. That comes to one rebellion in a century & a half for each state. What country before ever existed a century & a half without a rebellion? & what country can preserve it’s liberties if their rulers are not warned from time to time that their people preserve the spirit of resistance? Let them take arms. The remedy is to set them right as to facts, pardon & pacify them. What signify a few lives lost in a century or two?”

Now we have people who associate themselves with the present Tea Party Movement, people vocal about opposing health care legislation or insurance reform, and often people vocal about their opposition to the Obama Presidency in general, taking up the symbol of the Tree of Liberty to symbolize their cause, using acts of violence and threats to reverse legislation passed by their democratically elected Congresspersons and President.  They are encouraging taking up arms and forming community militia to oppose enforcement of law, should whatever conflict they believe may happen comes to pass….even though no threats or conflict from the government has been in play in the first place.

All the while believing that Jefferson’s words are supportive of their actions, when in reality the Tea Party of today are the new Shaysites….often misinformed, lacking a complete picture of the issues they protest, and collectively issuing little threats (whether they be real or not) concerning action against the government.  I just hope that the Tea Party followers aren’t bound to repeat history.
Mar 23

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

The good things the new health care reform will do is pretty incredible. And a lot of them start right away, or at least sometime this year.

2010:

  • Ban on denial of children because of pre-existing conditions
  • Tax credits for small businesses to assist with employee’s insurance premiums, up to 50% of the premium cost.
  • Rebates for seniors to help cover the medication coverage expenditure limitation in Medicare
  • Cutoff for young adults being on their parents’ insurance policy is reset to age 27.
  • Lifetime caps on individual insurance are banned.
  • High-risk insurance pool created for adults with pre-existing conditions
  • New insurance plans must include preventative care without co-pays
  • Insurance companies are banned from cutting someone’s insurance once they get sick
  • Insurance companies must reveal how much money they output on administrative costs and profits
  • There will finally be an appeals process for coverage and claims for the patient
  • New screening processes to tackle health insurance fraud
  • Medicare payment protections will be extended to small and rural hospitals.
  • Nutritional content will have to be disclosed by chain restaurants

2011:

  • Annual wellness visits and prevention care for Medicare recipients
  • Medicaid plans that would allow states to offer home and community care for the disabled
  • Payments to insurers offering Medicare Advantage frozen at 2010 level to bring costs in line with Medicare.
  • Employers must disclose the value of employees’ health benefits on their W-2
  • Insurance companies required to spend 80-85 of premiums on actual health care, or they will be required to issue a rebate to the patient for the difference

2012:

  • Move in Medicare and Medicaid to track admissions to prevent readmissions because of preventable issues.

2013:

  • Medicare payroll tax increased for individuals earning > $200,000 per year, or couples earning > $250,000 per year.

2014:

  • Ban on discrimination for adults with pre-existing conditions
  • Insurance exchanges for small businesses and individuals
  • Annual limits for insurance will be banned

2018:

  • All plans must include preventative care without co-pays

There are still a number of fixes that will need to be put into law, like a lot of earmarks and fluff removed…as well as the affirmation that federal dollars will not be spent on abortion services.  I hope the Republicans will be kind in their treatment of these fixes.

Mar 20

Perhaps it is most fair to describe Tea Party movement adherers as “Constitutionalists”…though it is certainly their own brand of interpretation of the Constitution, and often involves inclusion of additions that the Tea Party movement mistakes as being in the Constitution in the first place. Again, in fairness…additions like this are also done by progressives and people in general. But it is this myopic and aggressive fear and ignorance generated from Fox News and many Republicans that really is a strong reason to question the Tea Party follower’s actions.

Mar 17

Fox News, on multiple programs, reported that if ‘ObamaCare’ passes that 45.7% of physicians would opt to stop practicing, citing a poll from the New England Journal of Medicine. This is completely erroneous.

Basic fact-checking found that the source of the statistic is a physician recruitment firm in Texas called “The Medicus Firm”. They are using their statistic as promotional material. It was NOT from the New England Journal of Medicine, and Medicus polled their existing population of clients to attract their certain type of clientele with this statistic.

Ridiculous.

Mar 06

http://www.whitehouse.gov/blog/2010/03/05/weekly-address-what-health-reform-will-deliver-year

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