Having not embedded anything before…ever…
…I thought I would begin with my preferred citizen journalist, Russell Brand.
Enjoy
Having not embedded anything before…ever…
…I thought I would begin with my preferred citizen journalist, Russell Brand.
Enjoy
I just read a terrific article published yesterday in The Guardian, by George Monbiot.
The article discusses the climate of social discordance and intense competition that pervades modern, first-world, civilised (and corporatised) societies. Monbiot sets out to debunk the myths of neoliberalism as a merit-based system which rewards hard work and innovation, and particularly the notion that neoliberalism creates equal opportunities for everyone who adheres to such industrious application.
What I found most interesting is the notion of the cultivation of the individual (as consumer) and how this notion of individual enterprise fundamentally distances us from our fellow citizens and makes us wary of each other.
While it represents a heavily corporate dominated environment (look at Google), the Internet – vis-a-vis blogs and other platforms for community exchange – do offer a popular contemporary platform for us to reconnect outside of the context of commerce or corporate-mediated space. I think this can only be a good thing, if you consider examples that WikiLeaks and most alternative political sites offer as necessary counterbalances to mainstream media (both of these sites much in common with the platform of blogging).
The article ties into much of my other reading at the moment, particularly the notion that neoliberal governance undermines the possibility for collective action, as discussed by Jeremy Gilbert in his book, Common Ground. This economic-centered view of things is also so apparent in much of mainstream reportage and its focus on the quantitive elements of various events (e.g. death tolls, budget forecasts, etc, etc.), which give only the most cursory glance at the affective elements of such events on us as humans. The article took a refreshing qualitative stance and it’s a bit of shame that it was relegated to the lower sections of the The Guardian’s homepage.
If you get the chance, check out the full article here:
References:
Gilbert, J. (2014). Common Ground: Democracy and Collectivity in an Age of Individualism.
All this blog business is a bit new to me… a little bit scary.
I think I’m an analogue guy at heart and I’ve kept my distance from immersing, or even familiarising, myself with anything apart from the most basic Web applications (I’m currently neck and neck with my grandfather… alright, he’s winning – but NOT by much).
I like wide-open spaces and tactile, tangible things. Maps, schematics – anything to help me, a technologically averse buffoon, visualise.
Let me convey my current progress using a visual aid. Here’s a map of the internet, created by Martin Vargic
You can view this map in all its glory here: http://jaysimons.deviantart.com/art/Map-of-the-Internet-1-0-427143215
Currently I’m swept up in the Torrenz off the coast of Hastag Peninsula. It’s murky waters, but I’m determined to find my way to the land they call Creative Commons. The master of this land, Jimmy Wales, is said to contain some sage WikiAnswers.
If that were an adventure movie I’d watch it. Something like Lord of the Rings, with a charming protagonist (me), in a battle against Worms and Trojans, with only my helpful and wisecracking sidekick Norton to help me navigate these murky waters (there was originally McAfee too, but he tried to kill Norton, so I had to banish him to the Isle of Spam).
How would you visualise such places?
It could make for an epic adventure…
Watch this space.