Those who can, write. Many who wish they could write, but cannot,
blog. A lot of liberals blog. And many of those, like teenagers
pushing parental limits, use blogs to try to sting resented conservatives.
But when we look past the surface rhetoric of the typical liberal
blog, there is the unexpected. Buried within the invective is
homage. Homage to the writers they are disparaging, to the ideas
they are dismissing, and to the system of thought they secretly
admire, but ever remain only on the edge of. They would blog
to a purple rage to deny it, but vitriol is actually their way
of seeking approval from conservatives.
Blogs, or web logs, have become ubiquitous on the internet.
Everybody and his brother has one. Some are mediocre, some are
simply narcissistic, and some are very good. Most have a James
Joyce feel. A stream of consciousness flow that allows bloggers
to flit to the topic or path they find amusing. While this is
empowering, their very own candy store so to speak, they don’t
realize how much of their own personality is revealed in their
choices. The day’s disparagement and the particular way it is
presented reveals far more than was likely intended by the blogger.
When certain topics, and especially certain people, begin to reappear
in the blogs, you get a glimpse of Mr. or Ms. Inner Blogger and
the particular agenda they are attempting to conceal. Another
liberal attempt at obfuscation falls easily to conservative analysis.
It’s amazing to see bits of your work on some blogger’s page.
I don’t think I’ve ever been contacted in advance by a blogger,
to say something like ‘look for my slime of you in the near future’
at such and such site. But often I catch it in a google check
of my name, or in an email from someone in my writer’s group.
Predictably, liberal blog entries concerning my work are rarely
favorable. Few liberals write flattering reviews of anything
conservative; it therefore falls to conservatives to critique
their own. Conservatives denied the platform of the mainstream
media, actually fared better in development by having that obstacle
to overcome. Liberal bloggers just end up forcing words into,
uhm, unorthodox adjectival functions.
That ‘bits’ are used is a concern. Only partial passages appear,
and Snip is acknowledged regularly. I like to think it’s a rigorous
adherence to the spirit of the DMCA, rather than deliberately
taking things out of context to make the point stretch to their
intention. But then, that wouldn’t explain how some parts quoted
jump into completely random order, totally foreign to the way
I left them on the page when I finished the article. It also
wouldn’t cover such visceral reactions to discrete words and phrases,
when viewing the words and phrases as they were written would
belie the blogger’s inaccurate interpretation.
I am disappointed about the lack of discourse, because I’d like
to correct the inaccuracies and misinterpretations. But then,
there aren’t enough hours in the day; days in the week; weeks
in the year; or years in the decade that would be needed to correct
so many mistakes. Not to worry. Conservatives always see the
humor amid the ‘world o’ crap’ found in so many liberal blogs.
Jan Ireland