I think I'll start a new blog and write about nothing but weather.
The R.C. mentioned the long blog-silence to me last week. I thought about it for a while and decided that--mostly--my thoughts are more private than they used to be. Not because I'm thinking anything seditious, obscene, or even mean, but because I don't know anyone who actually cares. I can't even remember the last time I had an actual conversation with someone about a topic of any actual importance.*
Conversation, I've decided, has to stay pretty shallow if you want today's over-stimulated, frantically trying-to-multitask population to even pretend to be engaged. If you find yourself, twenty years or so past your college days, once again ruminating on Kant or with an urge to re-visit the Federalist Papers/Anti-Federalist Papers, you can't really talk to anyone about the thoughts these writings inspire, can you? Or about how your attitude toward them might have changed in the last twenty years. I have an intermittent but long-term interest in quantum physics. It's inconceivable to me that anyone I know has any grasp of the fundamentals, much less is willing to spend as much as 60 seconds discussing the topic.
Brief. You have to be brief.
As time goes by and our society becomes ever-more addicted to the sound-bite, whether spoken or written--texting, Twitter, and Facebook, I'm looking at you--you have to be briefer and briefer if you don't want people to just walk away while you're still in the middle of your first sentence.
Our society has absorbed and internalized the right-wing cult of anti-intellectualism to the point where any display of a depth of knowledge on any subject deeper than the intellectual tapioca of television produces a tsunami of glazed eyes and empty chairs.
People are not only ignorant and uninformed, they brag about it. As though not understanding the world they live in is something to be proud of. As though remaining steadfastly stupid in a world awash with information is a unique achievement. As though, having been gifted with a brain, making the choice not to use it is in some way--in some way a choice and not an abdication of membership in the human race.
So, you know, mostly I've just stopped trying.
The weather, FWIW, is fabulous. It's been sunny and 75-80 for the past few days.
_______________
* I am, as always, dissing the nameless, faceless masses. Not the intelligent and stimulating readers of this blog.
Also, I should point out that this blog entry would probably never have been written if I'd dropped a couple of chocolates in my lunch bag this morning.
posted by AnneZook on 10.19.09 at 02:45 PMAnti-intellectualism may be proof that Heisenberg was wrong: observing the phenomenon, as we have for so many years, does nothing whatsoever to change either its state or its vector.
I used to think blogs were the answer: the ability to write long pieces; the degree to which bloggers often do better when they specialize, develop a solid niche expertise; the conversation between related (and sometimes unrelated) blogs, and the value of an active, interested commentariat; the fast nature of the conversation combined with the ability of a blog post to sit there attracting readers and search results in perpetuity.
Sturgeon's Law, though, and academic inertia have dulled my enthusiasm. They are a new publishing platform, it's true, but like television -- which Pete Seeger thought would be a revolutionary cultural tool -- it's a vast wasteland with oases of quality (and large stretches of banality of interest only to small social networks).
posted by: Jonathan Dresner on 10.19.09 at 06:06 PM [permalink]"Wasteland" is a good choice.
The internet is full of words, words, words, but it's increasingly obvious to me that not everyone who can type has anything to say worth reading.
What's more, I'm starting to distrust everything I read online. When there are no checks and balances, when anyone with a keyboard can call themselves an expert, who decides what is true?
posted by: Bettie on 10.19.09 at 08:40 PM [permalink]Precisely, Jonathan. Our country has absorbed the distrust of and contempt for intelligence so thoroughly that even trying to discuss the value of education/intelligent thought is enough to get you branded as part of the "intellectual elite." Most people no longer even question the assumption--they've easily come to believe that smart=dangerous/delusional. (And then an "Aha!" moment. Is that how the Shrub got the votes? People figured he was so stupid he couldn't be dangerous?)
I, too, used to think blogging was the (maybe "an") answer and it still might be--I continue to read a couple of dozen blogs written by intelligent (or at least willing to be informed) people who aren't afraid to write in complete sentences and have original thoughts. The conversations that take place encourage me.
Yesterday's mood of disgust aside, I do realize that the entire span of human existence has consisted of a few people with active brain cells surrounded by a horde of ignorant sheep. I need to come to terms with the fact that contemporary mass media--from television to the internet--has given the sheep a "voice" they never had before.
I haven't given up the idea that the world of the internet and instantaneous global communication can be a powerful force for good. I'm just frustrated when I realize how few people take advantage of the opportunity. And, even worse, I'm beyond frustrated--I'm enraged when people glory in their ignorance.
I don't suppose the divide between those who pay attention and understand the problems our world faces and those who just want to make it through the day so they can hit the bar at 5:00 is any larger than it was a hundred or two hundred years ago.
Sorry--I'm sort of incoherent before coffee.
posted by: Anne on 10.20.09 at 08:39 AM [permalink]I dunno, Bettie. I think people of intelligence decide what's true the same way they always have. They dig into the facts, compare and contrast interpretations, and figure out what makes the most sense.
And, obviously, some online sources (like offline sources) are more reliable when it comes to "the facts" than others.
posted by: Anne on 10.20.09 at 08:43 AM [permalink]I do realize that the entire span of human existence has consisted of a few people with active brain cells surrounded by a horde of ignorant sheep.
"ignorant," but self-serving, "sheep."
Well, so much for my World History surveys. Do you know how hard it's going to be for me to not quote this in class?
posted by: Jonathan Dresner on 10.20.09 at 09:25 AM [permalink]Yes, self-serving. But, really, what the sheep want is very simple. Food, shelter, entertainment (see today's rant), and the illusion of some control. (Just the illusion. Real control, real personal responsibility, is a burden.)
P.S. Just being thought quote-worthy has made my day. :) Help yourself.
P.P.S. Really. Help yourself.
Because it occurs to me that if you offend just a handful of students and inspire them to go out and prove you wrong--prove that they aren't sheep, then I have not blogged in vain.
LOL
posted by: Anne on 10.20.09 at 10:05 AM [permalink]OK, you're in my quote file. It would make a great final exam essay prompt: "Do you agree? Discuss concretely."
the illusion of some control.
That's a lot harder than it used to be, I think. The tension between the rhetoric of freedom/individuality/independence and the structural boundaries created by family, state and corporation is more obvious, I think, than it used to be.
posted by: Jonathan Dresner on 10.20.09 at 01:45 PM [permalink]I could make a case that civilization closing in around people makes it easier.
I think, as the world grows smaller around them, most people's personal focus narrows as well. I think people in contemporary society are willing to accept smaller freedoms--control over increasingly minor issues. We have willingly given up some broader freedoms for the safety gained from knowing that others around us are subject to the same prohibitions. I could argue that that makes our remaining freedoms, the remaining areas where we possess control, more important to us.
Where the freedom, the remaining flexibility in our society comes from is the fact that we don't all agree on which freedoms are necessary to us. We won't all eat the same bread or cheer the same circus. :) Consequently, leaving the majority of us even the "illusion" of control is no simple matter--even for the vast federal government whose job would be made easier by a more homogeneous population.
Amusing digressions into paranoia aside, I think that's where a lot of resistance on things like automobile seat belt laws and mandatory helmet laws for motorcycles originates. That's a loss of control--freedom--that interferes with the motorcycle rider's perception of his/her "image" or the car driver's perception of the inside of their car as a "personal space" that isn't subject to public control.
And my point is, because I haven't actually forgotten where the conversation started, is that by letting these largely unimportant (to society as a whole) issues remain a matter of "personal choice," you let people focus on the illusion that they control their own lives.
posted by: Anne on 10.20.09 at 03:14 PM [permalink]Speaking of vast wastelands, I ran across this discussion of global television this morning. I'm not sure I agree with the tone, and the causality is suspect, but the discussion is interesting.
posted by: Jonathan Dresner on 10.21.09 at 09:08 AM [permalink]Okay. I agree with you. It was an interesting discussion, but I find the causality more than "suspect." Maybe they were trying to boil 500 pages of research and data down to a mass-market audience, but I'd personally like to see some kind of evidence to back up their assertions.
On the other hand, I don't doubt that exposure to other ways of life can be of benefit to an entire culture. I'd even suggest that the world needs a lot more of it--I'd like to see more global offerings on US television. I don't say that with an eye to blurring the distinctions between cultures, but because I honestly think that television CAN be a bridge to understanding.
posted by: Anne on 10.21.09 at 03:24 PM [permalink]