Shared reality

— Steven Den Beste’s common-sense observation that bloggers link blogs they like has the Font Kiddiez’ knickers in a bunch. See this pretentious crap: SDB suggests that webloggers cluster themselves into like-minded groups, and cross-link accordingly. Disagreements (including here) are what he calls “religious” in nature: “A-list” vs. warblogger, “E/N” vs. “A-list”, etc. Does Steve’s … Continue reading “Shared reality”

— Steven Den Beste’s common-sense observation that bloggers link blogs they like has the Font Kiddiez’ knickers in a bunch. See this pretentious crap:

SDB suggests that webloggers cluster themselves into like-minded groups, and cross-link accordingly. Disagreements (including here) are what he calls “religious” in nature: “A-list” vs. warblogger, “E/N” vs. “A-list”, etc. Does Steve’s structuralist argument hold up? Are his characterizations fair or accurate? Do you slot yourself into a group? Are the blogs you link to in a similar vein as yours?

Later on in the comments they get huffy about some of my trollish remarks on the content-free faux pioneers of the blogosphere. It’s actually kind of funny, in sad sort of a way, especially the calls for MetaFiltration Unity.

Another great war profiteer gathering

— Happy Fun Pundit Steve hosted a great party for war profiteers at his palatial digs in San Leandro. We immoral philistines feasted on pheasant tongues, shark fins, caviar, and Dom Perignon provided by the bounty of our hawkishness, served to us by liveried servants as we basked in the hot tub and disco-danced in … Continue reading “Another great war profiteer gathering”

Happy Fun Pundit Steve hosted a great party for war profiteers at his palatial digs in San Leandro. We immoral philistines feasted on pheasant tongues, shark fins, caviar, and Dom Perignon provided by the bounty of our hawkishness, served to us by liveried servants as we basked in the hot tub and disco-danced in camos with live ammo. OK, not exactly like that, but between Mr. and Mrs. Random Jottings, the keeper of Plato’s cave, the erudite Craig Schamps, the brilliant Peter and Christina, and the formidable Joanne Jacobs, we pretty well solved all the world’s problems once and for all. I hope everybody got home safely.

Steve was at the recent Media/Blogger conspiracy summit in Los Angeles sponsored by the founding editors of the Right Wing False Consciousness Collective, and Joanne was just in London conferring with the Samizdata, so we all have our marching orders from WarBlog Central Command now, and new insight into the true nature of Antiwar.com, so the juggernaut is unstoppable. Peace-loving types had best quake with fear.

Warbloggers are clearly some of the best-read and smartest people in the planet, which must have something to do with why the Prison-Industrial Complex has chosen us to do its dirty work.


Update: John took pictures.

All about me

— I’ve updated my bio page with links to an essay, some press quotes, and letters to the editor that I’ve had published. Have I said that Blogs have made the editorial pages of newspapers obsolete? Well, if they haven’t, we’re at least on equal footing.

— I’ve updated my bio page with links to an essay, some press quotes, and letters to the editor that I’ve had published. Have I said that Blogs have made the editorial pages of newspapers obsolete? Well, if they haven’t, we’re at least on equal footing.

Tit for Tat with Nunberg

— For the past few days, I’ve been doing some tit-for-tat in e-mail with Geoff Nunberg over his quick survey of elected-official labeling in newspapers. Numberg’s major errors are the most obvious ones: Goldberg said the Big Three nightly newcasts identify conservatives as out-of-the-mainstream more than liberals. Nunberg’s survey, while interesting, doesn’t address the charge, … Continue reading “Tit for Tat with Nunberg”

— For the past few days, I’ve been doing some tit-for-tat in e-mail with Geoff Nunberg over his quick survey of elected-official labeling in newspapers. Numberg’s major errors are the most obvious ones: Goldberg said the Big Three nightly newcasts identify conservatives as out-of-the-mainstream more than liberals. Nunberg’s survey, while interesting, doesn’t address the charge, because he examined print media instead of the Big Three. The language of television is very different from the language of print, and you don’t learn much about one by studying the other. He also limited the published study to a handful of elected officials with very well-established ideological credentials, people for whom labelling is redundant.

In a more extensive survey on his web site, Nunberg publishes results on Supreme Court justices and lobbying groups that support Goldberg’s claim. It seems to me that the effects of labeling are most pronounced when the media labels or doesn’t label the people that it interviews as experts on various political subjects. Most of these people — and I’m one of them, with a long list of interview credits in print and broadcast — are partisan lobbyists and consultants.

It was my experience that the L. A. Times always identified me as a “fathers’ rights lobbyist” while identifying people who lobbied for the other side as “child support analyst” or some similarly neutral-but-authoritative-sounding-title. I have examples. There are no neutral parties in the political process, but you wouldn’t know that from watching network news.

All aboard

— John Dvorak’s takedown of the The Cluetrain Manifesto for PC Magazine brings tears to my eyes: A site to visit is www.cluetrain.com. There you can read a chapter from the book where we learn bromides such as “life is too short” or read cute mumbo jumbo such as “knowledge worth having comes from turned-on … Continue reading “All aboard”

— John Dvorak’s takedown of the The Cluetrain Manifesto for PC Magazine brings tears to my eyes:

A site to visit is www.cluetrain.com. There you can read a chapter from the book where we learn bromides such as “life is too short” or read cute mumbo jumbo such as “knowledge worth having comes from turned-on volitional attention, not from slavishly following someone else’s orders.” I rolled my eyes so much that my vision is now 20/20 from the exercise. More interesting on the site is the massive list of well-wishers, ding-dongs, and so-called signatories to the so-called Manifesto itself. I’m sure many of them petition for the legalization of marijuana too. Throw a dart at this list and you’ll find one dot-com failure after another.

The only thing to take issue with, other than it’s not biting enough, is John’s conflation of the Cluetrain group with bloggers in general, which is kind of understandable since many ‘Trainers blog, after a fashion, but basically they’re giving us a bad name.

Well, it’s time for me to go subvert hierarchy with hyperlinks, just to stay busy until the Revolution comes.

Never mind

— After reading this, I’m having my doubts that Matt’s going to have time to write Green Fudge and Spam: (Los Angeles Business Journal – News Front Page) Riordan said there would be a staff of about 40 and that he plans to start the publication with Matt Welch, co-founder of LAExaminer.com, a local media … Continue reading “Never mind”

— After reading this, I’m having my doubts that Matt’s going to have time to write Green Fudge and Spam: (Los Angeles Business Journal – News Front Page)

Riordan said there would be a staff of about 40 and that he plans to start the publication with Matt Welch, co-founder of LAExaminer.com, a local media Web site that provides local news and analysis — much of it biting — about the heretofore ignored L.A. media scene.

Otis Chander would approve.

Correction

I said below that Geoff Nunberg “fudged his numbers.” That wasn’t nice – I should have said that Boyd was unable to replicate the results of Nunberg’s survey. Nunberg engages in spin, but that’s not the same as outright lying (except about NOW, where he seems to be involved in wishful thinking.) Civility is very … Continue reading “Correction”

I said below that Geoff Nunberg “fudged his numbers.” That wasn’t nice – I should have said that Boyd was unable to replicate the results of Nunberg’s survey. Nunberg engages in spin, but that’s not the same as outright lying (except about NOW, where he seems to be involved in wishful thinking.) Civility is very important.

I tend to give people more credit for knowing what they’re doing than others might, I’ve learned. When Richard Peterson examined the data Lenore Weitzman collected on post-divorce incomes and found that they didn’t support her argument that women suffer a 73% decline in standard of living whle men increased theirs by 42% (in reality, Weitzman’s figures showed that including tax effects, both had the same decline, about 10%), I said she lied and he said she erred. Take your pick.

Nunberg’s study is suspect on several methodoligical grounds, especially the small sample size and the short distance between noun and adjective he requires. It would seem that he had a point to prove, and chose a set of variables that appeared to prove it; that’s spin.

Nunberg number three on Blogdex

— ( blogdex ) shows a lot of links to Nunberg: “3.Geoffrey Nunberg – Media Bias – 8.1 points NOW cannot be accurately labeled as liberal www-csli.stanford.edu/~nunberg/response.html – more info – sources” That statement about NOW will go down in history as one of the all-time gaffes, just like “Singapore is a good starting point” … Continue reading “Nunberg number three on Blogdex”

( blogdex ) shows a lot of links to Nunberg: “3.Geoffrey Nunberg – Media Bias – 8.1 points NOW cannot be accurately labeled as liberal www-csli.stanford.edu/~nunberg/response.html – more info – sources”

That statement about NOW will go down in history as one of the all-time gaffes, just like “Singapore is a good starting point” and “the people of Poland are free.”

Pioneer copy-cats

— Commenting on the mud-wrestling between warbloggers and the Font Kiddiez, WarLog: World War III by Jeff Jarvis says: Nick Denton calls the feud developing between pioneer bloggers and warbloggers. It’s a simple case of the pioneers being jealous of the attention the newcomers are getting. Jeff’s right about the jealousy part, wrong about who … Continue reading “Pioneer copy-cats”

— Commenting on the mud-wrestling between warbloggers and the Font Kiddiez, WarLog: World War III by Jeff Jarvis says:

Nick Denton calls the feud developing between pioneer bloggers and warbloggers.
It’s a simple case of the pioneers being jealous of the attention the newcomers are getting.

Jeff’s right about the jealousy part, wrong about who the pioneers are. Among the Warbloggers we have several who’ve been logging news, culture, and politics on the web longer than Font Kiddiez Kottke, Winer, Blood, Searls, and Nutmeg: they would include Ken Layne and Bill Quick (since 1995), Tim Blair, Matt Welch, Emmanuelle Richard, Ed Mazza, Jason Ross, and Tony Pierce (since 1997), as well as yours truly, class of 1994. Jealous, yes; pioneers, no. But the Font Kiddiez have spent an awful lot of time and energy proclaiming the fiction that they invented weg logs, on Dave Winer’s web site, in Rebecca Blood’s forthcoming conspiracy book, and on Denton’s web site:

People like Doc Searls and Meg Hourihan are to the weblog as Oppenheimer and von Neumann were to the A-bomb. Gentle souls whose creation will be used by others more ruthless.

I suspect that Denton knows better, but likes to stir up the shit so he can sit back and enjoy the show; Winer, Blood, and Hourihan have a different set of issues.

Update: this snarky post by Font Kiddy Matt Haughey lays bare the confusion:

The original post that brought it up, though heavily exaggerated, doesn’t sound like the book will really cover blogger’s views of September 11, nor communicate the great power of weblogs and the good things they did for a lot of people that day.

See, Matt, the purpose of the book isn’t to rustle up some business for Jason, Dave, and Ev — it’s to bring some excellent expressions of human reaction to tragedy to a larger audience than the weblog-reading public. If you weren’t such a brat, you’d already know that.

I suspect that what the Font Kiddiez have in mind is something like their book, The Cluetrain Manifesto, basically a Unabomber-with-a-modem melange of brainlessness trying to look brainy. Think Al Gore drunk and you get the picture.

Caught with his pants down

— Liberal media apologist Geoff Nunberg tries to weasel out of blogger Edward Boyd’s discovery that he fudged* his numbers, committing three major gaffes in the process (at Geoffrey Nunberg – Media Bias, linked by Instantman) Gaffe Number 1 has Nunberg claiming NOW’s not a left-wing organization: Goldberg’s other number involves one of those specious … Continue reading “Caught with his pants down”

— Liberal media apologist Geoff Nunberg tries to weasel out of blogger Edward Boyd’s discovery that he fudged* his numbers, committing three major gaffes in the process (at Geoffrey Nunberg – Media Bias, linked by Instantman)

Gaffe Number 1 has Nunberg claiming NOW’s not a left-wing organization:

Goldberg’s other number involves one of those specious comparisons that critics of liberal media bias are prone to. In this case, he points out that “the Los Angeles Times ran only 98 stories about the Concerned Women for America and identified the group as conservative 28 times. But The LA Times ran more than 1,000 stories on the National Organization for Women and labeled NOW liberal only seven times.”


But that’s meretricious, in every sense of the term. Concerned Women of America is a self-identified conservative Christian group (it opposes, among other things, abortion, homosexual adoption, hate-crime legislation, the AmeriCorps volunteer program, and the teaching of “ill-conceived Darwinian theory” in the schools). Whereas NOW makes a point of rejecting explicitly partisan labels — the appropriate description of the group is “feminist.”

Nunberg doesn’t get out much. NOW takes a stance opposite to CWA on the relevant issues Nunberg mentions: abortion, gay adoption, and hate crimes, and NOW is in favor of unbounded welfare, comparable worth laws, quotas, and male disempowerment. There exists a broad spectrum of feminist organizations to the right of NOW, including the Independent Women’s Forum, the Women’s Freedom Network, iFeminists, so it’s not correct to simply label NOW feminist; they’re every bit as far to the left as CWA is to the right, and the inability to see them for what they are is the essence of bias.

The second gaffe has Nunberg claiming that labelling a politician “progressive” is evidence of conservative bias:

I found that Jesse Helms was described as “right wing” about thirty times as often as Paul Wellstone was described as “left wing.” But if you are going to look at “left wing,” you’re obliged to look at the other labels the press uses for liberal politicians, as well — terms like “progressive,” “on the left, ” “leftist,” and so on. In my own data, it turned out that these labels were applied to Wellstone slightly more frequently than the analogous labels with “right” were applied to Helms. And when I did some searches in the same database that Boyd used, I found that the inclusion of terms like “progressive,” “leftist,” and “on the left” would have increased Wellstone’s rate of labeling by about fifty percent, and doubled Barney Frank’s. In for a penny, in for a pound.

Excuse me, but this is a fine example of using a fact to prove its contrary. Paul Wellstone and Barney Frank are extreme left-wing politicians, the kind of people who would be socialists in every other country. But American socialists have invented the label “progressive” to hide their agenda from the public (who isn’t for “progress?”) and put on a shiny face. Calling Wellstone a “progressive” is going along with the deception; it’s hardly the same as calling Jesse Helms a “reactionary.” The data actually show that the press is more likely to call Wellstone a “progressive” than to call him an extreme left-winger, but it’s more likely to call Helms an extreme right-winger than, say, a moral conservative.

Nunberg’s third gaffe involves media mentions of the concept of “liberal bias” itself. He finds:

In the newspapers I looked at, the word “media” appears within seven words of “liberal bias” 469 times and within seven words of “conservative bias” just 17 times — a twenty-seven-fold discrepancy.

So the media is 27 times more likely to talk about liberal bias than about conservative bias. This arises out of the fact that credible books are on the best-seller list discussing this very thing, so the media has to defend itself. But to Nunberg, this self-defense is evidence of media complicity in the conservative plot:

The media may not have invented the “liberal bias” story, but people like Goldberg and Bozell couldn’t have put it over without their active help.

Nunberg should have left well enough alone, because in defending his shoddy methodology, he makes his biases quite clear and digs himself a deeper hole. He’s a Stanford professor, of course.


Update: see Live from the WTC and Zonitics for further illumination on the NOW thing, and pay a call to the NOW web site where they list “Fighting the Right” as a major issue.


*Update: see clarification on fudge vs. spin above.