September 11, 2006

"Best not to pick a fight with people who have gigabytes of text at their disposal unless you are interested in a duel on equal footing."

Well, it's not as catchy as don't pick a fight with someone who buys ink by the barrel, but that's what the NYT is saying ought to replace the old saying. The point is that MSM needs to catch on that blogs even out the fight:
Professional reputations and affiliations with mainstream institutions don’t offer any cover — not The New Republic, not CBS and not The New York Times. [Lee] Siegel was obviously driven slightly batty by the new medium, even calling it “blogofascism,” a term that brought much ridicule down on his head.

He has since calmed down and has his regrets.

“People of course have a right to question a critic’s judgment, but there’s a difference between doing that and merely insulting someone you disagree with,” he said in a phone call. “So I wildly created an over-the-top persona and adopted the tone of my attackers, when I should have just gone to the gym instead.”

23 comments:

Away From The Brink said...

I would say, "never pick a fight with someone who buys bandwidth by the terabyte."

Ann Althouse said...

Buys? I get all I want for nothing.

John said...

How about: "Never pick a fight unless you can defend yourself with principles rather than emotion."?

That plays regardless of the medium.

SippicanCottage said...
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Simon Kenton said...

Don't you love the woundedness of it? All this time we've been able to duel from our lofty position above the hoi polloi, and now the damned upstarts are actually forcing an equal position on us.

Daily pedantry - Innocent II's proscription of the use of the art of the crossbow being used on Catholic or Christian gentlemen; it was just too damned effective. And, of course, the outrage of the (surviving) French at Crecy when they learned what peasants with longbows and bodkin-pointed arrows could do to armored knights. For all those centuries we could just ride through them, hacking til our arms grew weary, with their pathetic cudgels and pikes and hayrakes bouncing off us. Now, the condescension curdles and the journalists face the deluge.

SippicanCottage said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
knox said...

For so long, the MSM were all conveniently insulated from criticism. The worst they could possibly face was an irate letter to the editor, easily shrugged off. But now, when bloggers expose them to the harsh light they so mercilessly shine on others (and heartily patted themselves on the back for), they freak.

Puts me in mind of other recent events...

knox said...

apologies in advance for any double-posting, blogger's not showing my comments when I refresh.

Balfegor said...

Daily pedantry - Innocent II's proscription of the use of the art of the crossbow being used on Catholic or Christian gentlemen; it was just too damned effective. And, of course, the outrage of the (surviving) French at Crecy when they learned what peasants with longbows and bodkin-pointed arrows could do to armored knights. For all those centuries we could just ride through them, hacking til our arms grew weary, with their pathetic cudgels and pikes and hayrakes bouncing off us.

Journalism subjected to popular criticism/mockery = good in my book.

Cavalry => Longbows => crossbows => cannons, rifles => machine guns => tanks => mustard gas => nerve gas => ballistic missiles => nuclear weapons => anthrax . . . not so much.

I'm not so keen on the escalation of warmaking technologies. It's all very well to crow about how many noblemen the lowly peasant can kill, but I am not sure that the path of improving efficiencies in man-butchery is a particularly happy one. And of course, on this day of all days, we should remember that the modern equivalent of the lowly peasant using his crossbow to stick it to the haughty mounted knight is a small band of Mahometan terrorists seizing control of a jet airliner and piloting it into a Manhattan skyscaper.

Not the most felicitous metaphor.

Balfegor said...

What are you gonna do about it?

Nothing. I have still not resigned myself to the collapse of European civilisation in 1914. If only! If only! It would be so much better dealing with the Sultan, and even lesser potentates like the Khedive too.

Brian Doyle said...

I can't help but get the feeling that Ann has a bit of a soft spot for Siegel/Sprezzatura; that she knows what it's like to get savaged for writing terrible blog posts, and has maybe even been tempted to "go to the sock drawer."

..but maybe I'm reading too much into this excerpt.

I'm Full of Soup said...

Think about all the really interesting stuff the MSM could be writing about if it did not abhor the internet and bloggers.

Do you think the MSM newspapers will ever have an "internet section" comparable to the TV section they have had for 30-40 years?

Let's face it- the internet is where a lotta readers go for entertainment so why not report on those places the readers may like to learn about- you know like Althouse.

bearbee said...

who is Lee Siegel?

altoids1306 said...

Siegel should have adopted Brad DeLong's approach to dealing with troublesome hoi polloi -- the 'sock assassin' is much more effective than the 'sock puppet'. Don't argue with your critics, just silently delete their comments (and if anybody else complains, delete the complaints too).

I think bloggers have a right to delete comments if they want, even if the comments are not offensive, and simply expressing a view contrary to the blogger. Not a terribly honest thing to do, but it is their blog, and there's no reason why they must allow others to use their pedestal to express their opinions.

Balfegor said...

Most of the hijackers came from middle-class backgrounds. They were not peasants in any sense of the word.

You miss my point -- the Third World was, up until 9-11, essentially powerless in the face of our arms. Arguably, this changed with the French debacles in Algeria and Vietnam, etc, but 9-11 was the first large-scale, effective, offensive projection of power by a nonindustrialised community or organisation. The fact that Bin Laden is/was rich as a Bond villain doesn't really have any bearing on this.

Before the crossbow, wasn't coup counted by how many peasants the Knight's slaughtered? Two armies would face off, sending their knights to attack the other's peasant foot-soldiers? My only recollection comes from T.H. White's "Once and Future King", which is fiction, but borrows heavily from Mallory. Just curious.

I am . . . fairly certain that Mallory (Le Morte d'Arthur) is just as fictional as The Once and Future King. In any event, the period Arthur is supposed to describe would have to be between the collapse of Imperial authority in Britain (ca. 400) and Alfred the Great (end of 9th century). The ban on crossbows, if it occurred, comes in the 11th or 12th century, considerably after.

I am certainly not an expert in mediaeval war, but I do not think the power differential between mounted knights and infantry formations was quite as disparate as you portray it. After all, in the Battle of Tours (732, Charles Martel halts the Muslim advance), Christian infantry successfully resists (and basically routs) the Muslim cavalry. It's exceptional, perhaps, but infantry certainly wasn't nothing back then.

Laura Reynolds said...

I know for me to a large degree, the MSM media and how they deal with bloggers and the internet is a non issue, I get what I want from whichever source is better and more convenient.

I haven't held the MSM in high esteem for a long time, it was easy (for me) to assume they were wrong or slanted about many things.

Simon Kenton said...

Balfegor -

"You miss my point -- the Third World was, up until 9-11, essentially powerless in the face of our arms. Arguably, this changed with the French debacles in Algeria and Vietnam, etc, but 9-11 was the first large-scale, effective, offensive projection of power by a nonindustrialised community or organisation. The fact that Bin Laden is/was rich as a Bond villain doesn't really have any bearing on this."

I'd argue this is precisely the point. I'm inclined to write that there is no Muslim technology that is not derivative or directly purchased. I don't have enough knowledge to say that for certain, but I bet even the Althouse commenters will have to go back to 0 and algebra to instance any. At any rate, what is the source of their weapons and their weapons programs? In small arms, AK-47s and Rugers and M16s; can you name a muslim-designed, muslim-manufactured rifle or pistol? Or for the matter of that, a muslim advance in nuclear technology? Have they any missles they haven't derived from Chinese Russian and North Korean technology (which in turn has come from ill-advised technology transfers in the 1992 - 1999 period, and from industrial espionage). They can fight with what they can buy, and they can buy with the money we have paid them for oil or gifted them for 'aid.' They attack us with tools and weapons their intellectual climate does not permit them to invent or manufacture.

Elizabeth, remind you of Milo Minderbender?

Balfegor said...

I'd argue this is precisely the point. I'm inclined to write that there is no Muslim technology that is not derivative or directly purchased.

So? I rather doubt that European peasants developed crossbows themselves. They borrowed the technology from China, which had been using crossbows for a thousand years at that point.

Tying this back to the analogy, bloggers did not develop the internet (Al Gore did! Haha). Or even, in most cases, develop blogging technology. True, as Ann notes above, they're not paying for anything (Google or someone is picking up the tab, here), but all the same -- whether the technology is borrowed or native doesn't really have an effect on the shift in power relations it brings about.

Or, in the case of warmaking technologies, on how many people it kills.

KCFleming said...

Balfegor: "whether the technology is borrowed or native doesn't really have an effect on the shift in power relations it brings about"

You're quite wrong, I think. VD Hanson (among others) has hashed this out at length elsewhere, so I won't reattempt it. Civilizations that lack innovation, especially those that actively condemn it in their own culture, tend to lose.

Yes, they can learn to use modern weapons. No, they can't get to the next level and surpass their foe. They are always one step behind.

Gordon Freece said...

Pogo, learning to use modern weapons is actually problematic for non-modern societies. Modern weapon systems usually require a lot of technology and education to maintain and use them effectively. Ours do, anyway. AK-47s and RPGs don't, and not by accident. But you can only make a certain degree of complexity peasant-friendly: I'm not sure you can clean a Sukhoi by urinating in it.

KCFleming said...

Re: "The threads still *appear* to be open and free-wheeling but it's an illusion."

Not at all; and your characterization implies there's a level of dishonesty present in doing so. A blog with comments get a reputation for the acceptability of content, and there is no illusion of total freedom, except for the foolish.

Instead, bloggers dictate varying degrees of civility for their comments as part of their style. Sometimes it's explicit, sometimes it's ad hoc. But it's not hidden.

And I'm not so clear what's superior about 'free-wheeling' anyway. Usually that means someone wants to act like a toddler without consequences, then complains when they're not allowed to draw on the walls and break stuff.

goesh said...

"I think bloggers have a right to delete comments if they want,.." (Altoids1306)

Darn right they do! I don't let people in my home that are unwashed or intoxicated. Once people are in my home, I don't tolerate profanity, racism or gross ignorance either and I won't tolerate anyone coming to my home simply to argue, even politely, with me. There are many places where I have to tolerate some of this, but not in my home. If I had a blog, it would be like my home.

Icepick said...

Belfegor wrote: I have still not resigned myself to the collapse of European civilisation in 1914.

To which Kirk Parker replied: Admittedly it was a big mess. But surely you don't think there was a force anywhere in the universe strong enough to prop up the Hapsburgs much longer, do you?

To speak out of turn (especially since I'm sure Balfegor would express it better), I don't believe he refers the Hapsburgs, Hohenzoellerns or Romanovs loosing power.

WWI represented a crushing blow to the old order, including the constitutional monarchies (eg Britain) and the Republics (eg France) of Europe, as well as to the absolute (to varying degrees) monarchies and the system of international relations that had evolved since the end of the Napoleanic wars. People lost faith in the old forms of government and culture. To satisfy their needs the peoples of Europe often turned to newer ways such as Fascism, Communism and Nazism.

The Europeans also lost faith in colonialism, and gradually withdrew from the world stage, mostly leaving governmental incompetence and badly damaged cultures in their wake. (This was also partly a function of demographics, as First World medical and farming practices led to huge population growth that the Third World could have never accomplished by its own resources.)

The last 90+ years of history can be seen as reaction to the events of 1914.

(There is more than that, of course. The growth of science and technology in that period has been astonishing. The hard sciences are the last playground of the old European Enlightenment, so even there Europe still dominates recent world history....)