Comments on: Congress catching on to the value of blogs
It's starting slowly, but a group of senators and representatives are now blogging, and some observers expect the number to grow as elections near.
It's starting slowly, but a group of senators and representatives are now blogging, and some observers expect the number to grow as elections near.
December 28, 2009 6:10 PM PST
December 28, 2009 6:00 PM PST
December 28, 2009 2:39 PM PST
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gullible pipeline for their written drivel. I just hope these political
idiots stay confined within a few zones, easily ignored.
Blogging is a public appearance in that sense and comes with advantages and risks. The sharper the blogger, the better they can handle that but it takes time and robbing time is a well known political tactic.
Note that some very famous bloggers such as Tim Bray who often express political points of view don't allow comments on their blogs. I don't as well. The time it takes to answer trolls exhausts me and takes all the pleasure out of what was told to me to be a form of personal expression. If you don't like the act, find another player. If you do, talk to me offstage. If you yell advice from the audience, I will come to your job the next day and yell advice into your cube. You will have me removed from the building. I will have you thrown out of the nightclub. Politeness counts in politics.
At the moment, we have 3 authors.
The day I see several calling it like it really is, even at the possible expense of their own political career, then I'll know there is change.
I'd like to see someone saying that they voted for something they didn't believe in because it was the only way to get people to vote for their bill and that it was for the greater good.
Or someone to post about the political contributions (bribes) they passed up and who the attempted bribers were.
Remember how the internet used to be fun and there was always something new? Now it's all glossy orchestrated corporate-speak on polished websites. I'm afraid that all too quickly it will get turned into just another useless PR-tool.
- Grinding the Squeaky Wheel
- by David Arbogast January 26, 2006 10:54 AM PST
- The problem with communicating via blogs, is that only the most extreme viewpoints are typically represented. If politicians start believing that blog comments represent the majority of Americans, they are going to find their poll numbers slipping.
- Like this Reply to this comment
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- That's the truth.....
- by Earl Benser January 26, 2006 12:51 PM PST
- nt
- Like this
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(8 Comments)Content citizens do not rant openly on blogs...
The majority of citizens do not rant openly on blogs...
Blogs may be a good way for politicians to pick and harvest viewpoints they were previously unaware of... but very few active blog comments represent a majority of Americans.