THE LAST DITCH

Link: TIME.com: Person of the Year: You — Dec. 25, 2006 — Page 1.

I love America because its people are – on average – so positive. To a jaundiced European eye, it may appear that in making “You” the Time “Person of the Year”, the magazine’s editors are overstating things a little.

The “Web 2.0” phenomenon seems to consist of amateurs providing more (and sometimes better) content than professionals. But is that really much more than the modern version of the local amateur dramatics, letters to the newspaper, campaigning, committtee-work and charitable effort that characterise real communities everywhere?

For every thug and waster there are a dozen decent people “doing their bit.” Particularly so in America, where community involvement (for the middle classes) and philanthropy (for the wealthy) is so normal as to be unremarkable.

Are home movies on YouTube more than modern AmDram? Are bloggers campaigning for or (more often) against this or that any different from the local activists – or even the saloon bar ranters – of old? Are the less political, more social, blogs much different from the WI or the local reading group? From the participant’s point of view, the activities are the same. The Web just extends their reach.

What is happening is not new. Just the way it is happening. The challenge remains better to integrate the virtual and the actual. When real politicians resign at the demand of bloggers (without the MSM first taking up the story); when “flashmobs” become real mobs calling for the necks of real tyrants; when real politicians routinely interact with real people online (as opposed to a few nerdish show-offs from each side) then the world will have changed.

In the meantime, it’s nice for effort to be recognised. Well done, Time.

H/T Andrew Allison

4 responses to “TIME Person of the Year: You”

  1. james higham Avatar

    …integrate the virtual and the actual…
    In terms of blogs actually acting like pressure groups, lobbyists, do you see this happening?

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  2. Tom Paine Avatar

    James, if it doesn’t happen we are just talking to ourselves. The pattern is always the same. First it’s just people playing with the technology (like the early days of email) and then the technology becomes a normal tool and the usual pattern of human activity resumes. Or (like CB radio) it’s found the technology adds nothing and it fades away.
    If I am not engaging in politics here, what am I doing? Tom

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  3. Ellee Avatar

    Bloggers are beginning to make that political impact, It’s been exhilerating to be part of the scene, albeit it on the edge, to take in this new integration of “the virtual and the actual”.

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  4. james higham Avatar

    But how far, Ellee, how far? It was Tom himself who said and I paraphrase, that it was a bit incestuous, with us all talking to each other. When does it get to the wider public? Through uber-bloggers like Iain and Guido or do lesser people get in on the act too?

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Tom is a retired international lawyer. He was a partner in a City of London law firm and spent almost twenty years abroad serving clients from all over the world.

Returning to London on retirement in 2011, he was dismayed to discover how much liberty had been lost in the UK while he was away.

He’s a classical liberal (libertarian, if you must) who, like his illustrious namesake, considers that

“…government even in its best state is but a necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one.”

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