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Sunday, July 09, 2006
Bloghopping: Uplifting or Unraveling?
While my own personal blog suffers from insufficient diligence, care, and effort, I consider myself quite exemplary in another realm. I spend a good part of my time in the Internet reading other people’s blogs, opinion pieces and news writing, at times squinting down to the last ounce of comment allowed from readers.
Thus, when on-line, I click-click away giving rein to my harried mouse to bring me to places, as fast as a thought, at the very least. I diligently ready, set, start from my comparatively shallow blogroll and from there, it’s anybody’s guess where I will end up – until the IE browser or Windows behind it cries ouch or foul and freezes up on me. Then a quick reboot pit stop and back to the race.
And much like the speedway oval, one goes round and round, registering miles and miles of track, one tedious hour after another, but really going nowhere. And then stopping in the same old place where one started. None the worse for wear, but gratefully loaded each time with a busload of information, opinion, news, and other nuts and bolts that could be sorted and arranged into some kind of practical wisdom applicable in the real world where we all have to live in.
So far so good, and things appear to look good on paper.
But is it really so?
Is the now unquantifiable Internet, the exponentially expanding blogosphere in particular, the place where one goes for such a commendable and crucial task? To try to expand one’s horizons by reading and listening to all possible ideas fleetingly wafting out there in the ethereal firmament?
To seek knowledge and wisdom away or aside from the traditional deference to solitude, or the other more mystical and contemplative modes such as the deep altered states of meditation?
I have no ready answer.
But based on personal experiences derived from my regular sorties, I find troubling developments to say the least.
First to drop by the wayside is civil and polite public discourses. Most everywhere one visits, especially the partisan political blogs and their cadres of regular commentators, vile, incendiary, or hateful rhetoric is quite typical and generally accepted or implied as acceptable through silence or inaction. Even when the host blogger shows good circumspection and respectful rhetoric, comments are allowed to run haywire and thus when at times called to task, instead of the blog entry itself the comments are highlighted as objectionable or worthy of reproach. I suppose behind this seeming nonchalance by the host is maybe the self-serving goal of keeping and attracting more readers. Or a vicarious way of saying things one cannot personally articulate?
Then we have those maybe because of the anonymity and yawning distance accorded by the medium, yet who should know better because of their education and background, who somehow have lost the ability to apply logic and ethics in their blazing statements. Like making blatant and uncorroborated generalizations with obvious willful design to deface another person’s (or even a country’s) humanity, his/her intelligence, even his/her physical looks. All with the easy flourish of a keyboard stroke. And yet nary an analytical word about the issues espoused or debated. And the bigger the political figures, the nastier the rhetoric.
And what about those who are somehow intellectually dishonest for gratuitously throwing in trite or proved-false talking points, simply to depict another who espouses a different ideology in a bad light? The comment sections seemed to have been designed by default as repositories (trash bins may be more appropriate) for those so inclined.
And if I may add, I am venturing that ego may be playing a stellar role in this process. A person’s hard-wired urge to ventilate and to show to the world one’s superior intelligence and analytical capabilities? Conventional wisdom teaches us that there may be sufficient personal gratification derived from such an exercise in the case of a good number of people.
Of course, all is not gloom and doom in the blogophere. There are many commendable sites that continue to answer to the higher call of civil public discourse, fair play, and guarded circumspection especially for statements that may permanently injure a person’s reputation and good name. I could name a few, but restraint dictates. . .
And to reiterate from a previous post, as a species who do have both the responsibility and control to decide where we want to go with this newest medium/tool.
To mediocrity or crassness as exemplified by the older much-criticized media/tools we have been using for communicating with one another?
Or aim for one that celebrates the nobler parts of our nature.
Our call.
I would say that bloghopping gives me further information about the world. It is more likely that people would express themselves on their blogs because it functions like a web-based diary. It also also gives us different views on the mundane - from the subjective, objective to the objectivistic. Whew, so much information to learn, so little time!
ReplyDeleteHi, Achoo:
ReplyDeleteThanks for dropping by. I did return the favor by visiting your site, too. Glad to know another Cagayanon on the superhighway of the blogosphere. Cebu is also partly my old hometown since my mother's family came from there.
And you do have a rather unique handle.
But anyway, how true that information overload is one big obstacle that any blog traveller should be cautious about.
Hi Amadeo, I landed on ythis particular blogpost blog while googling civility.
ReplyDelete(I just read a post about statemanship vis a vis civility.
What a topic,bloghopping, i remember the times when we used to encounter each other on different blogs like MLq's and djb's and now filipinovoices.
I also remeber you commenting on my post on a blog I deleted a few years ago, about my resigning as a real estate agent.
I remember you empathizing that being in real estate means being in it full time.
I think My days of bloghopping has passed, I have many links (including you)but I seldom click on them.
Maybe it is a result of having a large network in social networking sites and having to read their mini blogs while they think aloud. (hey, what's the difference blogging is also thinking aloud).