TIGblogs TIG | TIGblogs GROUP TIGBLOGS LOGIN SIGNUP
albertomz's Blog
albertomz's Blog


« previous 10


More on blogging

Emergence & Blogs - US political elections 2004 visual representation

Two good articles on blogging: one on the NY Times on Matthew Lee, one of two accredite bloggers at the UN, and one on the Washington Post on how women are increaingly harassed across the blogosphere.

Via Jon.


April 30, 2007 | 8:04 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Evgeny Morozov on Web 2.0 as the future of activism

 

Evgeny Morozov, Director of New Media at Transitions Online, where he focuses on promoting citizen journalism in Central and Eastern Europe, the Balkans, and the former Soviet Union, has just written an article for the Globalist on Blogs As the New Frontier in Human Rights, which makes some really good points on the potential of on-line Web 2.0 networks for social change and political action. A broader selection of Evgeny’s thoughts on the future of media, technology, and activism will be found on his blog, which he has just started after closing down his previous one.

He’s going straight into my blogroll and RSS feed…


April 27, 2007 | 8:04 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Dani Rodrik joins the blogsphere

 Dani Rodrik, the guru

Dani Rodrik, my favourite political economist, has finally joined the blogsphere promising ‘unconventional thoughts on economic development and globalization’. He’s already posted some really interesting thoughts on fair trade, Wolfowitz’s scandal and trade and procedural fairness, while soliciting a number of stimulating reactions from a variety of sources.

Remember my words: his is soon going to be one of the most authoritative blogs in the blogsphere.


April 26, 2007 | 6:04 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


The Coming Virtual Web

Entropia Universe 

Robert Hof on Business Week tells us how in the future the Internet is going to look more realistic, interactive, and social—a lot like a virtual world.

Full article here. I had talked about hyperlocal networks when reviewing Juan Freire’s excellent entries on the topic here.

Ever since Neal Stephenson published Snow Crash in 1992, the virtual world he described in his seminal dystopian novel has been the Holy Grail for a generation of tech whizzes. The metaverse, as Stephenson called it, was essentially the Internet.

But in place of the flat, two-dimensional World Wide Web that had just been invented, he imagined a completely immersive and highly social 3D online world. People’s avatars, or virtual representations of themselves, could interact using facial expressions and body language so richly textured that for many the metaverse became more compelling than the real world.

Now, 15 years later, the glimmers of a real metaverse are coming into focus. You can see it in the popular online role-playing game World of Warcraft, which is revolutionizing online games with sophisticated graphics and complex team strategy.

Virtual worlds such as There, Entropia Universe, and Second Life let you create avatars, buildings, and even virtual classrooms and businesses. With Google Earth and Microsoft’s (MSFT) Virtual Earth 3-D, you can transcend the map layout and zoom into satellite-mapped locations around the world.

[…]


April 25, 2007 | 6:04 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


The NRA as America’s Cosa Nostra

 Gun by www.stormy.org/

Stephan Richter on The Globalist unveils the sad truth behind the Virginia shootings, evident to everyone in the world except - apparently - Americans. A compelling read, which I am reproducing below. I would only add that in this era of globalisation, the US’ gun culture harms us all, in two distinct ways. First of all, because it’s reflected in the country’s attitude towards the international arena, which it sees as a battlefield rather than a space for dialogue and mutual comprehension. Secondly, because - through the omnipresence of the American media and pop culture - it influences societies cultures around the world. I am not saying that without American movies no one would fire a gun around the world, but it’s certainly hard to understand why London - and not Paris or Rome or Berlin - has seen over the last few years a dramatic increase in gun crime. Maybe because people here understand the words to many US songs? It’s not just in America’s (and it’s children’s) interest that guns should be banned. It’s in the whole world’s interest. Read on.

The NRA as America’s Cosa Nostra

By Stephan Richter | Friday, April 20, 2007

After the events at Virginia Tech, one thing is becoming rapidly clear: U.S. society is gripped by a cancer, the cancer of a deafening silence. For a society that has always held itself up globally as a standard-bearer of moral righteousness, historically and often with good reason, the proper reaction ought to be a no-brainer. Yet, barely a peep is to be heard.

Let us look at the stunning — and revolting – ironies of the Cho shooting spree. NBC’s Brian Williams — who distinguished himself by his dogged coverage of the New Orleans/Katrina disaster — evidently does not even realize how he was used by Cho.

Unfortunately for NBC, the ratings of Mr. Williams’s show have declined in recent months, quite possibly because he was “too tough on the American people.” After all, he was the one to remind them that nothing much had improved in New Orleans — despite the president’s promises that the city would shine again, soon and better than ever.

A drop in ratings

In the ratings race, Mr. Cho’s package must have seemed like a God-send. The decision to broadcast it, despite pretensions of complicated deliberations, was as easy as it was patently false.

Why, one wonders, give a sick man such a stage posthumously? Why not turn it over to law enforcement, saying that NBC did not want to have any part in broadcasting the gyrations of a disturbingly sick mind to the world?

Of course, NBC News’ President justified the broadcast essentially by saying it provided a unique insight into the mind of a mass murderer. Oh, really?

Making a tough decision

NBC’s management ruled that the students’ families evidently deserved less respect than those of soldiers. Let us remember that the U.S. news media obediently followed the Pentagon’s orders not to broadcast any images of funerals of U.S. soldiers, presumably out of respect for the grieving families.

And yet, death in military action comes with the turf of being a soldier, so families are inevitably prepared for such news. But enrolling as a student in Blacksburg, Virginia, does not entail a similar preparedness.

Respecting the dead

It’s a pure case of selling base instincts of voyeurism as a case of the public’s right to know. The video tapes showed nothing that one would not expect a sick mind to stammer.

Beyond NBC’s massive failing, the real one unfortunately spreads much wider. On TV and radio and on the websites and in the newspapers in the U.S. of A, one can get coverage of every possible angle — except for the one that really matters.

Did the university management make a bad mistake by delaying notification after the first shooting? Can one read the signs of a budding mass murderer before he explodes? Can such a person be compelled to receiving psychiatric evaluation or treatment?

Focusing on the wrong angles

And on and on. Every conceivable angle — except for: Why did this ticking time bomb have such easy access to handguns?

Truth be told, nobody in the United States is afraid of the Soviet Union anymore — but virtually everybody in power is deadly afraid of the NRA — the National Rifle Association. It acts as the ruthless countrywide enforcer of gun libertinism, the perverse and irresponsible, completely self-absorbed love of guns.

From Russia to NRA

A society that is so much in the throes of an organization like the NRA, as the rest of the world is quick to point out, is getting tragically close to issuing an every day death wish upon itself.

To paraphrase Primo Levi, chronicler of the Holocaust and author of “Survival in Auschwitz“: if not now, when? If this moment is not enough for a groundswell of opposition against the non-existent gun laws in the United States, when will this society ever show the will?

The U.S. media are not the only ones studiously careful to avoid the issue.

Just reporting

Democrats are similarly avoiding the issue, believing that taking the only ethically and morally correct stance — to ban most hand guns — keeps them from winning elections.

The gun control issue should be seized by all presidential candidates — and none more so than Barack Obama. He has consistently held himself as morally above the fray of his co-competitors — and he certainly knows everything there is to know about the corrosive effects of widespread availability of guns from his social work on Chicago’s South side.

Addressing the problem

And he does have a special responsibility to speak up in this case — on behalf of all young black males who have been far less blessed with the privilege of education than he himself has been.

The world waits with baited breath whether he will show the moral rectitude to lead on this issue — or lowers himself to do what is considered the politically expedient thing and stay silent (or waffle at best).

The fact of the matter is that the silence after Blacksburg equals the failure of so-called U.S. opinion elites to speak up in time and with clarity against the Iraq War.

Choosing the correct path

Then as now, the U.S. media and the Democrats feel chastised to stand by a course that every person with one moral fiber in their bones would have to recognize immediately as totally ill-advised.

But, then as now, the majority of them prefer to stay silent — on Iraq as on handgun control.

Staying silent

This deafening silence, of course, is the real issue. This society — so determined to bring the gift of democracy to far-away lands ompletely unprepared for such a venture — does sadly not have the democratic rigor and courage to speak up on its own behalf at a time when it really matters.

The students and teachers murdered at Blacksburg are a national monument to an agenda committed to changing the course on handgun control immediately.

Or so one would think. Instead, everybody whom one asks is hushed, expresses surprise — and says if only somebody had the courage to step forward to lead on the issue — and take on the Herculean forces on the other side…

Taking the first step

Hearing such soliloquies from Americans reminds one of Italian television series describing the corroding influence of the cosa nostra. Everybody knows full well that what they do is highly illegal — or at least ought to be illegal.

And yet, most of the folks in Sicilia and the south of Italy go along with the decrepit activities of the mafia. Silence is golden — and speaking up might result in one being murdered, or so the local logic goes.

Doing something

True, as in the case of Italy, there are a few courageous people trying to fight the beast. Some judges and prosecutors in Italy showed extraordinary courage in pursuing the mafia — and, yes, they ended up murdered.

But they made a conscious choice. They realized that fighting a longstanding cancer on their home society was the only choice they could ethically make — even if it meant to pay the ultimate price

A cancer

The same applies in the United States today. The NRA is as pervasive and destructive a cancer on American society as la cosa nostra is on Italy’s.

And all people of moral rectitude ought to stand up to defeat this monster. Failing that, Americans will have to realize that what they perceive as their innate sense of moral righteousness really is a twisted case of self-righteousness that nobody else in the civilized world is able to follow.


April 20, 2007 | 3:04 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


Easter break

 

Posting will resume as soon as I am back from holiday! Enjoy the break, if you have one!


April 1, 2007 | 1:04 AM Comments  0 comments

Tags:


« previous 10


Alberto Masetti-Zannini's Profile

Alberto Masetti-Zannini's Friends


Latest Posts
The Story of Stuff
Lagos la Vida Loca
Eppur si muove…
The Economist: missing...
ECFR: a tale of...

Monthly Archive
March 2007
April 2007
May 2007
June 2007
July 2007
August 2007
September 2007
October 2007
December 2007

Change Language


Tags Archive
africa blogbabble china civilsociety corporatesocialresponsibility doinggoodwork economicjustice economics environment eu/europe globalideas globalissues globalization humanrights informationtechnology innovation&creativity internationaldevelopment internationalrelations media micro-finance ngos people politics socialenterprise sustainability theunitedstates trade urbanisation war&peace web2.0

Friends
Arun Khadka
Eman Ebed
kumar, kundan
Mr. Thomas Julo Barlue

Links
Global Voices Online
Socializing
Surface Cut
Wired


58367 views
Important Disclaimer