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Curiosity and Legacy

October 9, 2008 by james | No Comments | Filed in Media and Politics

Being a little more removed from the US presidential elections this time around has been a bit of a relief. I’m still horrified that there’s even a question over which of the two candidates will win (Obama’s too right-wing for me, but that’s US politics for you), but at least we’re outside the myopic gaze of what passes for the media on that side of the pond.

Slacktivist is, of course, right on the money about the travesty that is Sarah Palin’s candidacy, and it was that which came to mind as I watched video of Doris Kearns Goodwin talk at TED about Abraham Lincoln’s thirst for knowledge and quest to educate himself. Her talk is well worth a listen, but be warned it may leave any watcher of contemporary presidential politics dispirited.

Tracing Continuity

June 14, 2008 by james | No Comments | Filed in Life, Media and Politics

I knew when I emailed the editor of Matthew’s House Project with a fairly strongly worded response to one of their recent articles that there was a good chance I’d be asked to write something as a follow-up. And that’s exactly what happened. So a piece I wrote on identity and immigration is now available for reading over there.

Everyday Democracy and Rowan Williams

February 10, 2008 by james | No Comments | Filed in Current affairs, Media and Politics

Across the river A couple of weeks ago I was fortunate to be able to attend the launch of DemosEveryday Democracy Index and pick up a copy of the associated 120-page pamphlet. The publication of the Index marks a helpful contribution to an important and fascinating series of conversations about the nature of democracy (in the sense of civic engagement and participatory decision making rather than a specific implementation), where it is most effective and how it can adapt to deal with societal trends and challenges.

The Index and associated pamphlet are far from complete, but are a helpful starting point. Seeking to compare democracy in various spheres across Europe highlights some interesting trends, even beyond the apparently idyllic nature of the Scandinavian countries. As Timothy Garton Ash pointed out in his address to the launch, looking at some of the data at the country-level risks missing out on the distinctiveness of the situation of large cities, and not enough time is spent exploring issues around various forms of diversity. But this publication is a first step in an ongoing process that will hopefully see it refined and expanded in coming years.

It was while reading the pamphlet that I heard about Rowan Williams’ much-discussed recent speech. A message that comes out strongly in Demos’ work is that democracy cannot be simply understood in a national, institutional way. In examining how it works in Europe their researchers looked through a series of connected spheres to see how participation worked in each one and it seems there is a connection to what Rowan Williams was looking towards in that speech.

As our society becomes more complex there is more need for governance to work not simply on a geographically local level, but to grapple with the concepts of psychogeography and other notions of connection which happen at levels other than the physically local. Policies and services need to be built that understand that for most of us we don’t have a primary relationship with the State, but instead our relationship with the State is one part of a web of connections that form the context of our lives. For those who are members of religious communities, the relationship with the norms and traditions of those religious communities are an important part of that. As Revd. Williams put it:

“it is not enough to say that citizenship as an abstract form of equal access and equal accountability is either the basis or the entirety of social identity and personal motivation.”

Reading his speech it seems that for the most part he is calling for flexibility in our legal systems to be able to place more weight on the testimony of (carefully established) religious authorities when trying to understand the significance of certain situations or actions for members of certain religious communities. There may also be analogies to systems already in place for Hassidic Jews to follow their own legal traditions in areas of marriage and divorce.

Obviously any move in this direction is likely to be incredibly complex, but it is not without precedent, and fits very well with thinking across the board on flexibility of government services and constitutional practice. Whatever the papers say, or the many critics within the church may think, Revd. Williams is most certainly aware of those complexities and the need for legal systems to strive for egality in their treatment of citizens. In a key paragraph he says:

“If any kind of plural jurisdiction is recognised, it would presumably have to be under the rubric that no ‘supplementary’ jurisdiction could have the power to deny access to the rights granted to other citizens or to punish its members for claiming those rights. This is in effect to mirror what a minority might themselves be requesting – that the situation should not arise where membership of one group restricted the freedom to live also as a member of an overlapping group, that (in this case) citizenship in a secular society should not necessitate the abandoning of religious discipline, any more than religious discipline should deprive one of access to liberties secured by the law of the land, to the common benefits of secular citizenship – or, better, to recognise that citizenship itself is a complex phenomenon not bound up with any one level of communal belonging but involving them all.”

Both the Everyday Democracy Index and Rowan Williams’ speech make clear that the next few decades are likely to be a time of significant change in the way citizens and governments interact and how society understands the role of a wide variety of civil society affiliations. It’s a shame so many in our media are scared of that debate.

Future Music Talk

January 29, 2008 by james | No Comments | Filed in Media and Politics, Music, Projects, Technology

screenshot from Future Music TalkI don’t talk much about my work here, saving the more in depth stuff for the other place, but every now and again it seems worth mentioning some new project that has launched.

In spare moments over the past few weeks I’ve been setting up Future Music Talk. It’s a site that pulls together blog entries from a group of people talking about the future of the music industry, music promotion, etc. There’s a lot of good discussion taking place, but it’s all so widely spread out that it seemed helpful to bring some of it together for easy discovery and maybe some more cross-fertilisation.

There are a few more features I’d like to add, but it seemed high time I got this out in the open and started gathering feedback and ideas for more blogs to include. You can find it all at http://www.futuremusictalk.com

Has W misplaced his G8 invitation?

June 5, 2007 by james | 1 Comment | Filed in Media and Politics

Bush calls for warming summitI’ve been resisting the temptating to chronicle every example of the combined inanity of the Bush administration and certain US media outlets, but in the midst of the busy-ness of this week a cheap shot just couldn’t be resisted.

This headline appeared over the weekend in USA Today. I was really hoping for a follow-up the next day along the lines of “other leaders ask if invitation was lost in mail.”

It just seems to be one of the strangest headlines I can imagine coming four days before the start of a G8 summit that’s due to discuss climate change. The fact that such a call was reported straight says something—something bad, but not surprising—about at least one newspaper.

Unity 2008

March 11, 2007 by james | Comments Off | Filed in Media and Politics

Back around the 2004 Presidential Elections, I read an article published in what I think was The Atlantic reporting on a roundtable discussion between a number of key political thinkers. They were exploring the state of the two-party system in US politics and the possibility for a third party.

To my surprise (coming from a point of view where both major parties in the USA seem to be of the right) they were arguing for a third party to appear in the middle of the US spectrum. But as I thought about it more, and have come back to it over the past few years, that makes a lot of sense. A serious third party in the middle would force the Democrats and Republicans to refocus. It could suck away those on the central fringes of each party who drag the others to more moderate positions, and it would be taken seriously in a way that no third party has been here for a long time.

So I was interested to see Surprise Party by Joshua Green in the January/February issue of The Atlantic. The article looks at Unity 2008, a new party being launched for the 2008 elections by seasoned political strategists tired of the way campaigning has worked lately. They’re looking for candidates prepared to break ranks to form a mixed ticket, and they’re trying to innovate around how they select that ticket to reduce the cost of presidential elections.

It’s hard to tell how far they’ll get. The US political system is tied up by the two main parties to a ridiculous degree, and finding candidates who will so publicly and fundamentally break ranks may be hard. I’m also not sure whether I want this to happen now. The country certainly needs real debate and renewed engagement, but that needs to lead to significant changes in domestic and foreign policy. Nevertheless, Unity 2008 could be that movement envisioned in the aftermath of the 2004 debacle.

West Wing’s Fifth Season

January 20, 2007 by james | Comments Off | Filed in Media and Politics

As a Christmas present, we treated ourselves to the complete West Wing box set. We already owned three seasons on DVD, but the price gap between buying the set and buying the four seasons we were missing was slim enough and the packaging so enticing that we gave in, and have been working our way gradually through it ever since.

Season Five remains, unfortunately, just as weak as I’d remembered. There was some decline in Season Four as Rob Lowe departed and Aaron Sorkin was aware of the impending end of his tenure, but Five was where that really sank in. Too many scenes lack the pace and the intensity of the show’s earlier days, and the writers seem to lack the insight into their characters that viewers expect by this stage. But that’s not what really lets it down for me.

On first viewing I’d thought the show really lost its footing when it tried to be less ideological, more bi-partisan. Revisiting it confirmed that sense. On traditional partisan issues like school vouchers, the older show would not have simply given in but instead would have found a new idea. In Season Five they simply surrender on that, just as they do on so much else.

The one standout episode of the season puts that weakness in sharp relief. Episode 17 (“The Supremes”) sees the Bartlet administration seeking a new Supreme Court Justice and coming to a middle-ground solution that works by re-connecting with many of the show’s previous strengths. They reinforce the oft-lost strengths of partisan politics, by showing that smart people of strikingly different opinions can really engage, and that everyone benefits when they do.

In some ways the show regained some of its earlier power in its final series. They claimed back some of the optimism about what happens when intelligent people engage on issues, and they solved the desires of the new people in control to be bipartisan by following two different candidates. But sadly it never regained its former strength, just like it never returned to that early conviction.

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Wood TV’s WiFi Scare Mongering

January 10, 2007 by james | 2 Comments | Filed in Media and Politics, WiFi

As usual I’m spending some of the morning at Common Ground Coffee Shop. This morning a crew from local news providers, Wood TV 8 channel turned up and filmed those of us making use of the wifi service for a piece they’re preparing on WiFi in the City of Grand Rapids. When they asked to film me, I told them about my WiFi site and they said they may interview me.

But they didn’t. Instead they talked to every other customer using a computer, asking entirely wrong-headed questions about security issues those customers were clearly not all that familiar with. They were suggesting that other customers could be sniffing the network and stealing, for example, banking information. They skipped the fact that every reputable banking site encrypts that data from the web browser to the bank’s server.

There are real issues to be confronted if using WiFi for sensitive work and most people don’t encrypt their email and some usernames/passwords when working on public networks. Software vendors and service providers need to do more to help people learn what and how to encrypt. But most banking sites do a pretty good job of using encryption, as does almost anyone accepting online payments, and it’s not hard for a web user to be shown how to make sure that encryption is being used. And once that’s done you’re probably more at risk from someone watching over your shoulder as from sending the data across the network.

It’s not really that I care to be interviewed by the local (corporate shill) media. It’d be nice to promote a website I work on, but that’s beside the point. What’s really frustrating is having just experienced corporate media scare-mongering so close up but had my offer to clarify the issues rejected. Maybe it’ll all be edited out or someone who understands these things will be invited to comment, but I’m not holding my breath.

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Gerald Ford and Saddam Hussein

December 29, 2006 by james | No Comments | Filed in Media and Politics

There’s some irony in the fact that in the same week that the death of former US President Gerald Ford is leading to a slew of obituaries mentioning his pardoning of Richard Nixon, Saddam Hussein has been executed.

You don’t have to draw any moral comparisons between the crimes of Hussein and Nixon to suggest that if most historians agree that Ford was correct to let Nixon off the hook for his crimes in order to begin a process of reconciliation within the US, then perhaps there’s a better way forward for Iraq than a rushed verdict and sentence on Saddam Hussein. Especially when that sentence looks set to lead to a significant increase in violence.

If the United States really wants to honour the memory of Gerald Ford, perhaps it will consider the implications of one of his most notable actions when advising other countries on their judicial policies.

Condoleeza Rice and the Baker Commission

November 18, 2006 by james | No Comments | Filed in Media and Politics

It seems likely that the dominant theme of the next two years in US politics will be which party can emerge least scathed from a withdrawal from Iraq. If the democrats can be seen to force the President’s hand in withdrawing from an unpopular conflict, they may be able to leverage that in the 2008 elections. If the Republicans can manage a withdrawal that looks orderly and maybe even victorious, or if they can spin Democrats’ urgings as being weak on defense, then maybe they can salvage something from this ridiculous venture.

It’s interesting to note Mark Benjamin’s piece on Salon yesterday that suggests Condoleeza Rice was a significant force behind the establishment of James Baker and Lee Hamilton‘s much discussed Iraq Study Group. Could this be a sign that Rice is planning to run for office and believes that the commission’s findings could help her do that without her role in the invasion of Iraq hanging over the campaign?

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