Sunday, February 6, 2011

The Death of Blogging

I noticed the other day, with some interest, Chris Bowers' announcement that Open Left, the far-left progressive blog, was shutting down. I'd already noticed that Bowers had migrated to Daily Kos, and no explanation was needed: more readers, and more exposure. I didn't think too much of it beyond that. And then I read Ben Smith's post, where he wrote:
There's been a bit written recently on the death of blogs, and while there will -- I hope -- remain space for some, there's little doubt that the online world of politics is no longer limited to this form ... Some of the older blogs on right and left are still thriving, while others -- like TPM and the Hot Air bloggers -- have worked to turn themselves into broader news platforms. But the form now feels a little quaint.
So, the death of blogs. I hadn't actually seen too much on that. Or, mostly, what I have seen and written about is the fascination with new media, especially Facebook and Twitter. But I just found a report on the death of blogs at New York Observer, "The End of Blogging." Folks can read it at the link. All of this is mostly a matter of definition. Blogging per se isn't going anywhere. Twitter is micro blogging. It's the hippest medium right now, but it may well be replaced with some new application or publishing format soon enough. The larger issue is the future of news publishing altogether. Folks might check James Rainey's piece yesterday on the SoCal newspaper industry: "Consolidation seen as inevitable for Southern California's newspapers." The dead-tree news model is nearly a thing of the past. Consumers get their news online nowadays, and those formats best able to attract advertising revenue will keep publishing. My sense is that, yeah, reverse-chronology blogs are someone quaint, as Ben Smith notes, but the power of blogging remains as great as ever. Top bloggers breaking top stories will survive. And the numbers will include a lot more than those mentioned by Ben Smith, who, incidently, made his own "quaint" blogging comment on a blog. Perhaps folks will just shift over to the online newspaper format. Think Daily Caller or Huffington Post, or on a smaller platform, Maggie's Notebook, NewsReal, or PA Pundits – International. And then there's Althouse. She keeps plugging away on Blogger, and if it's good enough for her it's good enough for me! I'll be keeping American Power running, whether on Blogger or Wordpress, a switch that remains in the contemplation mode. I'm also in talks for my own blog at NewsReal, which means I might be joining the David Horowitz publishing house as a formal member. Again, that's just in the discussion phase, but I'll know more after CPAC next week, where I'll be hooking up with some folks.

Meanwhile, perhaps
The Other McCain might weigh in on the topic.

And for a reminder on why I'll be blogging somewhere, no matter what, head back over to Open Left, where Daniel De Groot bids farewell with a parting attack on the right, "
Farewell thought: Conservatism is still the enemy":

Shortly after Kerry's loss in 2004, at MyDD, Chris wrote "Conservatism is our enemy" which I think is the first time I ever encountered a direct ideological assault on conservatism itself. Along with Phil Agre's rightly famous essay on the subject, it began me on a road and mission to better understanding this beast. Everything I have learned to date from then continues to bolster Chris' original thesis. Conservativism is still the primary enemy of progress, justice, fairness and widespread happiness for humanity. It remains a destructive and corrosive force on the institutions of democracy and the single biggest obstacle to world peace ....

These fights will have to go on. Conservatism is a destructive system of hierarchy and zero-sum power seeking that has no place in the running of a modern society. It is some kind of evolutionary anachronism, the ingrained desire to accumulate power and resources to the exclusion of "the other" against times of need in Hobbes' jungle. Since about 1850 we (in the West at least) have lived in the world of surplus resources where there really is enough stuff for everyone to go around, but still we live with about half the population intuitively working the politics of a Malthusian state where every hamburger you eat is one of my kids going hungry. Even today in the shadow of the Great Recession, world GDP per capita (PPP) stands at over $10,000 per year. About 1 billion live on less than $400 a year. Another billion live on less than $750 a year. Clearly there is enough to go around, we just suck at distribution. Is it really so crazy to imagine we could get those bottom 2 billion up to $1000 or $2000 a year?

In the field of pursuing the ideal human society, liberalism is the science of pursuing human well being. It combines the empiricism and rationalism of science with the goal of maximizing human happiness. The process is iterative and the specific means change as well meaning ideas are found wanting, and as science improves our understanding of humans themselves and what it takes to make them happy. There is no other school of thought that both seeks to improve the lot of all, and actually can do it. The ultimate goal of liberalism is that we should not need the word "liberalism" because no one would need a special word to describe the self-evident way people determine solutions to societal problems. That's what liberalism is, and why it must win or all humanity will fall back into ruin, scarcity, ignorance and fear. We live in a world with plenty of those things, but also a world where solutions to them are in reach, which was never true any time before. Après liberalism, le déluge.

Look, that's not "liberalism" — that's radical progressivism. And as long as these f**kers keep agitating for the neo-Stalinist revolution, I'll be out pushing back, smacking these freaks down like a whack-a-mole.

10 comments:

Karen Townsend said...

Nicely done. Good luck with your new venture.

The Vegas Art Guy said...

Somehow I doubt that blogging will ever die. It will certainly evolve but it will always be around as long as people have something to say.

Bartender Cabbie said...

I blather nonsense on my blog all the time. I won't go anywhere unless the "blogosphere" shuts down entirely.

Red said...

I hope you keep blogging ;-)

Tania said...

My own 0.2 cents - blogging is far from dead.

Perhaps we are witnessing the the slow death of progressive tilted blogging, but not of blogging entirely.

Tania said...

PS: You want to migrate to Wordpress :)

PSS: See you at CPAC!

Mr. Mcgranor said...

I'm hip... Do you recall when Myspace was of active 'blogging? It seems webblogging started declining around 2008-2009. Other countries utilize the internet for civics; but here society uses it for nothing meaningful.

Maggie@MaggiesNotebook said...

The best thing about blogging is reporting (if you will call it that) from different sources, on the same bit of news. That's very different from what you will find in any mainstream online or print edition.

Only in the dreams of the msm and elitists (which can include some of the bigger bloggers) will blogging go away. Maybe we'll just call it something else, and put a new face on it, as you suggest.

Or, we'll go to jail for quoting. That might end blogging.

Blogs coming and going reminds me of "refreshing the tree of liberty from time to time with the blood of patriots and tyrants" (figuratively speaking, of course).

I subscribe to NewsReal and would be excited to read you there.

Anonymous said...

Stopped by from Stacy McCain's blog to read this.

I always hated the term "blogging" and would love to see it die, but I also know blogging is a form that is well-followed. It's also like being a musician.

As with music, some fools get the big contracts for next to nothing; some work their asses of for years before they have a few hits. Some toil in obscurity until they quit, and others make a fairly comfortable living just being good at what they do, and treating it like a small business.

Those latter folk aren't famous, except to a limited few. Tom Waits is a somewhat famous example of the non-famous. Bill Kirchen is a non-famous example of the successful non-famous. (Yeah, fame is relative).

I say do what suits you, and don't accept format changes as a roadblock to success. Label mergers didn't kill music, and indies who know what they are doing make money.

papundits said...

Douglas,
Good post!
Thanks
Ed