Communicable violence

A Quillette article about the Christchurch shootings draws a parallel between the printing press and the internet as innovations that ushered in sectarian clashes:
The disruptive nature of the internet has been compared many times to the disruption caused by the printing press. And the frightening realisation one has when making this analogy is that the printing press precipitated hundreds of years of religious warring. We do not yet know what will be the long-term impact of the internet—obviously, it will be both good and bad, and most likely the upside will vastly outweigh the downside—but we must also be prepared for a fragmenting of our societies, and continual fracturing along ideological and tribal lines.
Here at home, I continue my experiment in local politics, relying heavily on the internet for communication. At this week's public meeting the county attorney was inspired to suggest that the County Judge ask the bailiff to restrain me from speaking further. The Judge wisely ignored her and contented himself with bringing debate to a close by the usual procedures and calling a vote.

The controversy was over the "agenda packets" that are distributed to department heads and commissioners in preparation for each meeting. I had proposed that the county should resume the traditional practice of distributing the agenda packets to the press and the public as well, instead of making them file an open-records request and wait until at least two weeks after the meeting.  Even the local paper is taking an interest, which is surprising, given that the editor normally is rather a cheerleader and averse to controversy--but of course, he resents suddenly being denied access to the packets before each meeting. The voters, for the most part, would like to see more transparency, which is of course why they elected me.

I spend a lot of time answering forum comments about how all this procedure is supposed to work.  I explain why, even when I'm disappointed by not winning support for a proposal, the really important thing for me is the freedom to post an item on the agenda and debate it in open session. After that, we decide what we decide, and then the voters evaluate our performance. There's an odd perception that, when an elected official has discretion to control a policy, that means his decision is not subject to scrutiny or comment. Obviously I take a different view.

The presence of the internet makes the scrutiny and comment more immediate and widely accessible. The discussion can get heated and, like all impromptu unmediated public discussion, can veer off-course and demonstrate how disconnected and ill-informed some voters are. Still, they're what we've got. I just plug away at presenting the facts and try not to let even the most outrageous comments lead me into snippiness or sarcasm--no easy feat for me.  Flawed as internet arguments are, I prefer them to an information lockdown.

7 comments:

Christopher B said...

I think you're on it. I'm probably biased due to my Lutheran background but I'd say it was just as important that material such as the Bible was printed and then likely read aloud in native languages and not confined to Latin. I think you could draw a parallel between the current deplatforming efforts and a counterfactual age where printers were only allowed to distribute books in Latin.

E Hines said...

Channeling Sallah: Educated voters. Very dangerous. You go first.

Eric Hines

David Foster said...

From the link: "In Australia the attack has been blamed on the Australian media, in Britain the British media, in the US on Donald Trump. The tragedy has become fuel for the fire of the internal culture wars of each country—domestic culture wars that are draining our finite reserves of mutual social trust."

In the US today, ANY tragedy, indeed almost any problem of any kind, has become a trigger for the expression of rage in all directions. The recent Ethiopian airline tragedy reminded me of a disturbing 2013 Yahoo comment thread about the battery problems with the Boeing 787 Dreamliner....problems that did not result in any crashes, didn't result in any injuries, but only in a temporary grounding until the problems could be analyzed and resolved.

Some commenters blamed it on union workers in Seattle..some blamed it on nonunion workers in South Carolina. Others blamed it on cheap Chinese parts. There were accusations that the FAA must have been bribed. There was blaming of Obama, and of the Republican Party. And so on.

I wrote about it here:

https://chicagoboyz.net/archives/34475.html

Dad29 said...

Re: "religious wars" We note that most (not all) of those wars since 650 AD involve Muslims. That can't be coincidence, can it?

Grim said...

It might be; their territory puts them in between the other big religions. Christianity was long in the West, with rare exceptions; Buddhism in the East; Hinduism in the South-East. Islam was right in the middle, with an opportunity to clash with all of them (and first in line for the pagan Mongols, too).

There are structural doctrinal issues with Islam, and its classical interpretation of its founding texts and traditions. But it might have gone another way, just as Jews no longer sacrifice and conquer (or like Christians did go conquer, in spite of a mostly peaceful and apolitical set of founding texts).

Dad29 said...

Location didn't start wars, people did.

douglas said...

Perhaps, but it's entirely fair to note the contributing factor.