Tag Archive for 'culture'

Interview with Andrew Keen, Author, “the cult of the amateur”

Everyone else has had their opportunity to have a go with Andrew Keen, so I thought I would have mine. I just happened to interview him the morning before he appeared on “The Colbert Report.” I thought he handled the interview well. I mean the one with Colbert.

The one with me went well, too. I may get boos and hisses as a result, but I think he makes some valid points in his book. I don’t like the fact that it is hard to know whether what you find on the internet is true or not. I think the internet has brought to the forefront some of our worst human qualities. We are self-important and self-promoting. We are more concerned with having and expressing an opinion than knowing and understanding the facts, the truth, whatever it may be.

I don’t think there is anyway to avoid all this. The internet is here. I am not sure the ultimate effect of the internet is any different that the effect of the Industrial Revolution which brought great benefit and great oppression.

One of Keen’s major concerns is the survival of mainstream media in this “everything should be free” culture. Rather than paying $.50 for a newspaper, we get the headlines free on the internet. No need to buy the latest CD, I can get it free sooner or later on the internet. While I think these are valid concerns, the fact that we cannot go back suggests to me that we will work through this and somewhere down the road the Phoenix will rise from the ashes.

I do not grieve over the demise of print media. Good books will always be written and they will always be read. In fact, I think the MSM betrayed itself and us long ago when it made news entertainment, when it put people on the tube 24 hours a day with nothing better to do that give us inane opinions from people with limited or no qualifications, when it made profits more important than journalism, when it became politically motivated rather than a defender of the truth. If businesses go bust and journalists become umemployed, is it any different than the decimation of American manufacturing by outsourcing plants and jobs?

Whatever is wrong with the internet culture is not the result of the internet. If it reveals our worst, I have some confidence that our being continually exposed to our worst will make us better, just as TV exposed racism in Birmingham in the ’60s.

Be careful out there!

 
 Andrew Keen, Author, "the cult of the amateur" [29:42m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (312)

Interview with Fawaz Gerges, Expert, Middle Eastern Affairs and Author of “Journey of the Jihadist: Inside Muslim Militancy”

Fawaz Gerges is an expert on the Middle East and Islam. He holds a Chair in International Affairs and Middle Eastern Studies at Sarah Lawrence College in New York. At present, he is a Carnige Scholar residing in the Middle East studying the complex relationships between Islamist, Radicals and everything else that goes into Arab politics. I saw him on “Bill Moyers Journal” and knew this was a guy who knew what he was talking about.

Everyone knows that Iraq is a mess. Everyone knows that we would be better off if we had never invaded Iraq. The question for me focuses more on whether or not we have any chance of achieving our goals in Iraq. Will our “export” of Jeffersonian democracy to the Middle East take root? What is going to happen when we leave, because we will leave? Is the surge working? What deals have we struck with one group, the Sunnis (the minority), at what cost with regard to our relationship with all the other groups, particularly the Shia?

The centuries old rivalries and conflicts between Sunni and Shia is pretty much impossible for Americans to understand. Even if we can glimpse the origin of the conflict, can we possibly understand how these differences affect our chances for success? Bush ‘41 knew enough to stay out of Baghdad in 1991. Bush ‘43 has created a legacy which he richly deserves.

I got the impression from Fawaz that it is just about impossible at this time for anyone to stop the natural progression of events which will lead Iraq through a civil war that may last for years, after which some form of national government may emerge. But it may not resemble what our president envisioned when he declared “Mission Accomplished!”

Fawaz also comments on our current strategy of buying peace in various areas by arming the local Sunni leaders and essentially giving them control of specific territory in order to keep the peace. Not only does this undermine the national government which we are trying to create, but who knows what effect this favoritism toward one sect will have on the others.

No wonder the Iraqi Parliment went on vacation!

 
 Fawaz Gerges [29:58m]: Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (323)