Vi er kommet til det 5. og nest siste brevet:
Dear Chris,
Well, I can’t say I’m really surprised by your response, but you have certainly slaughtered whole battalions of straw-men, so well done on that!
Let’s clear up some misunderstandings. You say that I write of “never being surprised by the positions we take on important issues”. That’s wrong. I wrote of never being surprised by the positions which certain blogs take on particular issues. The difference is crucial, as you’ll appreciate. And, of course, I chose the word “particular” for precisely the reason that you indicate.
You talk of my “transparent attempt” to get you to be critical of Brian Leiter. Frankly, that’s just nonsense. I didn’t want to suggest that you necessarily approved of Leiter’s style, so I indicated that maybe you would just think it characteristic of the dross which you accept that one finds in the world of blogs. I’ve got to say, though, that I think it instructive that you weren’t willing to condemn it.
You also miss the point which the Leiter quote illustrates. You say “Leiter has a point”. The fact that he has a point isn’t the point! Of course entrenched positions are sometimes correct. That isn’t what is at stake here. What is at stake is whether entrenched positions are likely on the whole to generate more heat than light. My argument is that when a whole medium is characterised by entrenched positions then you tend to get heat not light. The fact that Butterflies and Wheels might contribute to the heat is neither here nor there. It is part of the blogging phenomenon, therefore it suffers from the same problems.
I think we’re largely talking across each other here. Your argument seems to be – though I might be wrong about this – that we shouldn’t worry too much that blogs tend to be partisan, because people’s reading habits don’t straightforwardly follow their political and ideological outlooks. Of course, this is true for some people; I read Conservative Commentary, for example. But, as a general claim, I don’t buy it. First, there are systematic differences between the kinds of people who comment on liberal blogs and the kinds of people who comment on non-liberal blogs; just check out the comments threads. Second, there is a whole group of more casual readers who will regularly look at maybe one or two blogs. They will not tend to choose to read material which they systematically disagree with (that’s not how it works in the mainstream media, for example).
Let me finish with someone else’s words. They are talking about the relationship between left-wing and right-wing blogs:
The left and right hemiblogospheres are presently linked – if at all – by a corpus callosum of profound mutual contempt. Countless linky axons of aggravation transmit negative affect side to side. I won’t bother demonstrating this obvious fact with links. … And so, in the interest of entente – or at least to preclude the need for split-brain surgery to prevent the equivalent of a interwebs-wide grand mal epileptic seizure, as the storm moves left to right and back – I propose … a contest! Awards! For outstanding and meritorious achievements in the field of contempt.
This is John Holbo. On Crooked Timber . Yesterday.
All the best,
Jeremy