Rising Blogging Insanity and Introspection
Recently I came across an article, Beware the Bloggers’ Bile, in TIME Magazine by Joe Klein recently in which he wrote about the insanity that has taken over the Liberal/Progressive blogosphere. This of course is going well with Republican bloggers. In Klein’s piece, he expresses his concern of the recent criticism he is receiving from liberal bloggers recently:
A strange thing happened to me the day the House of Representatives voted to pass the Iraq-war-funding bill. Congresswoman Jane Harman of California called as the debate was taking place. “Look, I would love to have cast a vote against Bush on this,” she told me. “We need a new strategy, and I hope we can force one in September. But I flew into Baghdad [with 150 young soldiers recently]. To vote against this bill was to vote against giving them the equipment… they need. I couldn’t do that.” I posted what Harman said on Swampland, the political blog at Time.com, along with my opinion that Hillary Clinton and Barack Obama had changed their positions and voted against the funding for the worst possible reason: presidential politics.
And then Harman changed her position. After we spoke, she voted against the funding. The next day, I was blasted by a number of left-wing bloggers: Klein screwed up! I had quoted Harman in the past tense—common usage for politicians who know their words will appear after a vote takes place. That was sloppy and… suspicious! Proof that you just can’t trust the mainstream media. On Eschaton, a blog that specializes in media bashing, I was given the coveted “Wanker of the Day” award. Eventually, Harman got wind of this and called, unbidden, to apologize for misleading me, saying I had quoted her correctly but she had changed her mind to reflect the sentiments of her constituents. I published her statement and still got hammered by bloggers and Swampland commenters for “stalking” Harman into an apology, for not checking her vote in the Congressional Record, for being a “water boy for the right wing” and many other riffs unfit to print.
But the smart stuff is being drowned out by a fierce, bullying, often witless tone of intolerance that has overtaken the left-wing sector of the blogosphere. Anyone who doesn’t move in lockstep with the most extreme voices is savaged and ridiculed – especially people like me who often agree with the liberal position but sometimes disagree and are therefore considered traitorously unreliable. Some of this is understandable: the left-liberals in the blogosphere are merely aping the odious, disdainful – and politically successful – tone that right-wing radio talk-show hosts like Rush Limbaugh pioneered. They are also justifiably furious at a Bush White House that has specialized in big lies and smear tactics.
And that is precisely the danger here. Fury begets fury. Poison from the right-wing talk shows seeped into the Republican Party’s bloodstream and sent that party off the deep end. Limbaugh’s show—where Dick Cheney frequently expatiates—has become the voice of the Republican establishment. The same could happen to the Democrats.
Klein’s main point is that he is concerned that “the left-liberals in the blogosphere are merely aping the odious, disdainful – and politically successful – tone that right-wing radio talk-show hosts like Rush Limbaugh pioneered.” I feel Klein’s observation of the so-called progressive blogosphere is very accurate. The blogosphere has become more of a place where one can find hate-filled rhetoric in the land of he said-she said. Before I go on, I like to make this clear. I do understand that Joe Klein is somewhat of a hypocrite in a “pot calling the kettle black” kind of way. But this post is not about Klein, the purpose of this post is the subject of his article – the hate-filled rhetoric that has dominated the left.
The sad reality of it all, there are people on the Left who do attack others not because they disagree with their point of view, but who actually enjoy watching the other person crumble with fear. And those who are committing these offenses are not realizing the sense of despair that is being felt throughout the certain communities and communities of color who are attempting to navigate through this crazy world of ours towards a more just society. Because of this, I am compelled to speak out on the realities that are taking place in the liberal blogosphere.
I find it ironic that Klein’s article came out during the recent Brittney Gilbert vs. Jesus General dust up. I have written and rewritten this post so many times it is not funny. I had planned to provide a full break down on the sequence of events on how we got to this mess we are in now, but something inside me kept me from doing it. I just did not feel right. Instead, I will just speak from the heart. For those who would like a good break down, check out Jim McCulloch’s post, “The strange case of General Patriotboy and his lynch mob,” at Stone Bridge. I think, his post is well balanced and easy to follow. What really bothered me about all this, the whole debate was intertwined with racist and misogynistic remarks that would make any causal observer feel like they were watching an old Jerry Springer episode. Even worse was the people’s inability to step back from their A-list hero-worshiping and look at the bigger picture. In retrospect, the dispute represents the current patriarchal and racially based social structure.
While Brittney Gilbert, who used to blog for Nashville is Talking meant well as tried to expose the racist tendencies of a known blogger called Smantix by posting an excerpt of his post – Teaching Libs a Lesson – that denigrated the recently deceased liberal blogger Steve Gilliard, she unwittingly reinforced racism. Granted she did posts a lot of stuff without much comment, in which many of her readers (both new and regular readers) would have to have common sense or the initiative to figure out the context and meaning of the post themselves. However, Gilbert had already set precedence by commenting on stuff done by Smantix and his views in the past and unfortunately, she neglected to do so this time and this is how she unwittingly reinforced racism. Racism is a system that values whites over people of color and therefore, it is arrogant to assume that every reader of any blog will get the “subtlety” of every headline or every post written. For example, suppose I were to move to Nashville and I wanted to know about the local blog scene around my new town, being a minority, it would have been easy for me to assume there was an Anti-African American tinge to that blog. However, this doesn’t mean Gilbert is a racist, it would be an error for me to judge her based on this one post. Unfortunately, in this sound-bite world of ours, this is how people are judged.
Here is where I have the biggest problem; it has to do with the way Gilbert was treated. Not only was it misogynist, but also it was a total reinforcement of the patriarchal and racially based social structure we live in. Patriarchy is the single most life-threatening social disease that is assaulting the male body and spirit in our nation. As pro-feminist male, it is more than just recognizing it, but a need to speak out against it because mere recognition of an injustice being done is not enough to end it.
As Paolo Friere wrote in his classic Pedagogy of the Oppressed:
The oppressor is in solidarity with the oppressed only when he stops regarding the oppressed as an abstract category and sees them as persons who have been unjustly dealt with, deprived of their voice, cheated in the sale of their labor – when he stops making pious, sentimental, and individualistic gestures and risks an act of love. True solidarity is found only in the plenitude of this act of love… To affirm that men and women are persons and as persons should be free, and yet to do nothing tangible to make this affirmation a reality, is a farce.
Such “acts of love” are possible. Being Latino, not only do I have an insight in identifying racist behavior taking place within the Latina/o community but also, I am also able to identify the subtle sexist behavior that also takes place because, as a male, I understand the male privilege that has been given to me by society’s patriarchal rules. Although there are some who assume by not being involved in the oppression of women that should be enough, but the reality is, that is nothing more but passivity. As bell hooks once said, “if we don’t change our own consciousness, we cannot change our own actions or demand change from others.”
In a recent conversation with Brownfemipower about ally building, she pointed out how the Zapatista movement was redefining the rigid gender roles that are put on men and women. The way this came about was the willingness to listen and bring down the sexist power structure. After listening to Marcela Lagarde, a Mexican feminist scholar and a former member of Mexico’s House of Representatives (2003-2006), on the marginalization of women in revolutionary movements in Latin America, subcomandante Marcos contacted Feminist International Radio Endeavour (FIRE), a woman-produced radio/Internet broadcasting station, who put him in touch with Lagarde. After the two finished talking, Lagarde agreed to serve as their Gender Advisor to the movement. It is this type of ally building I feel Brownfemipower was talking about and one that we, as men, should model after.
The discriminatory practices within the progressive blogosphere have its roots in a male-dominated culture society. This patriarchal culture does not tolerate freedom and democracy or equal rights of men and women, because it would threaten their leadership position. What really broke my heart was reading comments after comments of people both men and women pulling out the lowest blows they could muster in an effort to shut Britney and her allies up. It clearly showed that they had little empathy for women. The minute JG sent his letter to her bosses and to the sponsors; it became misogynistic because it was for the purpose to damage Gilbert’s reputation. They did nothing more but took the focus off her pain and placed it onto JG. As a male, it was his privilege to have all the attention on his pain. During that week, JG and his followers felt they had done nothing wrong in what they did to Britney – as it was no big deal, but what do not understand, it is they who took her power away, her voice, and her personhood. In the end, JG is still employed while the other is not. Just because she resigned that does not take away the fact that the onslaught heavily influenced her decision.
How are their actions any different from the people who damaged the reputation of the woman who was unable to get a job because of the online postings that contained offensive content and personal attacks on her? What about Kathy Sierra who canceled her speaking engagements because she was afraid to leave her house? Or Jill Filipovic of Feministe and her situation with AutoAdmin? Or Brownfemipower? Or nubian? or MarisaCat? Or the thousands of women who are vilified by their allies and non-allies in public and who have no shame in making violent threats against them? NOT A FUCKING GOD DAMN THING!
I have been involved in politics for a long time and I have been using the Internet back in 1992. In those 10+ years, nothing has changed when it comes to attacking women on the Internet. It is easy to dismiss all this as being BS and state that people should find a way to grow a tougher skin and just accept the fact that we live in a world full of mudslinging and vitriol. Do we really want to live in a heartless world where people become indifferent with one another?
The reality is words and ideas are damaging, no matter how tough someone claims to be. The attacks from the left border on the edge what the folks on the right have no problem doing. When it comes to attacking female bloggers, it is easy to hide behind the keyboard to begin their onslaught on the female psyche as they attack a woman’s physical appearance and sexuality. Worse, are the attacks by men on their self-worth as to why they are still single or, why their relationships are failing with overt misogynistic comments on how “ugly” they are to get a man or how they are too pretty to be taken seriously or how they should “put out” more for their husbands or boyfriends. When that does not work, it becomes easy for us to start labeling them a bitch, whore, vendida, traitor, cunts, ho, ugly.
While it is easy for people like progressive male bloggers like Markos Mousilitas (Daily Kos) to tell women to “develop a thicker skin,” one must really have to wonder about this line of thinking. The problem I have with this line of thinking, people become emotionless and non-caring on issues that should have our attention. As a result, these issues are always kept at a distance. If we don’t see them, they no longer have to care. Truthfully, we are a society that suffers from severe emotional repression. For example, as of this writing, this country has already murdered hundreds of thousands of innocent human beings in a foreign country, it has already imprisoned another hundred of thousands in concentration camps in this country and yet we all know this, but nobody bats an eyelash. We are destroying not only our souls, but also our physical, emotional, and intellectual infrastructure of which we are a part and cannot live without.
It is bad enough men are raised to not to display emotions, now we are forcing women to do same as we tell them to “grow a thicker skin.” By developing this “thicker skin,” all we are doing is maintaining the emotional repression with the intention of denying our deep feelings of hurt and pain, and left to express them through anger and rage. As long as we shield ourselves from actually feeling, we are preventing ourselves from walking a journey of full honesty with all our personal and structural relationships.
By minimize their efforts by asserting a perceived authority about what is considered “right” and “wrong” ways to draw attention to the issues we as people face is not only sexist, but oppressive, especially when it is done by men.
So those who continue to the silence of women and yet glorify democracy is nothing more but a hypocrite and it is they who are hurting our movement, not those who are the voice of the thousands of women who are forced to be silent.

Put forth on June 17, 2007 by XicanoPwr
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fantastic post, amigo.
i didn’t follow the argument to the places/threads you did. but it seems you made some good insights by going there. its good to have a bigger picture, so thanks for giving the XP angle.
I am so in love with you right now.
Me, too.
Thanks for the insights.
unfortunately the american society is missing the much-needed matriarchal leadership (also it seems the mexican society is just as bad and has substituted its matriarchal reverence with the ‘virgin mary’ icon
I also tire of the dominant macho attitude of this hemisphere and long for the influence of the patriarchal/matriarchal duality to complete our society
Thanks Nez. It was a post that was a long time coming. I have expressed my views else where around the nets, but never here on my blog. I am glad that I was able to provide a big picture point of view.
It was kind of hard because it is easy to get sucked into the chaos and writing more attacks.
I third the love, seriously. This is an awesome post, XP. Thank you for writing it.
Sylvia and Brittney – now you are making me blush. Your approval of this post means a lot. More than you really know.
Steven D – Welcome! Thank your for having an open mind. I also like to thank you for linking a couple of my posts over there. That means a lot to mean.
tizoc – I long for that day too, I really don’t know if it will ever come in my life time. However, that does not mean I will stop trying to get there and ascribe to a fatalistic mentality and throw my hands up and say Oh well.
Thank you, magniloquence!
Thanks for the link, XP. Re “A-list”/hero worship, you drilled it, of course.
All the best, B
I came over here through the link at brownfemipower. It is my first time here, but I will definitely be back. This is very well thought though, documented, clearly written, undeniable critic of how patriarchy infects everything, even progressives.
Thank you for standing in solidarity and expressing your voice.
I *heart* you and this post!
I haven’t been online the last few days and I was afraid to read anything that even remotely touched on this mess now that I’m back. I’m glad I did anyway. Thanks for breaking it down right here.
I must certainly say that I am truly flattered that everybody enjoyed reading this post. This really means a lot to mean. Oftentimes I have noticed that people tend to gloss over, more like a slap on the wrist on important issues. This is so true when there is a lot of hero-worshiping going on. How often do we hear the ole “Well … she or he did not mean it that way” but when another person does it, it because a slug fest. We not move forward if we are unwilling to hold to the same standards we place on other folks.
Thank you so much for all your kind words!!
Excellent point about how long this pattern has been going on in online communications. Susan Herring’s 2001 paper on Gender and Power in Online Communications summary that “men generally appear to be less concerned with politeness; they issue bald face-threatening acts such as unmitigated criticisms and insults, violate online rules of conduct, tolerate or even enjoy ‘flaming’, and tend to be more concerned about threats to freedom of expression than with attending to others’ social ‘face’ sounds like the blogosphere to me. http://rkcsi.indiana.edu/archive/CSI/WP/WP01-05B.html
Great post! Like Christina I came here from brownfemipower … and I’ll be back.
jon
Thanks jon!
The problem is that many people like to just think that these just words on a screen and if one is bothered by it, simply turn it off. But that is not easy, words are powerful, consider the traumatic effects “virtual rape” has on a person. If these are just words then why is the Brussels public prosecutor asking detectives of the Federal Computer Crime Unit to go on “Second Life” to investigate a “virtual rape.” Something must have gone so wrong if the cops are being involved now.
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