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Friday, June 28, 2013

Unraveling the Cloak of Caring


Humane Aid in America


Why does empathy and emotional solidarity only seems to coalesce after major natural disasters and horrific communal trauma?

It seems hypocritical to praise the act of raising money in order aid and help victims in a knee jerk reaction when, in times of relative peace and harmony, the same people can't muster an iota of empathy. They are morally unequipped to benevolently care for the same people prior to them befalling a life altering disaster.

Why are most people, especially our elected political representatives, unable to foresee that assisting someone out of an economics or social quagmire, by passing legislation which supports them with subsidies during peacetime, is also commendable. Have we forgotten the horrendous state of disrepair of the levees and flood surge protection in pre-Katrina Louisiana?

According to US News and World Report;
“the American Society of Civil Engineers estimated that one-quarter of the 607,380 bridges across the United States were functionally obsolete or structurally deficient in 2012 – placing the cost of repairs at $76 billion. The sheer weight of the evidence shows that it's just a matter of time before the next bridge failure.”

The explosion in West Texas which claimed the lives of 15 and injured about 200, appears to be rife with institutional negligence, political obfuscation and corporate monetary gluttony. Ramit Plushnick-Masti of the Associated Press, who has investigated and covered the story intensely, said during NPR's Diane Rehm show, that the public grew up around and in proximity of the fertilizer plant over the past 30-50 years. Without even delving into the ISO certifications and the EPA stringencies, this is a classic scenario of zoning.

We don't know when if ever the blame will be laid on which governmental agency's failure but the fact that the zoning was distorted, ignored or rezoned is obvious. It seems to reflect the increasing prevalence of a revolving door system. A system of murky back room horse trading deals which ultimately leads to thinly veiled plutocratic control. The lobbying groups or thinks tanks function as half way houses for aspiring politicians and burgeoning captains of industry.

Recently, the Senators from the tornado ravished state of Oklahoma both voted earlier in the year to deny federal relief funding to the hurricane Sandy victimized areas of the NorthEast. However, when it was reported that some of the schools which were struck by the massive tornados were not equipped with adequate storm protection, they "evolved" their previous ideological dogma significantly.


It seems unfathomably disingenuous to proclaim oneself a magnanimous public official when one showers praise and merits on other public officials who they themselves only register empathy when it effects them directly.

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Journalism and Democracy and Getting Information that Matters


Tedx Poynter: The Future of Journalism


(story originally ran in Creative Loafing Tampa)

The future of journalism was the connecting theme of a version of the popular online Ted Talks series last Friday at the Poynter Institute in downtown Saint Petersburg. A crowd of mostly media insiders listened to topics ranging from copyright issues and viral media to fact checking and the role of new media.

The Poynter Institute is borrowing a style of discourse from the successful Ted Talks which focus on disseminating new ideas on three varied subject matters; Technology, Entertainment Design. The TedX formats are independently organized but are conducting within the Ted Talks structure. The Poynter Institute is a non-profit school of journalism, which teaches through traditional class room settings as well as online webinars. Elynn Angelotti is a social media faculty member at the Poynter Institute. She said the blueprint used by Ted Talks is a good fit for Poynter’s third Ted X event.

“What they’ve done is provide us with a framework to create powerful engaging; much briefer talks than we typically do here at Poynter. So, it’s a deferent tempo. It’s a different style. But it’s an engaging platform that helps us invite the Tampa Bay community and the larger journalism community into an event where we can realty learn from innovative thinkers.”

One of the overarching topics discussed during the event by several of the speakers was the role of professional journalism. Since the second dot com boom which was fueled by the near hegemonic emergence of social media, news and scholarly media have experienced a decline in hardcopy circulation. This decline brought with it a steady decline in revenue from advertising. In order to compensate some traditional media outlets have adopted a new business model called “paywall”. A “paywall” is an online business model which restricts access to webpage content without a paid subscription to news or academic publications. Paywalls come in two varieties either “hard” where no or limited viewing is permitted or “soft” where the content is less rigidly controlled.

One staff member who focuses on ethics in the media, Kelly McBride said in an interview after the talk, a well informed citizenry is a cornerstone to democracy. The direction of journalism McBride sees, however, is a move towards unprofessionalism: citizens with a passion, spokes people; marketeers. She says we are still tumbling down the rabbit hole with no clear indication where will it end. According to McBride democracy needs at least a small cadre of journalist in order to function. A la carte journalism works for some models, like Side Boob Reports, but doesn't work for investigative journalism. She said that not many people are willing to pay for investigative stories.

That would seem to be the case with stories like the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists who divulged the path to the center of the money maze that stems from lucrative offshore banking. However, paywalls are beginning to work for the New York Times and other major newspapers, like Gannett Publishing but the future is murky for small town newspapers where it's largely untested whether people will pay at all.

Transmitting and receiving news and information outside the conventional written word is a viable means of ensuring professionalism and reliability. Pat Aufderheide is a professor and director of the Center for Social Media at American University and also a film critic. Aufderheide said documentaries are an important and significant medium for reporting on culture.

”Homes across America through public broadcasting these films are being seen by millions and millions of people; which is at least two or three orders of magnitude larger than anything that will happen to a documentary on theatrical screens. So although they are not necessarily sexy in movie media they are terrifically important in being part of our media mix for a democracy.”

A Ted Talks veteran, Eli Pariser, spoke about the misconceptions of viral media. Pariser’s most recent project is upworthy.com but he cut his internet teeth with the moveon.org website. Pariser said the way information is filtered today is a challenge because we have little control over how it is filtered, what is filtered or the methodology behind the filtering. I order to achieve what he calls a “nourishing diet of information” filters need to be smarter.

“FaceBook for example, could have an important button to go along with the like button and that would actually have a significant effect. Right? Because it’s hard to click like on war in Afghanistan continues for twelfth year. But you would say that’ important; I want people to pay attention to that. So there are ways without being prescriptive about what’s important and what’s not that you could allow people to elevate that kind of content.”

When asked about the emerging trends in social media as it pertains to news and information gathering, Pariser sees an increased fragmentation as the overall trend over the next five years. He said we “...are all increasingly speaking these different informational languages.” Will these internet fragments eventually be integrated? Maybe not Pariser thinks. He doesn't foresee these information Goliaths being slain by any upstart dot com Davids.

Facebook, Twitter and Google as well as Instagram and Tumblr are not only veritable blue chip companies but they are the forums and platforms on which disparate niches of society have come to rely as a primary mode of communication. It's been said that President Obama's social media “gladhanding” was in large part the element which tipped the scales in his favor during the 2012 presidential election much like the role social media played as an instrument in nurturing the Arab Spring into a regional phenomenon.

Other media experts at the Ted X Poynter event also talked about the changing tides of journalism as a result of expanding technology. There aren't any mystic Oracles to consult on the future of journalism but one thing is certain, the medium is becoming the message. It's the duel responsibility of the consumer and the producer to make sure the message remains meaningful despite the medium.

Saturday, June 8, 2013

Florida Freegan Lessons from Bill McKibben




The month of May 2013 marked the tipping point when atmospheric measurements of carbon dioxide passed the 400-parts-per-million threshold for the first time since the beginning of human civilization.

Environmentalist and climate activist Bill McKibben has been out front alerting the public that scientists warn that level needs to be cut to 350 in order to avoid long-term climate catastrophe from the greenhouse effect. McKibben has written several books on global warming and alternative energy and is also the founder of the grassroots climate movement 350.org. Scientists, including McKibben, assert that an accelerated greenhouse effect will be the outcome if 350 ppm is exceeded, and that translates directly into bizarre and erratic climate change. 350.org is behind what's considered to be the largest globally coordinated protest, with 5,200 simultaneous demonstrations in 181 countries.

Bill McKibben was the keynote speaker at Eckerd College’s graduating class of 2013 in St. Petersburg. He addressed graduates and their families at the Golden Anniversary of Eckerd College’s commencement ceremony.

Before the speech I sat down with Bill McKibben and began by asking about the name of his organization. We also discussed, among other things, some of the climate issues facing Florida.


            Bill McKibben Interview 1                             
     Bill McKibben Interview 2                      




Further reading and listening pleasure: