Are we really changing the world?
I couldn't quite put my finger on what I felt was the over-arching theme in many of the race and digital divide discussions until I saw this quote at the end of the The African American Blogging Thing.
Reading the articles this week, I wonder how many of the population that progressive blogs seek to speak for ever actually read blogs like DailyKos and MyDD? In reality, I'm going to guess that the readership profile of DailyKos doesn't look that much different to the people who came out to support Howard Dean.
I don't get any real sense that the Internet has really changed the dynamic as much as we would like to believe. It is often said that the Republicans need an average turnout - low or high favors the Democrats. One reason for this is that the nearly 50% of people who don't vote are presumed to be more likely to vote Democrat. Once again, many of the these people didn't vote in 2004, when we saw the most concentrated GOTV efforts ever seen.
What can we do to bring these people into political process? I don't think it is just a matter of access to computers - reading the article above, it seems to suggest that African Americans are online and reading blogs, but feel no connection to something like political blogs which they see as a predominantly white culture. Surely the democrats need to spend less time attacking each other, and more time working out ways to connect with their natural supporters?
... blogging is representative of existing dynamics as much as it is a new system to change those dynamics.And that is the point isn't it? We have talked much in class and outside about how the Internet has been so revolutionary by increasing civic participation and motivating whole groups of previously disenchanted citizens to rejoin the political fray. But hasn't it just done that amongst the groups that were politically interested anyway, just turned off by the partisan political process - in other words, people who are predominantly white with above average incomes?
Reading the articles this week, I wonder how many of the population that progressive blogs seek to speak for ever actually read blogs like DailyKos and MyDD? In reality, I'm going to guess that the readership profile of DailyKos doesn't look that much different to the people who came out to support Howard Dean.
I don't get any real sense that the Internet has really changed the dynamic as much as we would like to believe. It is often said that the Republicans need an average turnout - low or high favors the Democrats. One reason for this is that the nearly 50% of people who don't vote are presumed to be more likely to vote Democrat. Once again, many of the these people didn't vote in 2004, when we saw the most concentrated GOTV efforts ever seen.
What can we do to bring these people into political process? I don't think it is just a matter of access to computers - reading the article above, it seems to suggest that African Americans are online and reading blogs, but feel no connection to something like political blogs which they see as a predominantly white culture. Surely the democrats need to spend less time attacking each other, and more time working out ways to connect with their natural supporters?

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