Peggy Noonan on Blogging in today's Opinion Journal. {registration required}
{...}When you hear name-calling like what we've been hearing from the elite media this week, you know someone must be doing something right. The hysterical edge makes you wonder if writers for newspapers and magazines and professors in J-schools don't have a serious case of freedom envy.The bloggers have that freedom. They have the still pent-up energy of a liberated citizenry, too. The MSM doesn't. It has lost its old monopoly on information. It is angry.
But MSM criticism of the blogosphere misses the point, or rather points.
Blogging changes how business is done in American journalism. The MSM isn't over. It just can no longer pose as if it is The Guardian of Established Truth. The MSM is just another player now. A big one, but a player. {...}
Amen!
The information wants to be free. We're simply allowing for it.
Read also: Robbo.
{...}I'm glad she didn't focus exclusively on those bloggers going toe to toe with the MSM in the fields of news and politics, but also mentioned folks like Lileks and Terry Teachout. For every INDCent Bill or Dr. Rusty out there scalping Dan Rather or posting Jihadi snuff films, there's also someone blogging about their favorite music, changing the baby's diapers or when they ought to plant the spring bulbs. This is one of the major beauties of writing in the 'Sphere as opposed to the MSM. Not only do I not have to ask an editor if I can run another Eason Jordan story, I also don't have to ask if I can post about the daily harassment I suffer at the hands of my cat who, as soon as I get home, starts demanding loudly that I sit down in the library so he can jump into my lap.Likewise, and equally importantly, readers of blogs aren't confined by the MSM's gatekeeping. If someone stumbles across our site, likes my cat-blogging for instance and is sufficiently impressed with the quality of our writing, why, they're free to come back any time. And to request more of the same. (We're always open to suggestions. That's what the TastyBits (TM) Mail Sack is all about.)
That, by the way, is why we Llamas like to think we have something pretty special going on around here. We get into the political debate now and again, but we also opine about whatever else crosses our crazed minds. As Steve-O likes to say, we cover the waterfront, gathering rats and toasting them on sticks so you don't have to. {...}
Interests vary from person to person. When you remove the control that says only this should be interesting, everyone wins. I'll say it again: the information wants to be free. If I can do someone a service by pointing them to an article that interests them, I will have served my purpose as a blogger. From there on in, no matter what I say about it, it's up to you, my devoted Cake Eater Reader, to, in the words of the Oracle, make up your own damn minds.
I, for one, think you're capable of it.
Posted by Kathy at February 17, 2005 10:22 AMYou are all different!
We are all different!
You are all unique!
We are all unique!
(Lone voice) I'm not.
(All) Shhhh!!
Posted by: Robert the Llama Butcher at February 17, 2005 10:30 AM