Death of the Republican blogosphere
Instapundit, John Hawkins, and a number of right-wing bloggers consider why some consider the right-wing blogosphere to be on the decline:
And everyone became increasingly afraid of offending the bigger dogs and getting cut off from the all-important link flow. For example, I used to be a regular guest on the Northern Alliance Radio Show. That stopped not long after I criticized Michelle Malkin for her shoddy research failure and thereby offended the Powerline guys, even though I remained on good terms with the Fraters Libertas. I suspect this desire to curry favor is why the outliers that took off in terms of popularity have so little chili; they're basically the blogosphere equivalent of the mainstream media whores. Face it, Dana Loesch isn't any smarter now that she's a Breitbart bimbo than she was when she called herself Mamalogues(TM) and I was kicking her around in response to her various lunacies.
An even more important factor is the sapping of right-wing energy by thirteen straight years of relentless betrayal of conservative principles by the Republican Party. Libertarian realists like me are still going strong, since we never expected any better, but how much enthusiasm can conservatives expect to muster in support of nominal leaders like George W. Bush, John McCain, and Mitt Romney? The political enthusiasm simply isn't there anymore. It's not so much the right-wing blogosphere that is dying as the Republican one.
It may be worth noting that the Right also tends to fear controversy and mainstream criticism far more than the Left, not always without cause. I'm a bit more controversial than the average blogger, and as a result, have an unusually small number of incoming links in relation to the readership. Consider this fact: McRapey's Whatever has between 30 to 40 percent less traffic than VP+AG these days, but Alexa shows 4,713 incoming links there, nearly 3,500 more than VP's 941 and AG's 315. I'm not complaining. I'm clear that readers will find their way here whether they are encouraged by others to do so or not. But the difference is noticeable.
Being an aggregator, Instapundit is one of the few bloggers who still links religiously to others. I've attempted to follow his example and I never cite any information from any blog without linking directly to it. But I don't really bother with a blogroll per se anymore, because I have neither the time nor the interest to keep track of them as they spring up, post for a few months, or even a few weeks, and then fade away.
These days, if someone sends me an email enthusiastically informing me that they have just launched a new blog and would love to exchange links, I don't even bother to reply anymore. I've seen far too many new blogs begin with a few enthusiastic posts, followed soon after by an apology for not having the time to post but promising that will change real soon now, then a last hurrah, after which comes the void. Blogging isn't for everyone, but it usually requires trying it in order to learn whether it suits you or not... but I would recommend not requesting links from anyone until you've proven that you can do it for at least one year.
I think the corporatization of blogs makes independent that much more important, even if it is less common and less popular than it once was. Otherwise, we might as all sit around and watch the three television stations permitted to us by our masters in the media.
[A] funny thing happened in 2002-2003 — the left side of the blogosphere took off and eclipsed the Right side of the blogosphere. Liberals ferociously loathed George W. Bush, just as conservatives had detested Clinton, and they went online to congregate and get the information they needed to fight back. Soon, the liberal blogs were considerably bigger than the conservative blogs….although, and this is an often overlooked caveat, there were still a number of significant conservative websites, with large audiences, that many people don’t consider to be “blogs:” Lucianne, The American Spectator, WorldnetDaily, Newsmax, etc.And Legal Insurrection laments the link-stinginess of the corporate blogs that have largely taken over both Left and Right alike.
So, since that was the case, when Barack Obama got into power, you’d have expected that traffic on the Right side of the blogosphere would have surged just as it did on the Left side of the blogosphere in the early Bush years.
That didn’t happen.
Sure, there were a few outliers that took off: Hot Air, Redstate, and the Breitbart empire for example, but most conservative blogs have either grown insignificantly, stayed the same size, or even shrank. Most bloggers on the right side of the blogosphere haven’t increased their traffic significantly in years. Moreover, the right side of the blogosphere as a whole is definitely shrinking in numbers as bloggers that have had trouble getting traction are quitting and fewer and fewer bloggers are starting up new blogs.
I wish the reality weren’t so true that the days of collaboration and mutual support are waning. It’s nearly impossible to get a link out of the new big names in conservative media. It’s not even a conservative blogosphere anymore, it’s for-profit and non-profit corporate media which are protective of eyeballs.I think there are several problems. The first is the increased amount of corporatization among the blogosphere. Pajamas Media is the primary culprit here, but Gawker Media is also to blame. Once Nick Denton and Roger Simon showed that it was possible to monetize a blog or ten, pecuniary interests rapidly came to the fore. Suddenly everything had a price tag, links were worth money, and everyone's behavior naturally became just a bit more self-centered and mercenary. The H/T soon went the way of the dodo.
And everyone became increasingly afraid of offending the bigger dogs and getting cut off from the all-important link flow. For example, I used to be a regular guest on the Northern Alliance Radio Show. That stopped not long after I criticized Michelle Malkin for her shoddy research failure and thereby offended the Powerline guys, even though I remained on good terms with the Fraters Libertas. I suspect this desire to curry favor is why the outliers that took off in terms of popularity have so little chili; they're basically the blogosphere equivalent of the mainstream media whores. Face it, Dana Loesch isn't any smarter now that she's a Breitbart bimbo than she was when she called herself Mamalogues(TM) and I was kicking her around in response to her various lunacies.
An even more important factor is the sapping of right-wing energy by thirteen straight years of relentless betrayal of conservative principles by the Republican Party. Libertarian realists like me are still going strong, since we never expected any better, but how much enthusiasm can conservatives expect to muster in support of nominal leaders like George W. Bush, John McCain, and Mitt Romney? The political enthusiasm simply isn't there anymore. It's not so much the right-wing blogosphere that is dying as the Republican one.
It may be worth noting that the Right also tends to fear controversy and mainstream criticism far more than the Left, not always without cause. I'm a bit more controversial than the average blogger, and as a result, have an unusually small number of incoming links in relation to the readership. Consider this fact: McRapey's Whatever has between 30 to 40 percent less traffic than VP+AG these days, but Alexa shows 4,713 incoming links there, nearly 3,500 more than VP's 941 and AG's 315. I'm not complaining. I'm clear that readers will find their way here whether they are encouraged by others to do so or not. But the difference is noticeable.
Being an aggregator, Instapundit is one of the few bloggers who still links religiously to others. I've attempted to follow his example and I never cite any information from any blog without linking directly to it. But I don't really bother with a blogroll per se anymore, because I have neither the time nor the interest to keep track of them as they spring up, post for a few months, or even a few weeks, and then fade away.
These days, if someone sends me an email enthusiastically informing me that they have just launched a new blog and would love to exchange links, I don't even bother to reply anymore. I've seen far too many new blogs begin with a few enthusiastic posts, followed soon after by an apology for not having the time to post but promising that will change real soon now, then a last hurrah, after which comes the void. Blogging isn't for everyone, but it usually requires trying it in order to learn whether it suits you or not... but I would recommend not requesting links from anyone until you've proven that you can do it for at least one year.
I think the corporatization of blogs makes independent that much more important, even if it is less common and less popular than it once was. Otherwise, we might as all sit around and watch the three television stations permitted to us by our masters in the media.
Labels: corpocracy, media
77 Comments:
[A] funny thing happened in 2002-2003
Two funny things: Medicare Part D and No Child Left Behind. It became obvious then that the GOP had absolutely no intention of reducing or even controlling the size, scope, or growth of government.
When it becomes obvious that your team is not only losing, but has wagered massively on their opponents, why should one remain excited about the game?
Interesting article, but it fails to look at any of the real issues that you address. The most important of which is are they Republican sites or Conservative sites? There is an increasingly large difference. Second, the party of Dole, McCain, and Romney is a party of Losers. Who wants to identify with them? Finally, the level of conversation... Zerohedge has built a great site and runs many great articles... most of the commentariate is lacking though.
Lacking a Republican/Conservative leader who is a Winner!, I think the community divides into issue groups, life, guns, taxes, immigration etc. In a way they could be dividing and conquering themselves. Without a smart, dynamic leader to bring all the parts together, we'll be stuck with a pathetic party led by moderates afraid of offending. Another Bush anyone?
An even more important factor is the sapping of right-wing energy by thirteen straight years of relentless betrayal of conservative principles by the Republican Party. Libertarian realists like me are still going strong, since we never expected any better, but how much enthusiasm can conservatives expect to muster in support of nominal leaders like George W. Bush, John McCain, and Mitt Romney? The political enthusiasm simply isn't there anymore.
Bingo. And yet, the guys who crow that they are conservatives, not Republicans, can not seem to break from the party (see: Hannity, LeVine, Steyn, Hanson et als). They can rant about particular policies, but, no matter how many times they're stabbed in the back, they won't actually move on. Those who do (like maybe Derb) get whacked. Lose.
I have a blog (a few, actually), but admittedly rarely update them. I just quit FB for a spell, but with FB, I had the opposite problem.
As far as blogs are concerned, this is my main daily stop, followed by some bike related blogs, perhaps I go to AG when the mood strikes, and that's about it.
> An even more important factor is the sapping of right-wing energy by thirteen straight years of relentless betrayal of conservative principles by the Republican Party.
This. The complete an utter betray of conservative principles by George Bush (not that anyone who knew his father expected anything else), then the nomination of the author of McCain-Fiengold, and finally the nomination of a New England liberal have completely sapped any enthusiasm any conservative blogger might have. And the slack can't be picked up by the neocons as they can't truthfully blog about what they actually believe without alienating the conservative base.
It would be an interesting question what the impact of pressure on someone's career has for blogging outside narrow ranges. I have decided I am not going to worry myself, but I don't address some issues as it could easily kill some things with minimal benefit.
Has the corporate/organizational world become more intolerant? What impact does that have on blogging? It is easy to say we should all be black knights, but easier to do when you already have independent income.
I should have noted that my own lack of blogging is more a lack of motivation than anything else though. I agree that a strong underlying passion is needed.
And in completely unrelated (but never off topic) news, Tebow has been released by the Jets.
As a medium of communication, the internet does have advantages: namely ease of use and access, wide horizontal distribution, and anonymity. However, the internet has even greater drawbacks. It is basically a cesspool of bastardized (as most people don’t understand the origin and history of the ideas they read) and ever mutating (once stated, others begin mis- and purposely re-interpreting) ideas and the context in which they apply. Second, the author has no control over access to content. Ideas, once stated, are defenseless.
These characteristics make the internet far more useful for “liberal*” ideals that depend on misunderstanding and mutation to maintain the appearance of validity and relevancy, than for anything of real value.
*Post-modern or similar may be a more accurate term. Basically the egalitarian/nihilistic doctrine.
An even more important factor is the sapping of right-wing energy by thirteen straight years of relentless betrayal of conservative principles by the Republican Party.
The voters and bloggers are staying home. Just like a 2004 turnout numbers would have elected Romney, the conservative bloggers aren't even bothering to show up anymore.
At this point a thousand more conservative bloggers screaming at the GOP won't do any good. If one wants to be a libertarian/conservative blogger then your mission is to point things out for posterity and help like minded peoples survive the coming storm. Just like the economy there's no way to turn around the GOP Titanic.
Blogging can only be useful for the people who rarely post, but have good content when they do, in the comments of popular blogs where they'll get more views or by guest posting on the big blogs that like to outsource.
It's telling that the Republicans' biggest gripe is still Medicare and Social Security. They're blind or in denial that their party robbed the nation's wealth to pay for two wars and the nation building that followed, not to mention the banker bailouts that took place under their president and Treasure Secretary. If that wasn't bad enough, now they see the mean old sleeping dog that is entitlements and want to give it a swift kick.
What I mean is no one wants to read a blogger that defends that kind of shit anymore.
It's also that most of the bigger conservative blogs have a very hard time sticking with their positions.
Instapundit has this problem. The guy wants to be a big time Republican, but the truth is, he can't bear to publicly support the platform day in and day out.
He already has abandoned the party line on gay marriage. He already has abandoned the party line on neoconservatives.
Instapundit has this problem. The guy wants to be a big time Republican, but the truth is, he can't bear to publicly support the platform day in and day out.
No, Instapundit has always been leery of the Republican elite. He's got a fairly strong libertarian streak to him.
I think the analysis fails to account for facebook and twitter. This is a very different internet system than the one that existed in 2003. Comparing the two isn't particularly useful.
Nate's right about twitter. I get my political info from twitter more than anywhere else.
@Nate
"I think the analysis fails to account for facebook and twitter. This is a very different internet system than the one that existed in 2003. Comparing the two isn't particularly useful."
Less content, more emotional triggers. It lends itself very well to calling people -ists of every kind, shallow analysis, and instant gratification. This is not conducive to deep, principled reasoning.
Blogging hasn't really gone way. Independent blogging probably has. Most bloggers don't last very long because they don't have anything interesting or original to say. And horse race coverage has its limits, especially for the next two years (and turnout is going to be significantly down for the midterms).
This is not conducive to deep, principled reasoning.
Most blogs aren't either, especially political ones.
OC said it best.
The blogosphere is made up of millions of people with nothing to say and an irrepressible urge to say it.
To that I would add... most of those people have moved on to saying nothing very loudly on Facebook and Twitter... which are easier ways to say nothing.
The crazy thing is... there is still obviously a market for people who DO have something to say. I go two years barely posting anything at all... an when I start back up... It takes all of two weeks for the blog to be back to the 380 visitors a day traffic it was before I quit... and plenty of days it spikes up way above that to practically respectable numbers.
To that I would add... most of those people have moved on to saying nothing very loudly on Facebook and Twitter... which are easier ways to say nothing.
Which, I think, is actually a good thing. It makes it that much easier to ignore them.
"Which, I think, is actually a good thing. It makes it that much easier to ignore them."
agreed.
Another problem is thast for those on the left, politics is religion. They believe they’ll obtain a form of salvation through The State. For the rest of us, politics is an annoyance. We seek to escape it. We want to live life instead.
The big problem is that the Republicans do absolutely nothing to encourage or develop talent. In fact, quite the opposite, they will squash it at any sign of independent thought. It is a centrally planned political party that has totally lost touch with its base. Unless that changes, the Republican party is not long for this world.
There will be a realignment, which will probably look something like this if history is any guide here: The Democrat party splits into two factions (radical and center left) The Republican elite will join the Center left faction - the populist reactionaries will form a new party. - but the ballot rules that favor the established parties may artificially prevent this from happening.
"Which, I think, is actually a good thing. It makes it that much easier to ignore them."
I've given a lot of people across the political spectrum a chance on twitter, and then stopped following them a while later.
I had my second anniversary of blogging in March. I blog almost every day, but I did take a week off last week after I wrecked my car.
I definetly do not fit the conservative prototype as in the last election cycle I suggested none of the above for president.
Here is an example from that time.
http://www.prophecypodcast.com/journal/2012/8/7/dolly-partons-dixie-stampede.html
Lately I have mostly blogging about the coming financial crisis. While I do not expect Ragnarok, it will not be pretty. Blogging is difficult, but I find it worthwhile, now if I can just start podcasting to make the title of my blog make more sense!
Blogtalk radio is pretty awesome.
Just sayin'
I just can't do the twitter thing. I try every once in a while... but the stupid is just... GIANT.
When will the US compromise sanitary conditions during surgery in the name of appeasing Muslims
Is this another betrayal? Choose your hospital carefully.
"Most blogs aren't either, especially political ones."
Correct. Hence this original blog post.
The actual format and access patterns of content on the internet is a reason Vox never explicitly stated.
I just can't do the twitter thing. I try every once in a while... but the stupid is just... GIANT.
Think of it as a news RSS feed with 140 character commentary and it works well. The personal/relationship feeds are worse than FB, but the news tweets are useful.
The pendulum swings like a pendulum do.
I have never heard a blog talk podcast with adequate audio quality.
An even more important factor is the sapping of right-wing energy by thirteen straight years of relentless betrayal of conservative principles by the Republican Party.
More like 35 years. Moron Majority, Reagan's false promise of small government, and his disastrous debt funded recovery. Globalist, thousand points of light, Illluminatist Bush the First, followed by Constitution hating Bush the Second.
You can get any quality you want. Listen to the opening of my ATF show. the talking after it is low quality because we're using phones but the intro was pre-recorded and uploaded... which is what you'd do with a pod cast. I don't think you'll have a complaint with the quality of the intro.
I believe another overriding factor is the realization that the America we knew is no more and many of the lights in the conservative blogosphere are regrouping realizing that the job has change. It is no longer a defensive strategy to protect further erosion but a full on offensive strategy in the mission field that was the USA. We have seen several of the key bloggers pass away or retire recently. It is winter with a regrouping and changing of the guard in preparation for a new push.
How could anybody (forget conservative or GOP, we're talking anyone with a brain) have supported the GOP or the established Right after Bush took office? Almost at once the man announced he would be breaking his oath of office and refusing to uphold the laws and declining to protect the nation because, in his personal opinion, "family values don't stop at the Rio Grande". They may well not; but the shelter of the United States most certainly does. That nobody rose up in Congress to challenge him on this made it all the more despicable. Bush basically sold America to the lowest bidder. All notion of law and order became moot, and we were to be governed by GWB's personal conscience and preferences. Who could support this?
Next, after 9/11, his clear responsibility was to smash al-Qaeda, give the Taliban a swatting they'd never forget, leave a note in one of the craters reminding them that it'd be far worse if they ever made us come back, and leave. Instead, Bush had us fighting an endless losing war, apparently so that Afghan girls could go to school. WHAT?!? American blood and treasure were sacrificed so that the US Army could act as crossing guards with guns. Who could support that?
Next, Bush starts a completely pointless war for no real reason (oh wait, now I remember the reason: neocons!) based on lies (told ya!), gets God knows how many thousands of people killed on all sides, smashes up a whole country, turns a secular state Islamist, it drifts into Iran's orbit, our national reputation is disgraced throughout the world, the Christian communities of Iraq are shattered... AND WE DIDN'T EVEN GET TO STEAL THE OIL. Mysteriously, the chief beneficiary of all this madness was... Israel. Funny how it always works out that way. Again, who could support that?
And all this lunacy is just by 2003. Rather than touch a right-wing site with a ten-foot pole (I don't even know what "right" means), I passed the time hanging out at leftist sites, reminding them that just because Bush was stupid, evil, and insane, that didn't make lefties smart, good, and sound of mind. There's room for all sorts of animal crackers in the soup.
And then in 2004 the GOP re-elects this monster. Again, who could support that? Frankly I'm astounded the GOP had the gall to show its face in the blogosphere, or in America, at all.
Lucianne and Drudge are not blogs. They are websites where you find links posted to interesting articles and publications from all over the world. In case you guys forgot, she was singlehandedly responsible for the blue dress hanging around Clinton's neck. She has registered commenters from all segments of society. She also is mom to Jonah Goldberg, if you did not know. She is a very conservative lady who has her fingers in a lot of pies.
Different T nails it: "...the author has no control over access to content. Ideas, once stated, are defenseless.
These characteristics make the internet far more useful for “liberal*” ideals that depend on misunderstanding and mutation to maintain the appearance of validity and relevancy, than for anything of real value."
The other day I googled my screen name, just to see how many other Scoobys had adopted that idiosyncratic pun (no matter what you come up with on the internet, somebody else thought of it first). One thing I found was this stupid leftist site, Fundies Say the Darndest Things, that picks out quotes from alt-right sites and then stupidly mocks them, and they'd picked up on something I wrote here.
So I read their comments. Not only had they literally misread what I wrote, they also failed to understand it in any meaningful way. They spent the comments thread not understanding my point, making 'gay' jokes believe it or not, getting history blatantly wrong, and then congratulating themselves on pointing out how evil and stupid I was. It was a truly surreal performance, but completely typical of the left.
It really is a cult, there's no other explanation for it.
"In case you guys forgot, she was singlehandedly responsible for the blue dress hanging around Clinton's neck."
Oh, that was her, eh. So she's the one who tipped the scale and gave us George W. Bush.
What's her PO Box? I'm sure hundreds of thousands of dead Iraqis would just loooove to send her a thank-you note.
No, Instapundit has always been leery of the Republican elite. He's got a fairly strong libertarian streak to him.
I didn't mean he wants to be the party line, just that, he wants to be influential, like A Big Time Republican.
Editorials in USA Today, trying to influence public policy (trying to push the Hollywood tax), etc. I am sure he's a half-way decent libertarian.
What's her PO Box? I'm sure hundreds of thousands of dead Iraqis would just loooove to send her a thank-you note.
It's sure looking more like a million.
Nate, while you podacst is far better than most blog talk productions, I feel we just have different definitions of adequate audio quality.
It's interesting to compare the vapid wasteland of mainstream conservative blogs (to say nothing of Twitter/Facebook) vs the "dark enlightenment" blogs VD linked the other day. It seems obvious that a lot of the intellectual energy on the right has fled mainstream Republicanism and is now engaged in more reactionary pursuits.
BTW, I find Instapundit a rather interesting case. He obviously *reads* VD, Roissy, Sailer, etc. but is very careful what he will link to. I have noticed a more reactionary turn in his commentary since the election, and I'm curious to see where that leads.
Vox, I am surprised you did not even mention how it is open season on conservative speech of any kind on the internet these days. Even a conservative comment can get a person banned from any further participation. Conservative comments are commonly deleted without explanation. If you bother them about it, they just say it was offensive to someone. Conservative speech is necessarily not politically correct in the Obama era, which the Liberals have convinced everyone is "HATE SPEECH", under a variety of subcategories, including race, religion, gender, orientation, or the newer category "disrepsectful of the President".
Leftist and Liberal bullies are pretty brave behind their keyboards. They can even be downright aggressive and authoritarian. But what the Liberal press has proven in recent years is that they are not honestly reporting the news, the news is laundered to suit the White House, and Liberal journalists are perfectly willing and capable of creating their own "grassroots". Free speech is ONLY for Liberals.
The Conservatives I know well have felt the repression on the internet in the more common streams for years and frankly, it simply is not worth it. Websites get shut down, comments get deleted, and commenters get banned. This is not an argument. We are not losing the war of words because we are not allowed to be heard. The Liberals know how many times they have lost the war of words and they have no reason to believe they will ever prevail....unless they can create a Liberal ONLY debate. Have we not see that on FoxNews already? Immigration debate, with two people arguing for open borders, one wants more open and the other wants people to give their name as they enter the country....and it is presented as a Conservative viewpoint! John McCain and Linsay Graham arguing over immigration policy. Everybody on the field has the same color uniform. Why? Because the other team was kept off the field by the refs.
The problem is the Hegelian mambo: 1) The Republican blogosphere defines itself as opposition to the Left; 2) The Left moves further and further left with every election cycle; 3) Republicans themselves follow them leftward; 4) begin the dance all over again.
I stopped reading the corporate Republican blogosphere years ago. It was only through the Dread Ilk that I learned about LGF's face heel turn. If being a beta orbiter for the GOP is what it takes to make it big in the blogosphere, then I'm content in my niche as a Catholic reactionary.
"Nate, while you podacst is far better than most blog talk productions, I feel we just have different definitions of adequate audio quality."
Did you hear the intro? how would you say the intro sound quality compares to the sound quality on Vox's podcast Voxic Shock?
For podcasting... blogtalk works like this... you upload your file... it plays your file.
"Most bloggers don't last very long because they don't have anything interesting or original to say. "
Bingo. Every time I wander into insanity and think I need to start a blog, I ask myself am I really motivated and able to consistently post something original and interesting?
In the realm of politics or religion, the answer is always no. I can always find someone else already expressing it much better, so I just post links to them on the rare occasion I think it worthwhile.
And then a considerable amount of us stopped writing and started training. Every hour I waste on preaching to the choir is another hour I'm not reading the doctrinal information I consisder useful or dryfiring.
I've decided that instead of deleting my FB account like I want to, I would use it as my own propaganda outlet that is seen by exponentially more people than my blog ever was. Without the spam comments.
dh: "I didn't mean he wants to be the party line, just that, he wants to be influential, like A Big Time Republican."
-
Sure he wants to be influential. Why wouldn't he want that? He thinks he's smarter than the establishment, and he's right.
He's also smart enough to notice that they aren't listening to him.
Ace of Spades has reported that his reliable, well-informed contact has told him that - fund-raising messages to the contrary - the Republican Party is out of the winning business for at least a while, and is exclusively concerned with beating enemies on the right. So again, nobody's listening - those with power are trying to freeze out and / or drive out dissidents, including and not limited to anything that sounds Tea Party-ish.
What can the bloggers on the right do? They need mass media or at least academic support and they can't have it, because these are leftist tribal-moral communities. Power would be nice, because when you are being continually strafed as "racist" etc. one defense is that your preferred policy is simply a fait accomplis that doesn't have to be debated any more. Obviously they can't have either. Or they need the ear of influential big-money donors. But that's the problem. The key donors are people like Sheldon Adelson: explicitly liberal (for America, not for Israel), implacably opposed to anything that would be in the interests of the white working class base, and quite willing to spend a hundred million or more to freeze out any opposition to their preferred candidates and policies, with no real heartburn if that means the general election is lost. Bloggers cannot beat that.
Without money, no-one can establish a credible rival political party to shake things up.
So the discussion turns to football and Ashley Judd's puffy face. In other words, serious politics is inaccessible, and the potential opposition is checked out.
The only way I can see this changing is if wealthy whites get tired of going along with the destruction of their ethnic kin, the white working class people that represent the large majority of the people wealthy whites are highly related to.
But for the time being, academia and the mass media have that covered, as the price of high status includes indoctrination in anti-white attitudes at university, and the mass media has been making working class whites stink in the nostrils of their social betters for half a century.
So as Instapundit always says: "Repeal the Hollywood tax cuts!"
DonReynolds April 29, 2013 11:56 AM is true.
Republican policies are, almost without exception, intellectually bankrupt and indefensible. People just voted for them because they were supposedly the party that was in charge of opposing the left. Their policies can't actually stand up to open commentary or examination.
Nobody is inspired or energized by the Republican party or their policies. They don't deal with any of the real issues or have any intention of fixing anything.
There is no intellectual energy in the Republican party. The intellectual energy on the right is in the libertarian and dark enlightenment spheres.
I'm not too familiar with the libertarian blogosphere, but orthodox Ron Paul style open borders libertarianism has a big problem that limits its appeal. It's obviously wrong and only an autistic person could possibly believe in it.
So normal people on the right have probably disengaged from blogs somewhat.
There is a lot of intellectual energy in the Dark Enlightenment blogs, but blogging about the Dark Enlightenment is a bit risky. If a Dark Enlightenment bloggers gets popular enough to attract attention he is likely to be doxed by Anonymous, fired from his job and ostracized or jailed.
The main problem is that once blogs became corporate and "blogging" became the full-time job of a few who managed to get in early, there is neither the incentive nor the room for anyone else. Let's face it - what gets written on most of the big name conservative blogs - you know, by the people who pat themselves on the back for getting to "live-blog" CPAC or whatever - is generally no better in terms of quality than what even average writers ranting on a 20-hit a day blog can produce.
You don't have to be John Hawkins to produce a "10 reasons why _fill in blank_" post every other day. Pretty much anyone with a keyboard and internet access could do that.
Blogging is not about just going online and publishing your opinions anymore. Blogging, for the most part, is now about getting as many hits as you can on your blog ads so that you maximise revenue, which leads to the link-stinginess that Vox mentions in his article. As much as it may pain the "rugged individualist" types to hear it, Right blogging worked best when everyone was more or less working together, because nobody had much incentive to undercut/shut out anyone else. Now that it's about preventing the upstarts from "stealing" your coin, the institution is dying.
FreeRepublic is the same way - Jim Robinson has an absolutely idiotic anti-blog policy on his site. Supposedly, the reason is to keep "drek" from being posted up on FR (even though about half of the non-blog stuff that gets put up on FR is "drek" by their own ill-defined standards). However, the real reason is because they don't want "link whores" stealing hits from Free Republic (because, you know, people haven't figured out how to use the "Back Button" on their browsers yet). If FR started allowing blogs to post freely, JimRob might have to hold monthly "Freep-a-thons," instead of mere quarterly ones.
I just can't do the twitter thing. I try every once in a while... but the stupid is just... GIANT.
It can be. But I prefer it to Facebook (which I left years ago). I know that if I follow an entertainer, they will probably be leftist, but there are a few fun exceptions like Adam Baldwin and Nick Searcy. It's easy to follow someone that I'm interested in without them agreeing to let me follow them (as on FB).
And the giant stupid is still limited to 140 characters. So even Amanda Palmer is limited.
I maintained my joint at 3-4 posts per week for 3 years. I stopped for a combination of 3 reasons:
1) Ran out of time due to getting more real, paying work
2) My desire/need to argue was fulfilled by participating in others' comments (and recently, on FB)
3) The cycle of politics led to repeating the same ideas; nothing new to say
That last one is why I stopped reading many of the blogs I used to enjoy and comment on. They were either repeating the same arguments in the same way, or just reposting other content. (One devolved to being a stringer for Ace of Spades and Hot Air. There was nothing original or challenging. I got bored.
There a few bloggers who were always interesting, but they, too, tapered off handing out free ice cream for whatever their personal reasons. I miss those.
"Blogging isn't for everyone..."
It isn't for me. I obviously don't have the patience or dedication to stick with it. I'm apparently also ADD because there are so few blogs that interest me. If I blogged, I'm afraid mine would be one of those that leaves me cold. Although I spend a lot of time on the computer and web, my list consist of this blog, FOX, DRUDGE, Crossfit, Dilbert & a couple other comics that are far from mainstream. If anyone has suggestions about another blog I may be interested in, I's appreciate it.
... I'd ...
DonReynolds has correctly identified the primary issue.
"Blogging isn't for everyone..."
True. I tried blogging for a while. I had a blog that was going pretty successfully for a couple of years back in 2003-2004 (i.e. the time window in question), had a regular readership, etc., but stopped because I just didn't have the time to keep up with it in such a way that would grow it beyond what it was. I didn't have the desire to try to go the "mega blog-ads/10 posts a day" route that it would take to be "successful" at blogging as it was trending even then.
I finally settled on writing longer articles for sites like Renew America, Canada Free Press, and a couple of others. I can send an article in when I want, and it gets aggregated with the rest. If I write four in one week, great. If I go four weeks without writing, great. This fits my schedule, and I'm much more satisfied with it than I ever was blogging. I know I have a core group of followers who read every article I send in, because I hear from them. I also know that I get under a lot of lefties' skins, because I hear from them too. I know people send the links to the articles around, because they tell me, and because I see links to them on sites I never even knew existed before googling. I don't make any money off of blog-ads, but I *DO* get to craft more insightful, less mass-production-driven articles that aren't just simple "I hate this thing that just happened!!!!" reactions to daily news, but which can address deeped philosophical issues affecting our country.
I know for a fact that I will never have a "wide" readership like Michelle Malkin or John Hawkins or somebody, because I don't tend to pull punches just to make GOPers happy, and also, the average Fleisch-Kincaid reading level for my articles is around a grade level of 16, which obviously slices off large sections of the left side of the bell curve.
But I'm happy with it. It gives me an outlet, but one I can use on my own time.
I read Powerline a few times. If I was a Jewish lawyer from Minneapolis I would probably still be reading them. They just don't represent my people. And the congratulatory shout-outs to their kids at Yale, Harvard, Oxford, and on various humanitarian world tours just leave me cold. Its clear they are just looking for a more docile servant class than Yankee blacks.
Pity they don't make aliyah and make common cause with their people. But just as the Russians needed political commissars to stay out of the front lines and keep the ground-pounders fired up and willing to sacrifice their lives for the Party. I guess that is their job in the New America ... that and importing anyone non-European who wants to migrate here and take some high-paying job for less.
David Horowitz had his head fairly straight until 911, and then he started baying for Arab blood. I guess his funding changed about then. I tuned him out immediately.
Its been 12 years now and my people are still dying in the Middle East trying to turn Muslims into Democrats.
I have tried to visit so called conservative blogs, but I find I don't have much in common with them. My views are some sort of amalgamation of Pat Buchanan and Ron Paul. So I cannot jump onto their bandwagon of free trade, open borders, aggressive foreign policy and tax cuts for those driving for the aforementioned.
Real men don't tweet.
"Adam Baldwin" - I stand corrected: the man they call Jayne can tweet and get away with it.
Somewhat on topic, I just saw that HotAir is linking and going after Alex Jones infowars types and anyone who comments on hotair about conspiracies.
I still read hotair but since the election its gotten a lot harder to. Ed Morrisey seems to get more afraid of any controversy heading his way. That and his MN "conservative" roots are showing.
If the GOP actually focused in Medicare and SS that would be a good thing. As wastefull and damaging to our finances the occupations were they pale to the fiscal damage being wrought by those two programs. We could have to mortgage our nations GDP 5 times over today and not have enough money to mety future liabilities. When the welfare system goes belly up a lots of people will die.
"I'm a bit more controversial than the average blogger,"
Is there an award for understatement?
Bloggers who are part of "Conservative Inc." betrayed Conservatives years ago in favor of $$$. Free Republic is exhibit #1. I posted their religiously for years, then left in 2006, and never looked back. JimRob always had his tin cup out and followed the Republican establishment party line on everything. Same thing with NR - haven't read it since the girlie men fired Coulter and took a dive on immigration.
Pajamas media has a few good writers but its always been neo-con hack website out for Israel, advertising money, cutting the capital gains tax.
I find Hotair interesting for the links and articles. Their two main writers "Captain ed" and "AP" are not wimpy moderates, they're completely boring.
Which brings in the hits - I guess.
Certainly some comments with which I can agree, but I'll assume a blank slate and present my point of view as if this were the first comment. The first thing one might wish to keep in mind is that the referenced article by John Hawkins was published back in July, 2011.
I completely quit reading any of his stuff after he (and others) came out with the new blog which will remain nameless and weeks, if not days, before the election made a big deal of not endorsing Romney. Doesn't seem to me that you had to be a Romney supporter to see the sliminess and lack of integrity in making the call when he/they did.
And that's just for starters....
As others have mentioned, there is the problem for many smaller independent bloggers of going up against the now larger and more established mega-blogs/sites who enjoy big money/support and who are more interested in linking to each other and sharing the pie amongst "friends". I will have to say that "the Other McCain" does make an attempt to promote sites which aren't necessarily on the A-list.
One also has to admit that few smaller blogs can objectively meet the same standards of presentation, quality writing, originality of thought, and sheer volume of output as the larger blogs do on a daily basis. Size matters and also helps to attract the necessary number of comments to make the visit an interactive experience.
I'll plug my blog here, while not really plugging it, prior to getting to what I consider to be the primary problems for conservative bloggers. My writing is not what it once was and I tend to jump from topic to topic as the spirit moves me. If I had a choice of reading Vox Popoli or Aaron Investigates I'd have to pick Vox Popoli. I rarely visit the mega-sites anymore, but continue to subject myself to the joy of reading this one, while unfortunately coming out rather poorly in comparison.
All that being said, I am intelligent, knowledgeable, and consider myself to be both a logical and independent thinker. There are two characteristics which bear consideration:
1. In my experience, the difference between many liberals and most "others" is that liberals can discuss the same issue forever and ever bloating the viewer and comment count with numerous "me too" comments.
On another site, with a generous mix of political perspectives, I noticed that conservatives arrive at the answer, agree, and move on. Liberals, possibly because their ideology/world view has no real substantive support can go on for hours explaining how the impossible is somehow possible. They need the reassurance.
2. The other characteristic I will address here is that there often seems to be little connection between the words being exchanged and any real world action. On a personal note, that is a problem I am attempting to work on.
Obviously a comment such as this can't address every concern, but maybe some of my thoughts will become a part of the conversation.
AI
If a Dark Enlightenment bloggers gets popular enough to attract attention he is likely to be doxed by Anonymous, fired from his job and ostracized or jailed.
Moldbug is known under his real name and hasn't suffered any consequences of which I'm aware. He's also given at least two public speeches.
I'm not sure how long it will take for the left and right wrong headed outlets to go away or change up their content.
The repetitious problem I see in good and well meaning writers of any political stripe is their passion, research and maybe the blogrolls.
I'm with Vox on the blogrolls, they are sometimes a distraction and surprising in how some other bloggers/writers shrink away from what should be the top 3 to 5 stories of the day. Those top stories are most likely ignored by the media overlords or they are twisted in a manner to use predictive programming or a diversion on the reader/viewer.
Also the fear factor is now occurring to bloggers, no longer do they want to cover or perhaps understand econ., fin., or banking. And for the left and right to fail to stare down the banking factor, they don't deserve readership.
Of course, I'm not referring to the usual writers or Vox or anyone. In their bravery and knowledge did they choose to talk about such issues with charts, graphs, (darn math is hard) math/facts and give their thoughts for future outcomes. Vox and others were and are proven correct in their respective analysis.
My own blog simply didn't improve to the level I wanted. While I liked the hobby for the 3 years, the passion and enjoyment was there for the topics I like to follow (biz, medicine, econ, banking, some social issues, misc., anti-feminism/MRA support), the quality content was not there, the technical skills were insufficient. Blogging is not for everyone and with how last summer was going into late summer, leaving the LP was a good decision.
Last spring, both parents fell ill while we/I was leaving OH (the key aspect about jefferson county is the bridge to PA) for another state. I was best tending to mom and dad without returning to blogging. There are far more intelligent writers that can succinctly say what I'd like to say, so let them use their voices and reach whom they may. As for me, all I can do is keep the faith, pray, stay well and try to recover/restore mom-dad...So may the Lord help me.
The repetitious problem I see in good and well meaning writers of any political stripe is their passion, research and maybe the blogrolls is their snobbery, unwillingness to allow comments that don't agree or praise their work or the level of bare reality that the global economy stare down. It is regrettable that so many bloggers aren't about freedom, liberty, logic or beauty. But here and other outlets are high quality, interesting, and informing, and may they continue!
Speaking of media masters, I looked into bundling cable tv, web and phone. The rip offs artists wanted $141 per mo. for that.
I requested a menu of channels versus some dumb package, no menu, no choices. I'd have to accept a host of channels that I don't care for. So cable tv is still shelved. I cannot pay for what I don't want nor do I care to subject myself to stateside news media. I told the 2 competing cable co.'s, thanks and I'll think about their offers. In reality, I sold the tv's and have no interest in what passes for tv here.
The GOP gave up on small government conservatism after the 95 budget battle. After that they only cared about maintaining their House majority. Instead of overthrowing the Washington establishment, they became the Washington establishment.
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