nettimes_digestive_system on Sun, 7 Nov 1999 03:29:42 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> The Rise of dot-communism (2x) |
1.... "Mitchell Orlowsky" <MOrlowsk@g2x.com> 2.... "scotartt" <scot@autonomous.org> ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: "Mitchell Orlowsky" <MOrlowsk@g2x.com> To: nettime-l@bbs.thing.net cc: Jeff@mindspear.com, newmedia@aol.com Message-ID: <85256820.007A8017.00@mail.g2x.com> Date: Fri, 5 Nov 1999 17:01:00 -0500 Subject: The Rise of dot-communism Jeff, I think it is difficult to understand the extent to which you have written with so little self-consciousness, especially around as phrase such as "the expression of popular will." On the one hand, we find out what many people think by THE expression of popular will and who should be included in that. It is a problem not so much in "gathering public opinion" but the absurdity -- given the medium -- of assuming it "popular." Second, even if we assume "popular" could be somewhat accurate given the medium (let me tell you, I don't), do you not see a greater danger in asserting it as popular with such certainty back through such a powerful medium. Tocqueville might be considered old-fashioned, but is it possible you are not even aware of the dangers in our so-called democratic frenzy (demo it ain't) of dampening even more potentially universal valid viewpoints through such certainty? I would love to have a more diverse population participating. What you consider popular is fairly narrow (do you really think us 5% are really such an expression -- come on now). I have an adopted son from Guatemala who would find your certainty about popular wills the single most dangerous thought phenomenon of the internet. I think you have confused filling out a form on the web with easier access to determining public policy. First of all, you do know that we live in a republic. Second, that republic is governed by people who govern, not the masses (whatever you mean by that -- what do you mean by that by the way). Third, why do you think filling out a form on the web could be construed to be a more generalized view of the masses The thought of voting online only scares me (I don't know about Mark) when people confuse it with real access, unselfconsciously consider it an expression of some popular will, are willing to reflect it back through that medium as popular and think the masses is so easily definable. Otherwise, I love it. Mitchell P.S. Someone once said that the market starts out as a voting machine but over time becomes a weighing machine. It is fairly simple to be worthy of getting a "vote" cast in the short term, far more difficult to be worth it in the weighing stage. ---------- Forwarded message ---------- From: "scotartt" <scot@systemx.autonomous.org> To: "nettime's_digestive_system" <nettime-l@bbs.thing.net> References: <199911051707.MAA28825@bbs.thing.net> Subject: Re: <nettime> The Rise of dot-communism [2x] Date: Sun, 7 Nov 1999 12:13:51 +1100 Organization: Autonomous Organisation > As I've mentioned, in Attic Greece, only the "Demos" voted and they did not > include the slaves who did the work or the women who kept their mouths shut. The > idea of direct general voting would have certainly terrified the original > "democrats." Mark, as I think Mckenzie Wark once made a point about; that very Attic Democracy was very fickle -- Socrates, after resisting the Tyrants most of his life, was later forced by the ungrateful democrats to drink hemlock for "religious corruption" of the youth. Living in a country which just voted to keep a foreign monarch it's head of state, on the basis that maintaining the status quo will magickally allow a directly elected head of state at some indeterminate date in the future -- always an option no matter if we get of the Queen now anyway -- but, the thought of debates with such willing ignorance (the arguments for the 'no i'll keep the queen now and vote for the president later' case are entirely 100% specious)having the transmission speed of the internet, scares me. Anyway, I'd sooner keep a foreign monarch than a directly elected president as a further centre of populist power whcih usurps the power of the Parliament and creates massive constitutional instability! Will internet-voting make any difference to the intellectual level of this type of uninformed debate? NO! Therefore it does not improve democracy. I like the antiquated nonsense of the voting booth. scot. # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net