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boobooday's Journal
Posted by boobooday in General Discussion
Sat Feb 26th 2011, 03:53 PM
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Posted by boobooday in General Discussion
Sat Feb 26th 2011, 03:10 PM
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Posted by boobooday in General Discussion (1/22-2007 thru 12/14/2010)
Fri Feb 13th 2009, 08:42 AM
I wanted to tell you. I defended it in August, when I received my PhD in Mass Comm. I have been a participant here for a long time, and an observer at Free Republic, the site I used for my comparative study. I would also post it there, but I have been banned every time I have signed up. I just wanted to say thank you to you all, what you do is real, and you are a real community. People like you are insisting that the U.S. move towards more democracy, and making it happen. This is my abstract. If any Freepers are lurking, thanks to them too.

AGONISTIC DEMOCRACY AND THE NARRATIVE OF DISTEMPERED ELITES: AN ANALYSIS OF CITIZEN DISCOURSE ON POLITICAL MESSAGE FORUMS

Navigating the tension between liberalism and democracy that characterizes our political system requires an agonistic approach to political conflict. The agonistic approach recognizes opponents as adversaries rather than enemies, as discussed by Chantal Mouffe and by Robert Ivie and disagreement as productive rather than obstructive, shedding the idealized and frequently unobtainable goal of consensus.

In this interpretive study, the discourse of politically interested citizens participating in partisan online “rhetorical” communities was examined for evidence of Mouffe’s agonistic pluralism. Two popular and parallel message forums were chosen as the subjects of the study, and a composite sample was drawn in January 2008. FreeRepublic.com, a conservative forum, and the liberal message forum DemocraticUnderground.com represent two active communities with strong ideological identities that transcend party affiliation. Analysis of link sources and topics provided information about what these online citizens were discussing, and where they turned for information about political actors and events. The narrative analysis invoked Kenneth Burke’s dramatistic frames of acceptance and rejection in order to provide a framework for the investigation. The study identified a narrative of the citizen-protagonist that was shared between the two communities. A more robust rhetorical ecosystem existed at Democratic Underground, as they often applied Burke’s “comic corrective” to points of conflict and took a more egalitarian approach to who could speak and when. The participants at Free Republic were more likely to assign motivations that precluded the agonistic frame. Ultimately, these emergent communities created environments that manifested the centrifugal and centripetal forces of democracy and liberalism, respectively. They also shed light on some of the pitfalls of rituals of “virtual vengeance.” These rituals can be empowering, affirming the “rationality of outrage,” but veer into something akin to Nietzsche’s “slave morality” when judgment is passed without the presentation of forensic evidence regarding motivation. Finally, the study argues that investigations of what online citizens actually do to constitute their political identities provide a well-rounded picture of political culture, which, according to Doris Graber may be more important than factors such as “citizen wisdom and media excellence” but is undoubtedly a reflection of both.



I'd love to provoke a discussion, but I can't promise not to write about it!

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Posted by boobooday in General Discussion (1/22-2007 thru 12/14/2010)
Sat May 17th 2008, 08:02 PM
I wrote a song back in 2004, when I thought for sure we were going to get ride of GWB. And just damn. When we recorded it, the musicians were worried about using their real names!

We've come a long way.

And this time, he REALLY IS GOING HOME! So I'm reposting, four years later.

W GOES HOME!

That is something to celebrate. It's a song of celebration, for the happy, happy day when this reign of fools is over.



http://www.boobooday.com/wgoeshome.mp3
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Posted by boobooday in General Discussion: Presidential (Through Nov 2009)
Sat Apr 12th 2008, 08:36 AM
What it has come to:

To value education, and speak intelligently makes one an elitist. To treat the people as though they are sophisticated enough to understand context is elitist.

Elitism has been redefined. It now refers to those who think the level of discussion should be elevated, providing cover for the real elitists, who only care if their income and status are higher, and are hostile to education and/or understanding. To value education over class status is just too damn democratic. To value education means that we are imagining a world where anyone could compete with the economic elites for power. This is very threatening!

So if a candidate dares to attempt more than superficial analysis, or speaks anything other than 6th-grade level, focus-group-tested soundbites, the cry goes out: ELITIST!

Obama suggesting that people are not just mindless drones, but might have some awareness that they've been getting screwed, even if he thinks that they often misplace the blame? ELITIST! Cheney telling us to go fuck ourselves? That we can relate to! Those are terms we understand, nothing ambiguous there! And thank god! We're just too damn simple to do the nuance!

Having said that, I'd like to see the admiral's son and his heiress wife debate elitism with Mr. & Mrs. Obama.


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Posted by boobooday in General Discussion (1/22-2007 thru 12/14/2010)
Thu May 24th 2007, 09:49 PM
I was just reading a thread posted by a member of DU who is in dire medical straits and like so many of our fellow citizens has no health insurance.

Our healthcare system sucks, and we all know why: the profit motive.

Michael Moore is coming out with a new movie about this national nightmare. The timing is opportune, and action on this issue is long overdue.

I'm just wondering what people think about a mass movement -- the American people tell pollsters over and over again that this issue is a priority and our legislators do nothing because of the power of profits.

Pharmaceutical companies and insurance companies profit from the suffering of poor Americans, all Americans, and gouge them for necessary medications and treatments. Then they act like WE are the ones who are irresponsible, and they act like we would ABUSE a national health care system by getting extra mammograms or colonoscopys or something, as if it is some sort of luxury treat we could overindulge in.

I would be willing to try to organize a demonstration in my community for better health care. Would others be willing to hit the streets on this issue? Do you think the American people could be motivated to demonstrate in large numbers for this? Could we stage sick-ins at the offices of our senators and congresspersons?

I participate(d) in many anti-war demonstrations, and here is an issue that is most likely costing as many American lives per day as Bush's heinous war, not to mention that so many of our soldiers come back in desperate need of health care, and are treated to the same boot in the face as the rest of us.

Now is the time, I think! What do you think? What if we organized something to coincide with the opening of Moore's film?
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Posted by boobooday in General Discussion (01/01/06 through 01/22/2007)
Tue Oct 17th 2006, 12:11 AM
My musical take on the Foley scandal (warning: the music will begin when you click the link).

I rewrote one of the most embarrassing seduction songs ever, "Midnight at the Oasis" because it just seemed to be almost embarrassing enough for the staggeringly embarrassing Mark Foley.

Kind of a rush job, but we did the best we could!

http://www.boobooday.com/foleytune.htm

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Posted by boobooday in General Discussion (01/01/06 through 01/22/2007)
Fri Aug 11th 2006, 09:17 PM
Here is the problem. People have now come to accept that the Good Guy can use the same methods as the bad guy. It used to be, in those Westerns, that the good guy had different methods to get what he wanted -- that is, if he wanted to stop a bad guy, and he had no choice but to shoot, he shot the guy in the leg or something. That was the difference. The bad guy would do anything, hurt anyone (with exceptions to this as well) to get what he wanted, and the hero didn't want to hurt anyone, and only resorted to violence reluctantly (although decisively, of course).

Now we have "heroes" who kill people gleefully, playfully, with vengeance and great satisfaction -- in so many popular narratives the good guys use the same methods as the bad guy, and often with the same motivations (24).

Transfer this to the polticial arena and you get people who call themselves Christians becoming cheerleaders for the war machine, and you get Abu Grahib, etc. Because now they've boiled the hero down to "goals" only, and the goal is domination, because we are exceptional, and deserve to dominate, and we're superior, and God loves us more. The motivations (or at least what are publicly stated as motivations) can change with the seasons, and the methods . . . well . . . the methods have brought shame on us all.

They are not heroic.

Our national narrative is broken, at the moment. I think the only solution is for individuals to create their own heroic narratives of citizenship, which is what I think we are doing here.
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Posted by boobooday in Latest Breaking News
Fri Apr 14th 2006, 09:15 AM
From the moment Billion Dollar Cheney chose himself as VP, it has been clear that he is the true root of the evil of this administration.

My music video about the Dark One:
http://billiondollarcheney.cf.huffingtonpo...
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Posted by boobooday in General Discussion (01/01/06 through 01/22/2007)
Fri Apr 07th 2006, 06:42 AM
About Katie Couric being equally despised on the right and the left
She is just a projector screen.

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Posted by boobooday in General Discussion (01/01/06 through 01/22/2007)
Wed Apr 05th 2006, 10:15 PM


WWJWHL (What Would Jesus Wear on His Lapel?)
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Posted by boobooday in General Discussion (01/01/06 through 01/22/2007)
Sun Apr 02nd 2006, 10:29 AM
Vote for Billion Dollar Cheney! http://billiondollarcheney.cf.huffingtonpo...
Good morning!

If you're in the mood for some rock-n-roll, and a little mocking of our segueway-riding, trigger-happy vice president, please support my entry, 'Billion Dollar Cheney' in the Huffington Post's 'Contagious Festival' by clicking the link below!

http://billiondollarcheney.cf.huffingtonpo... /

Thanks! Rock on!

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Posted by boobooday in General Discussion (01/01/06 through 01/22/2007)
Thu Mar 16th 2006, 08:33 PM
We all believe in personal responsibility for individuals. That is, people make choices, and when they make choices, they must be willing to face the consequences of those choices.

But I think our country has been bamboozled by a very long propaganda campaign that frames every issue as one of "individual responsibility."

So we focus on getting smokers to quit, while corporations dump toxins into the air we breathe and the water we drink. We focus on gun laws (a worthy cause to be sure) but not enough on the stockpiles of weapons our own country produces and sells around the world. Right wingers focus on the individual choices of women rather than the reasons for those choices, which are often tied to a woman's economic plight and that of her children. Children who can't adjust to the sausage factory that education has become are drugged, as if they are mentally ill, as are adults who are rightly stressed out and pissed off (Ambien to sleep, anti-depressants to get through the day). Rather than providing healthy foods, physical education, art and musical training in our schools, we blame our children for being lazy and fat.

Bill O'Liely points his finger into the camera and tells the elderly, infirm and impoverished who were unable to escape the wrath of Katrina to suck it up and get a job. Bush tells a woman who works three jobs to feed her children that she is a model American. All failures are personal, and if you struggle, it's because there's SOMETHING WRONG WITH YOU. This frame works very well to keep people isolated and afraid, noses to the grindstone. This works very well to keep people quiescent.

Where is the social responsibility? Where is the collective responsibility? Why are only individuals held accountable, while institutions and corporations are not? If an individual kills someone, they might face the death penalty. Why aren't corporations who are negligent, or fraudulent, who wreak death and financial devastation ever sentenced to death?

We've got to reframe this debate. Perhaps since our government wants to treat corporations as individuals, we should begin by proposing a corporate death penalty for companies that poison our environment or otherwise kill or injure individuals. If they want the rights of individuals, they must take on the responsibilities as well.

So what do you think? Corporate death penalty? First in line: Halliburton and the Carlyle Group.
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Posted by boobooday in General Discussion (01/01/06 through 01/22/2007)
Tue Mar 14th 2006, 10:29 AM
The subversive activities of QUAKERS.

We must protect our culture of violence from these non-violents! Don't they know they are un-American???

It reminds me of something I overhead between two right wingers. One of them says to the other one, "Can you imagine what would happen if these peaceniks got their way?"

And so I closed my eyes and did just that. It was lovely. It looked something like this:

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