Tuesday, August 11, 2009

Internet Samizdat...With Old People!

I eat this stuff up with a spoon. I just finished my Master's in linguistics, an area of study which I always loved, and my focus was on computer-mediated communication. Unfortunately, being situated in a waaaaay far-left department, even for wackadementia, I could never really undertake any serious studies dealing with political discourse for fear of facts getting in the way of my grades. It was the Monica scandal that really got me interested in CMC, when I realized that there was a real alternative to the Dinosaur Media (Drudge), which was not only boring, but full of apparatchiks at a time when I was flirting with third-party politics. Yeah, I voted for Nader. People do stupider things in college. I eventually grew to admire and respect Bush, though, and I never imagined how much I would miss him.

Anyway, it seems that even seniors have learned from the fallout after the Iranian elections, and the administration which was so media-savvy during its campaign has seen its chickens come home to roost as people have all but abandoned the major media networks and turned to Fox and to citizen journalism. Obama's promise of transparency may have been a farce, but what the media chooses not to cover no longer evades us. I especially enjoy tweeting older folks on Twitter. I find their involvement quite reassuring. Lots of great #tcot, #a4a, and #912 folks are considerably older than myself and I truly enjoy connecting with them. So I bring you two great stories about how the liberal establishment is crumbling. Dancing on ashes, anyone?

First, Fox rules, Dinosaur Media drools:


Did they really think they could keep people watching as they irrationally and inexplicably call us terrorists and racists, and after the way they railroaded decent human beings like Sarah Palin and Joe the Plumber? I watch the news to be informed, not insulted. Second, facts really are quite stubborn things. Thanks again, Iranian people, for showing us how it's done.

Obamacare meets Twitter
Old discredited socialist ideas meet the new economy and free people are reacting and revolting
Monday, August 10, 2009
by Star Parker

President Obama is a clever and ambitious man. And he has surrounded himself with a clever and ambitious staff.

This bright crew understood from the outset that time would determine if they would succeed with their health care plan.

They understood that their plan, which would require massive new expenditures, new taxes, and major new government interventions, had to be done quickly if it would get done at all.

They understood that it had to be done while the president's approval ratings were still high so that Congress would bend to his will. And that it had to breeze through and land on the president's desk before the general public could scrutinize it and understand the major way it would impact their lives.

As result, we've been hearing for months about the President's deadlines, tied to a list of explanations (economic recovery, if we don't do it now we'll never do it, growing hordes of uninsured, etc.) why the world will collapse if these sweeping reforms were not passed by August.

Now Washington's hot and humid August is here, Congress is adjourned, health care reform did not reach the House or Senate floor, and the White House is in panic. What they knew and feared they now confront. Dropping approval ratings and rising public awareness.

When the administration kicked this off with its White House Health Care Summit early last March, the president's 62-percent approval, per Gallup, was 36 points higher than his 26-percent disapproval. Now, at 56-percent approval and 37-percent disapproval, the gap has shrunk to 19 points.

A new poll from Quinnipiac University has him at 50-percent approval and 42-percent disapproval.

And, the details of the 1,000-page monstrosity, word by word, sentence by sentence, paragraph by paragraph, are being delivered to desktops, laptops, and blackberrys. Group emails, websites, twitter and facebook accounts are churning.

Old discredited socialist ideas meet the new economy and free people are reacting and revolting -- as the White House knew they would if they got a chance to know what was going down.

Ironically, this technologically savvy administration is being hung by its own petard.

Rather than concluding that the public understands what they are being served up and doesn't want it, the White House damage control machine is breaking out the smoke and mirrors, determined to spin government health care past the American people if they won't buy it outright.

Instead of talking about "health care reform", the White House website now uses the focus group tested "health insurance reform." Make the insurance companies the bad guys.

And they, along with Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid, claim that grassroots protests at town hall meetings are manufactured.

Perhaps they also think that Quinnipiac University pollsters, who now report that 39 percent of Americans "approve of the way Barack Obama is handling health care" and 52 percent disapprove, are being paid off by insurance companies.

Suggestions that grass roots protests prevent the White House from getting its message to the public are hilarious. This president has been on a honeymoon with the press for the last six months. You can't turn the TV on without seeing him.

He has had an unprecedented four prime time press conferences in six months. No. Their problem is not that President Obama has not communicated. Their problem is that he has. We've got the message and we don't want it. We don't want bureaucrats determining what health care is and how we get it. We don't want abortion, much less federally funded. Or government meddling with how our elderly live out their lives. And we don't want trillion dollar deficits. Perhaps Mr. Obama, who once suggested he admires Lincoln, will grasp Lincoln's understanding that ours is a government "of the people, by the people, for the people."
The truth will be the Left's undoing, if their despicable actions aren't.

2 comments:

  1. It seems like people are understanding what they want from the proposed health plan then getting upset over nothing.

    ReplyDelete