“Having lost his image in a presidential campaign years ago, Dean has become the laughing stock among many political communities and the general public… an outburst of raw and true emotions during a rally…Howard Dean was scorned for acting the way he did, but he was merely showing his enthusiasm and vigor for the presidential race.”— From Howard Dean is human by UWP 101 Saelee
I like how you tried out a few politicians. It made your post really dynamic and kept it running.
I think your point is well taken and possibly true. A lot of things that become popular or unpopular are luck. If the producer or investor in a newstation doesn't like a candidate, cutting their comments or appearances can skew a view. And we watch the news and read newspapers for "unbiased" information. We pass that information and opinion on and soon everyone is saying "Obama is the new Kennedy," but where did that idea really come from?
That may be the tough thing about news and the images we are given: they spread. It just might be the writers or producers that run public opinion, and less of the politicians.
This sentence gets at a real paradox: "Are our views of people skewed because we follow popular consensus?" The problem is that "our views" aren't 'ours' at all—they are heavily mediated, and rarely 'direct'. We 'see' what we are shown, and we 'know' based on knowledge doled out by enmeshed producers of information. These issues are central to the problems of living in a vast 'democracy': we want to believe that humans govern us, but we also want our humans in government to be manipulable, mediated, and predictable. In short, we want a human government that is post-human. Is this sustainable? Time will tell. In the meantime, I think we are right to be skeptical of *all* seemingly pure 'views' and personae.
2 comments:
I like how you tried out a few politicians. It made your post really dynamic and kept it running.
I think your point is well taken and possibly true. A lot of things that become popular or unpopular are luck. If the producer or investor in a newstation doesn't like a candidate, cutting their comments or appearances can skew a view. And we watch the news and read newspapers for "unbiased" information. We pass that information and opinion on and soon everyone is saying "Obama is the new Kennedy," but where did that idea really come from?
That may be the tough thing about news and the images we are given: they spread. It just might be the writers or producers that run public opinion, and less of the politicians.
Thanks for the great food for thought.
This sentence gets at a real paradox: "Are our views of people skewed because we follow popular consensus?" The problem is that "our views" aren't 'ours' at all—they are heavily mediated, and rarely 'direct'. We 'see' what we are shown, and we 'know' based on knowledge doled out by enmeshed producers of information. These issues are central to the problems of living in a vast 'democracy': we want to believe that humans govern us, but we also want our humans in government to be manipulable, mediated, and predictable. In short, we want a human government that is post-human. Is this sustainable? Time will tell. In the meantime, I think we are right to be skeptical of *all* seemingly pure 'views' and personae.
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