Note: I wrote this post in March 2012, but it felt just too raw to post it then — too soon, as they say. So it languished, forgotten in my ‘drafts’ until today, when I searched for a reference to Andrew Sullivan at a White House dinner for my reply to Lucia Maria’s comment on my post re Sullivan’s thoughts about private and public unforgiveness. OK, enough time has passed. – P
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From Andrew Sullivan’s response to propagandist/provocateur Andrew Brietbart’s sudden and early death:
The kind of high stakes in-the-arena 24/7 blogging lifestyle is not always easy on the body or soul. We were often at crossed swords online but tried not to make it personal. [emphasis added]
Elsewhere, Sullivan speaks of the ‘brutal’ ‘new media culture war’, and describes Breitbart as its ‘first casualty’. I don’t agree with the description, there have been other, more talented bloggers who’ve died in the harness (and journalists who’ve been executed for gods sake!) but focus for a moment on the ‘battle’ Sullivan describes: the new media culture war.
Jay Rosen alerted those working in mainstream media to wake uomto the fact that there are ‘enemies’ who seek their destruction. See “I’m committed to the destruction of the old media guard.” ABC News and Andrew Breitbart.
Brietbart, along with his confidence trickster/sorcerer’s apprentice James O’Keefe, are part of that group that use every opportunity to demean or attack those working in the news media variously describing them as liberal elite left wing blah blah – it’s usually tribalism, as we have discussed. People become fixated with scoring a point ‘For the Team’. That’s what is often behind the nasty sledging and attempts at online character assassination.
I enjoy reading Andrew Sullivan. He’s a complex, more nuanced writer and commenter than than his many cut-rate imitators. His kindly tone towards Brietbart on hearing news of his death is understandable. His:
“We were often at crossed swords online but tried not to make it personal.” … Is a good model.
Insults are cheap.
My own view of my online protagonists Is sometimes coloured by their attitude towards what I’m trying to say. I mostly can’t stomach liars and bullies, and especially racists, and will call that out where I see it.
I get exercised by what I see as duplicity when confronted by it. Hopefully not as exercised as Andrew Brietbart did a few weeks ago…[Note: I wrote this in March 2012]
Is it true that angry men suffer more heart attacks? Dunno. But I hate to think of the toxins pumping through Brietbart’s bloodstream as he emoted such apparent rage at the Occupy protesters,
Argument is not just about passion, or who ‘pushes it harder’, or stoops lower in their ‘culture war’. It’s about reason too, and truth (!) in my view … unless it really IS war, like against invaders. (But history, as they say, is written by the victors.)
As mentioned in David Frum’s obituary of Andrew Breitbart, the personalisation of his ‘attack’ on Obama — Breitbart’s ‘hating a particular political man’ is often disguised or justified by a spectre of ‘Wah! They’re oppressing me!’
Like this:
Prior to his passing, Andrew Breitbart said that the mission of the Breitbart empire was to exemplify the free and fearless press that our Constitution protects–but which, increasingly, the mainstream media denies us.
“Quis custodiet ipsos custodes?” – “Who guards the guardians?” Andrew saw himself in that role—as a guardian protecting Americans from the left’s “objective” loyal scribes.
Oh, right. The mainstream media is denying propagandists their constitutional rights!
To do what? Lie? Hate? Bleurgh. What pap.
– P
Well, the part about being filthy freaks might actually be true. Those occupiers were out there for weeks without baths or proper toilets. I saw them in my own city, and they did not seem to be idealist lefties to me. I might actually have been glad to join them if they had been. To tell you the truth, it was hard to peg a label on them at all. They may have been homeless people for all I know, but then I never heard of Andrew Breitbart, either. So who really knows? Breitbart and the occupiers may have been nothing more than actors paid to portray a right wing conspiracy as a left wing conspiracy. (which is really a centrist wing conspiracy). 😀
“… it was hard to peg a label on them at all.”
I agree. I visited the Occupy Auckland ‘campsite’ at Aotea Square when the Mana Party launched an economic policy there
http://www.radiolive.co.nz/Mana-Partys-John-Minto-on-economic-justice-policy/tabid/506/articleID/24084/Default.aspx
and they seemed to me to be a ragtag group from the unspecific ‘left’. Students and beneficiary groups, mainly, it appeared to me. (I’m not saying that in a pejoratively.)
I know that in Dunedin the Occupy campaign attracted a range of people too, including the author/speaker Kieran Trass who I’ve discussed here.
http://www.thepaepae.com/tag/kieran-trass/
I wouldn’t describe HIM as ‘left wing’ … but it was about the time he emerged as a sometime spokesman for the conspiracy theorists who suggested South Canterbury Finance supremo Alan Hubbard’s death was more than the road accident it appeared to be, and that ‘the gummint’ somehow got involved in a scheme to rob him and ruin him (Hubbard) before his death.
Breitbart? Yeah, ‘world famous’ if you’ve heard of him.
Not if you haven’t. 🙂
– P