Tuesday, July 26, 2005

The Recording Industry

Why is music on the radio so bad? Do playlists come down to market forces and radio listeners choosing what they want to listen to? Or is it something else? How hard are corporations working to influence the public's perception and attitudes?
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Thursday, July 21, 2005

American Justice

Cenk Uygur wrote:

"If you listened to this administration you would think there are only two possibilities on how to deal with suspected terrorists or foreign fighters – you either try them in tribunals where they have almost no rights or you let them go. Well, that’s how a third grader might see the world, but in the real world – and what used to be the real America – we do something else. It’s called fair trials that bring people to justice."

This issue seriously involves rights guaranteed to U.S. citizens by the our Constitution. Those rights are being taken away from us by those sworn to protect the Constitution, and Americans don't seem to care.
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Thursday, July 14, 2005

Liars

The following quotes should be read together. They tell a sad tale.

"Our strategy in the war on terror is based on a clear understanding of the enemy, and a clear assessment of our national interest." - Dick Cheney, July 2003


"Either we take the war to the terrorists and fight them where they are – at this moment in Iraq and Afghanistan and elsewhere – or at some point we will have to fight them here at home." - Donald Rumsfeld, August 2003


"America is more secure. The world is safer." - George W. Bush, January 2004


"...we are making ourselves more secure, because we cannot fight the terrorists in New York; we've got to fight them out there." - Condoleezza Rice, February 2004


"The question is do we fight them over there - or do we fight them here. I choose to fight them over there." - Gen. Tommy Franks, September 2004


"The number of serious international terrorist incidents more than tripled last year, according to U.S. government figures, a sharp upswing in deadly attacks that the State Department has decided not to make public in its annual report on terrorism due to Congress this week." - The Washington Post, April 2005


"I think they're in the last throes, if you will, of the insurgency." - Dick Cheney, May 2005


"In total, for the year from the handover of sovereignty on June 28, 2004, until June 23, 2005, there were at least 479 car bombs, killing 2,174 people and wounding 5,520. ... Last month was the most violent for Iraqi civilians since the U.S.-led invasion to remove Saddam Hussein from power in March 2003." - Associated Press, June 2005


"There is only one course of action against them: to defeat them before they attack us at home." - George W. Bush, June 2005


"...the Iraq insurgency poses an international threat and may produce better-trained Islamic terrorists than the 1980s Afghanistan war that gave rise to Osama bin Laden and al Qaeda." - classified CIA report, June 2005


"This shows that president Bush is doing exactly the right thing, or they wouldn't be making these kinds of attacks." - CSPAN caller, July 2005


"There were nearly 3,200 terrorist attacks worldwide last year, the Bush Administration said yesterday, using a broader definition that increased fivefold the number of incidents that Washington had previously tallied for 2004." - The London Times, July 2005

Either these people are consciously lying, or it proves the definition of ideology I gave in a previous post:

Ideology (n): A system of ideas and beliefs that commonly supplants reality among weaker minds. Syn: Bullshit

...or, as I'm inclined to think, it's a combination of conscious lies and blindness-by-ideology.
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Sunday, July 10, 2005

The Media and Perception

On my website's FAQ you will find the following:

Q What is RocketJam.com?

A It's my personal project/website.

Q Why?

A I've got this theory about popular culture and the media's effect on people's perceptions of themselves and their existence/role in reality. The why of having a web site has something to do with that, I think.

This essay is an attempt to explain that "theory". This essay is a work in progress. I'm not completely satisfied with it currently and it will probably be refined as time goes on. Still, I think it gets the basic idea across in its current state.


The Media and Perception
version .5
July 7, 2005

The media in modern western-influenced culture creates a meta-reality for its consumers which supersedes the reality of their day to day existence. This essay looks at the difference between man's culturally-created reality and the reality of the Universe-as-it-is, and the supplanting of culturally-created realities by the meta-reality of the media sphere.

In her book "Doubt, A History", Jennifer Michael Hecht writes about the difference between the socially and culturally constructed world that humans make and live in and the world of Nature with its seeming indifference to humanity's hopes and dreams that we also inhabit. She says, "We live between two divergent realities: On one side, there is a world in our heads - and in our lives, so long as we are not contradicted by death and disaster - and that is a world of reason and plans, love, and purpose. On the other side, there is the world beyond our human life - an equally real world in which there is no sign of caring or value, planning or judgment, love, or joy."

Those rare times in our lives when the world beyond human life interrupts our human- constructed reality usually come as a shock to our minds. As Hecht said, they occur and affect our lives without regard to our plans, our sense of fairness or our concepts of humanity's place in the hierarchy of the Universe.

What we know of the world depends on the interaction of our senses and brain/nervous system with the "outside" world. Modern physics has taught us that what we can measure of "reality" is relative to the tools being used for those measurements. Simple observation of your own perceptions will prove that what you perceive is very relative to how you are perceiving it. The temperature of a bowl of water you put your hand in will feel different to you, depending on how warm or cold your hand is at that time. A simple book of optical illusions will show you the assumptions our brain makes about what we perceive through our visual system.

But, beyond the limitations imposed on our perception of reality by our senses and nervous system, we humans impose additional limitations on our perceptions through our belief systems. We build up a picture of reality in our heads based on limited sensory input and language constructs which have no actual relationship to any tangible thing in the "objective" Universe. What is possible to know/perceive of reality is defined by our society and culture. This consensus reality permeates our social environment. Denying one's society/culture's consensus reality will get one labeled psychologically abnormal or ill.

In primitive, hunter-gatherer societies, people lived in small tribal units. A man's conception of reality and his place in the world were defined by the culture and/or religion or belief system of his tribe. These primitive tribes lived and survived close to the earth and had to have an intimate relationship to nature in order to survive that most of modern humanity does not have to have. Their religions and belief systems incorporated and formalized that relationship. From our origins in small tribes, man's social/governmental groups have grown and evolved into the modern nation-state. The consensus reality we live in and the groups that create and define that reality have evolved with the advancements of civilization and technology. This change has radically altered the way we learn our culture's consensus reality as well as who defines our consensus reality.

For much of recorded history, religions and religious leaders held the power of defining consensus reality for their people. With the Renaissance and the advancements of the sciences, the church began to lose its grip on power. The technological advances of the Industrial Revolution signaled the beginnings of our modern media as newspapers grew at a quick pace. The freedom of the press provision of the American Bill of Rights encouraged newspapers to take a central role in directing national affairs. That influence on governmental direction, and their role in tying together a geographically widespread and separated populace meant they were inheriting the role of defining the consensus reality.

The technology explosion of the twentieth century increased the scope and reach of the media with the advent of radio and the cinema and then the defining media of that century, television. The eye of television and the reach of television became pervasive. Television began to complete the process of removing man from nature and "objective" reality that has been ongoing since man became self-conscious. Increasingly, we live our lives almost exclusively in man-made environments. Then, in this environment, we are surrounded (voluntarily or not) by media. The result of this is that we are even more removed from Nature and reality than our primitive ancestors were. The parts of the natural world that appear in our man-made environments tend to be either highly artificial, cultivated and processed to conform to an idealized version of nature or the "wildness" of nature that impinges on our cities is what we consider the detritus of the natural world: weeds, vermin and wild life that has adapted to man's artificial environment. Even attempts to "get back to nature" are confined to a man-made expectation of what nature is or should be and occur in managed environments. So a prepackaged nature is what we get when we go camping in a state or national park or what is delivered to us on T.V. via wildlife shows.

The constructed world in our heads is more real for us, most of the time than the real world of the Universe. The media's contribution to this displacement of reality cannot be overestimated. Beyond man's "normally" constructed world in our minds, cinema and television have built up a simulation of our day to day reality that has become more real for people than their own daily experience and existence. The tendency of people who find themselves in situations highly removed from ordinary experience to compare the experience to "being in a movie" is an illustration of this idea. There is an interesting article at The Age's website about a philosopher who survived a crocodile attack several years ago. She notes that even as the attack was occurring, she thought about how this couldn't be happening because "I'm not food". She goes on and talks about the dream-like quality of the attack, as if it weren't really happening but she says she has since come to the conclusion that our ordinary life and consciousness are the dream, an outlook echoed by many religions and mystics. That we live in the illusion that we are outside nature and can control it.

The reality of the media, which is everywhere within our culture can be considered a meta- reality. A kind of hyper-reality which contains our ordinary everyday reality. Since our day- to-day reality is small subset of the meta-reality presented to us by the media, it seems to be less real or important than the meta-reality of the evening news. But periodically, an event will occur within our personally familiar territory which is covered by the local media. This event and the coverage by the media validate our existence and reality within the local media's meta-reality. Now we do exist and our part of the world is real.

If we are involved or within proximity of an event which should receive national news coverage, we become even more real as the meta-reality of the national media contains the reality of the local media. This is why people are generally willing, even eager to give `man on the street' viewpoints to news organizations or in other ways grab their 15 minutes of fame. No matter how they would appear or come across in their localized reality, they are now `real' in the meta-reality of the media.

As the media has become more pervasive in people's lives the affordability of the means to participate as a media producer has dropped, and with the advent of the internet has become accessible to anyone with a computer. Following the huge influx of people getting online starting in the mid-nineties, business and the media have attempted to incorporate the internet into their sphere of properties and influence, resulting in the internet taking on some of the aura of the media meta-reality. It has resisted being absorbed by these entities though, so anyone, with a modest investment can establish a presence on the internet and with a minimum of effort get good search engine placement and generate a modest amount of traffic. Via a personal website and public search engines, anyone can be as real in the meta-reality the internet represents as ABC News or Sony Corporation are. And, with sites such as the internet archive, a certain level of immortality in that reality is assured even if we let our website expire.



If you find the ideas in this essay interesting, you should read Poker Without Cards by Ben Mack. It is a much more extensive exploration of many of the ideas touched on here, as well as many other important ideas including the phenomenon of entrainment and its implications in a media/advertising saturated society.


You are free to post/distribute and/or quote this essay as you see fit. The only requirement is that proper attribution be given.
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Friday, July 08, 2005

Ideology

I just can't leave George W. alone. I looked at the comments he made to the press after the tragic bombings in London on July 8th and thought he doesn't get it and never will. Before I comment on Bush's statement, I want to make clear that I abhor the bombings and the view of those responsible that their "cause" justifies killing and injuring people. Especially civilians. I have first-hand experience with terrorist bombings. I know whereof I speak on this issue.

Regarding the president's statement, he said, "The contrast between what we've seen on the TV screens here, what's taken place in London and what's taking place here is incredibly vivid to me. On the one hand, we have people here who are working to alleviate poverty, to help rid the world of the pandemic of AIDS, working on ways to have a clean environment. And on the other hand, you've got people killing innocent people. And the contrast couldn't be clearer between the intentions and the hearts of those of us who care deeply about human rights and human liberty, and those who kill -- those who have got such evil in their heart that they will take the lives of innocent folks."

Mr. Bush wants to point out the taking of innocent lives by the terrorists. As I said earlier, this is to be abhorred. I want to point out that the number of innocent people killed in Iraq by U.S. troops is far greater than the number killed by Al Qaida terrorists in NYC, Madrid and London combined. While the U.S. has not made it a policy to kill innocent civilians and those who are "accidentally" killed are referred to as collateral damage since they were many times, just unlucky to be in the way of firefights or bad intelligence or whatever, they're still dead. Probably doesn't matter much to them what the circumstances of their being killed were.

I'm always troubled when Bush claims to care deeply about human rights and human liberty. I think Guatanimo Bay and Abu Graib show how much he and his administration really care about human rights. I guess as long as you're a law-abiding citizen of a western democracy, they care about your rights and liberty.

The next part of his statement I want to quote is what originally caught my ear. He said, "We will find them, we will bring them to justice, and at the same time, we will spread an ideology of hope and compassion that will overwhelm their ideology of hate."

Yes, ideology. That seems to me to be at the root of the problem. Here's a definition for ideology:

Ideology (n): A system of ideas and beliefs that commonly supplants reality among weaker minds. Syn: Bullshit.

I think ideology replaces thinking. That would explain a lot about this administration.

Thursday, July 07, 2005

Minnesota Vacation




Rainbow over Gull lake in Minnesota after a late June thunderstorm.

I was on vacation last week. The wife and I took our granddaughter and went to visit our youngest daughter who's working in Minnesota this summer at a lake lodge. We stayed in my sister-in-law's cabin on the lake. It was a really enjoyable vacation this year. I was reminded of how much of my time and my mind I let television eat into since the cabin had only one small tv in one of the bedrooms. It got referred to for weather forcasts, but that was about it.

I got a lot of reading done, bringing 4 books and a couple of magazines with me. Additionally, I did extensive work on an essay I've been working on (off and on) for some time. You'll be able to read it here and on my website "real soon now". I also took lots of pictures (over 100).


My granddaughter, K. Lee and me in the cabin on out last full day there. I'm the one with the beard.

I played a couple of rounds of golf on the lodge's small 9-hole course and did some fishing with the kids. We had a pretty serious thunderstorm roll thru on Wednesday evening, but were treated to an excellent rainbow and surreal clouds afterwords. All in all, I felt like you should after a good vacation. Rested and as ready as one can be to reenter the rat-race of modern American life.


Excellent clouds after the thunderstorm.