(So there's no confusion about the way it's worded, this is a cross-post of my original blog at Ramona's Voices.)
I missed Bill Moyers Journal on Friday night, and I was away from home all day yesterday until about 8 PM, so I had no idea that the end paragraph of my lowly blog about Moyers' interview with Wendell Potter made it onto the top of his show. (The clip shows my blog at Talking Points Memo but the content is the same as the original post here.)
Rowan Wolf over at Talking Points Memo Cafe saw it, blogged about it
and put it on YouTube. To say I'm pretty stunned by this is a total
understatement, and normally I don't like to toot my own horn, but this
may be my 15 seconds of fame, so you'll have to forgive me for this,
please.
I really want to talk about how blogs and bloggers have
come out of the shadows and onto the battlefield. It's becoming a
powerful vehicle for change, but with that comes the same kind of
responsibility that journalists advocate
but don't always follow. There are thousands of political bloggers out
there now, and picking and choosing is a daunting, time-consuming
occupation. Our political views are often going to be different, but
the one thing we should be able to agree on is that we've come to this
new vehicle for change with the understanding that we have an
obligation to tell the truth as we see it and understand it. We'll make
mistakes--plenty of them. Most of us are not professionals, after all,
and our passion is bound to get in the way of clear thinking and good
judgment some of the time. But our voices are out there; we're growing
stronger, and I believe this country will be the better for it.
I
came late to blogging. I just didn't get it. So much of what I saw was
superficial, shallow navel-gazing--a kind of helter-skelter
motor-mouth. Every thought, worthy or not, was transported onto a
personal page for everyone to read--even those just merely,
superficially interested.
I think it was the blogs on The Daily Kos
that first convinced me it could be used to pull whole communities of
people with common interests together so that one voice became many,
and many voices could ultimately gain the power to change things.
I
started my own blog here on January 20, the day of Barack Obama's
inauguration. I remember hesitating for a long time before I hit the
"Publish Post" button. It seemed like such a conceited, ego-driven kind
of thing to do, but after the past eight years, and after the heady
jubilance of the Obama victory, the passion to do something was
overwhelming.
All I can do, really, is write. I'm not good at
organizing or speechifying or getting on the telephone to try and
convince anybody of anything. Writing is re-writing, and since I never
get my thoughts straight the first time, it's the perfect vehicle for
me. But I wanted my blog to include more than just my voice. I wanted
it to be an open outlet for the blogs, articles, columns and videos so
many of us were sending to one another by email almost every day. I've
created links to many of them, but there are so many good writers out
there who have a voice and are working hard to get themselves heard.
It's becoming a real movement now, and outlets like Talking Points Memo are right at the forefront.
Somewhere along the way, Iwas lucky enough to find Talking Points Memo and the TPM Cafe.
A whole new world! Intimidating at first because, man, are they smart!
But I started a blog there and they welcomed me with a generosity that
actually kind of floored me. My comment section here on this blog
remains forelorn and lonely, but at TPM the comments sections are
lively and boisterous -- full of good talk and good information. You
can always count on the commenters to make you get it right. That's the
terrifying beauty of political blogging--we're all opinionators and we
make our opinions known!
But this one blog about Moyers and
Potter must have struck a tiny nerve. My Blogspot blog had 162 hits
that day and the next, and it received 656 Diggs--all because it was
posted on TPM.
We have the power to make change. On my last post, I was wallowing in Faithlessness,
but today I'm energized. And all because Bill Moyers spoke my words for
a few seconds on his show. Okay, I'm ready to get back to work. Health
care, labor, education, voter fraud, congressional shenanigans,
shameless fat cats--bring 'em on.