Black Bloggers

PROVIDENCE, R.I. [Brown University] — In the first scholarly research examining the role of black bloggers in the blogosphere, Brown University researcher Antoinette Pole assessed how bloggers of color use their medium for purposes related to politics. She found that black bloggers are, in fact, mobilizing readers to engage in political participation. Additionally, Pole found that black bloggers do not feel discriminated against or excluded by other bloggers. These findings appear in the International Journal of Technology, Knowledge and Society.

Among the top political blogs, Pole says blogging has primarily been undertaken by white men, coined by Chris Nolan as the “Big Boys Club.” She says blacks comprise approximately less than 1 percent of political bloggers.

“Though they are less numerous, examining the role of minorities in the blogosphere is important if blogs are being used to engage in political discourse and discussion, and more importantly, political action that has real-world implications,” Pole said. “Who has influence in the blogosphere and how bloggers are using this new medium to undertake political action merits study.”

from E-Activism: Analysis of Black Bloggers in the Blogosphere

I have never been a fan of identity politics– to my way of thinking, the way around all sorts of bad things is through real economic freedom, particularly wide-spread unionization and a shortened work week. If we got the week down to say, 20 hours, well, we would have time to fight all sorts of evil.

It’s hard to argue with Eugene Robinson, though, when he writes that “class is important. But race is, too, and while I hope we eventually get to the point where race is irrelevant, we still have a long way to go.” Among the places to start reading, the Black Agenda Blog, the Angry Black Women, blackfeminism.org and blackprof.com.

100th Post

2. 100 (number) from Wikipedia
3. Top 100 Videos, Google Beta
4. MIT’s 100 Dollar Laptop
5. Living to 100 Life Expectancy Calculator
6. Time’s Top 100 People
7. Top 100 April Fools Hoaxes
8. 100 milestone documents of American history
9. IMDb Bottom 100
10. Top 100 Network Security Tools

11. 100 Best Companies to Work For 2007
12. Here are the 100 words most often misspelled (‘misspell’ is one of them).
13. World’s Top 100 Wonders
14. Celebrity 100: Forbes
15. The 100 Most Frequently Challenged Books of 1990–2000: American Library Association
16. Top 100 Downloaded Books, Project Gutenburg
17. The Billboard Hot 100
18. XtremeTop100.com – Gaming top 100 list
19. Top 100 Bloggers.com
20. 100 Reasons You’ll Be Speechless (Windows Vista)

21. QDB Admin Top 100 Quotes
22. American Rhetoric: Top 100 Speeches
23. The IT 100 Companies: The Leading Tech Companies of 2005
24. 100 Mile Diet: Local Eating for Global Change
25. NASDAQ-100 Dynamic Heatmap
26. Messier 100
27. 100 Words
28. 100 Best Novels
29. 100 Black Men of America, Inc.
30. Committee of 100

31. 100 Years of New York City
32. The 100: A Ranking Of The Most Influential Persons In History: (Paperback)
33. 100% Campaign
34. 100 Oldest Currently Registered Domains
35. Michael Light: 100 Suns
36. Top 100 Lyrics
37. Club 100: A Model 100 User Group
38. 100 Girls
39. CNET’s Top 100 Products
40. Michael Light / 100 Suns

41. Micro 100 Tool Company
42. Top 100 Feeds
43. Top 100 Electronic Recruiters
44. Film 100
45. Top 100 Education Blogs
46. NEA: Top 100 Books for Children Top 100 Books
47. 100 Bloggers
48. Top 100 Global Universities
49. 100 Mysteries of the Century
50. World Chess: Top 100 Players

Continue Reading →

Bubble Wrap

For new college graduates and people out of school for only a few years, financial worries are enormous. Home prices, even if they are starting to fall, remain very high relative to ordinary incomes, and higher mortgage rates are no balm to money worries either. All Americans carry more debt on average than in the past but the increase for young people is most striking since young workers generally earn the least. Between college loans and car loans, people in their 20s are amazingly burdened financially compared to earlier generations, especially compared to my own generation of late-stage baby-boomer.

G. Pascal Zachary, AlterNet. Posted November 18, 2006.

I went to college in two distinct periods of my life, first in the late 70s and early 80 when I got my B.A. and M.A. Then I went back to school in the 90s to get my Ph.D. In between I was a Peace Corps Volunteer and then a teacher in France. I still have loans from both periods of my life.

Even though I have never missed a payment, I still have a dozen or more years left before I will pay off my education. One source of my debt, for example, is that until recently the University of Texas did not have a tuition waiver program for graduate students. Texas, unfortunately, had no loan forgiveness program for Peace Corps service either.

I have not exactly led a traditional life, so maybe I am not a good example of the issues discussed by Zachary. I did not even consider buying a house, for example, until I was well into my mid-40s. I am, as he puts it, a late-stage baby boomer. Still, debt relief for student loans, excessive credit card interest, and predatory/sub-prime mortgages, seems only just, especially for those of us who went to school in the last twenty five years.

It seems shocking to me that this piling on of debt– a process, like many other bad things first begun in the Reagan administration– is only now beginning to get any attention. Much of this attention, of course, is due to recent kick-back scandals that may yet touch my alma mater. It may, in fact, come up in the next election if trends continue.

It’s a classic case of shifting the costs of credit, education, and home ownership, all of which have real social benefits, onto the backs of the individuals who can least afford it. I have already posted (April 11) the clip from the the In Debt We Trust documentary trailer. Danny Schechter, the journalist behind the documentary, has also set up an associated resource page called Stop the Squeeze.org.

Mark Shuttleworth & Ubuntu

Ubuntu is a complete Linux-based operating system, freely available with both community and professional support. It is developed by a large community and we invite you to participate too!

The Ubuntu community is built on the ideas enshrined in the Ubuntu Philosophy: that software should be available free of charge, that software tools should be usable by people in their local language and despite any disabilities, and that people should have the freedom to customise and alter their software in whatever way they see fit.

These freedoms make Ubuntu fundamentally different from traditional proprietary software: not only are the tools you need available free of charge, you have the right to modify your software until it works the way you want it to.

from the Ubuntuwebsite.