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Archives: June 2011

June 9, 2011

How to Have a Mature Political Chat

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How to Have a Mature Political Chat

We love to chat about many things. People have different favorite topics to talk about. When you have a particular interest in mind, you look for those chats that will suit your needs best. If you like a mature chat, politics is definitely for you. Politics is a topic that many like to steer clear of. This is mainly because nothing conclusive emanates from it. It really does not matter where you are, politics will always spark different emotions. There are chats that have totally banned politics from discussions and there are those who specialize in political issues. There are very many chat forums which will host politics as their chosen topic of focus. Life is politics and, there is no way of avoiding it at some point in our lives. Therefore, the importance of politics cannot be underestimated. However, when you wish to engage in a political chat, there are several things that you need to consider. If you are chatting in chats where politics is common, there will be rules put in place to guide you. Therefore, the first thing before you engage in a political chat is to look at the rules.

Rules need to be followed for many reasons. It is through rules of a political chat forum that you will get to know what is acceptable and what is not. Just like a game, you need to know what to do so that you can gain as much as you can. In this case, rules will enable you know how to conduct it. Rules will also show you where trouble is and, you can avoid it. For example, you should never engage in personal attacks, you should never use insults to make your point heard and also you should never appear to demean any political figure or a figure in a different political context. In other words, rules are put in place to ensure that your conversations are mature. Criticism should be creative or constructive and, when you fully understand this, you are ready to conduct a political chat. Sometimes, politics seems to have no rules at all. It is difficult to establish the line which you should not cross. However, with proper adherence to rules, you should be in a position to chat appropriately.

A political chat should be based on honesty. You should avoid major propaganda. Also, you should not insight people or make people believe what you think. People you are chatting with will also have a keen interest in politics and chances are that they have their very own opinion. You should not be compelled to agree with anyone. Personal sentiments on politics will always differ to great degrees. You must know why you are chatting in the first place. Your aim might be to see what opinions of others are. You might also be looking for solutions. Also, chats will enable you understand some of the things you do not. Many minds have a way of dissecting issues and having a better or clearer understanding to issues. With the above tips on how to chat politically, you should have a mature chat.

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June 3, 2011

The British Political Blogosphere 2010

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The British Political Blogosphere 2010

 

With the UK election a mere five weeks away, warring between the three main parties involved (Labour, the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats) has begun. Now that the polls are so close there is a likelihood of a hung parliament (no one party with an overall majority) the parties are attempting to pick up as much media space as possible to influence voting in marginal seats and attract floating voters.

While there has been much talk about the Twitter phenomenon (a virtual instant messaging service which reports opinions and up to the second developments), the key media the three main parties are depending on are television, the press, radio and the internet (specifically, virtual political blogs).

The most prominent political blogs in the UK include Iain Dale’s Diary, Guido Fawkes and ConservativeHome on the right with Liberal Conspiracy, LabourList and Liberal Democrat Voice on the left. Although the right-wing bloggers were previously seen to predominate both in terms of traffic and influence, the left has been credited with a resurgence with the success of newer blogs such as LabourList and Left Foot Forward.

Britain’s political blogosphere is behind the US political blogosphere in terms of spend (and it shows) but way ahead of the US political blogosphere in terms of cutting, witty critique and scandal-scenting (recently parliamentary candidates have been forced to pull out of the election race because of ill-thought out comments online which were seized upon by bloggers who allied with the mainstream press to out the candidates involved). The US political blogosphere has more effect on the US political race than its British counterpart (but, again, this is much to do with the available spend, which is statistically far greater in the US than the UK, where elections are traditionally less of a jamboree).

Although the influence of political blogs on the three mainstream political parties is growing this has been accompanied by criticism of their content. A former leading adviser to the government has criticised blogs’ anti-establishment nature for fuelling a “crisis” in politics stating that there should be more emphasis on working together to solve problems rather than making hostile and conflicting demands on politicians. Some bloggers are blamed for encouraging citizens to remain in a “perpetual state of self-righteous rage”, behaving like “teenagers” who are “increasingly unwilling to be governed but not yet capable of self-government.” The director of the Press Complaints Commission has even called for a voluntary code of conduct similar to that governing newspapers and magazines due to the current lack of redress for those angered by their content.

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There has been much change since 2005 when Britain last went to the polls and voted in Tony Blair as Prime Minister for the last time. Back then the most prominent political blogs in Britain were mostly the same but there have been some spectacular casualties and some returns to form.

Take for example the right wing political blogger Guido Fawkes (a nom de guerre for the arch-blogger Paul Staines) who, after some time on top of the British political blogosphere, last time round was licking his wounds after an attack by the extreme left wing of the blogging scene (who tend to be the nastiest and most full of rage in virtual political Britain) led by the site Bloggerheads run by blogger Timothy Ireland. This time round the right wing has managed to turn the tables: while right wing blogs lead the British political blogosphere and Guido Fawkes is one of the top two most visited and influential blogs online, Ireland’s Bloggerheads has been marginalised after Ireland publicly took on one Conservative blog, the Westminster Journal, and very publicly lost all credibility and users this autumn when the Westminster Journal exposed Ireland as an all-round sore loser, bully and smearer to the point where recovery is impossible. The British political blogosphere is far more ruthless than its American counterpart!

While the Far Left is rudderless in British virtual politics, centre-left Labour has invested a great deal in Labour List and the site has recovered well from the scandal it became embroiled in during 2009 when on 11th April Damian McBride (a former civil servant and former special advisor to Britain’s current Prime Minister Gordon Brown) resigned his position after it emerged through the blogosphere that he and another prominent Labour Party supporter, Labour List’s Derek Draper, had exchanged emails discussing the possibility of disseminating rumours McBride had fabricated about the private lives of some Conservative Party politicians. The emails from McBride had been sent from his No. 10 Downing Street e-mail account.

With broadband internet penetration reaching levels of up to 90% in some areas of Britain, British politicians are well-aware that voters are spending an increasing amount of time making up their mind about how to vote while online. For this particular election there is one telling statistic about internet coverage which may well have a major effect on the election: the highest take-up of broadband has been in the South East of England where most of the swing seats (marginals) are located. It is estimated, based on census data, that 80-90 % of households in the South East have broadband access (a number that has more than doubled since the last election in 2005).

Blogs and Twitter do not stand alone as online media through which the parties struggle to prize votes from the British public. Youtube is a big draw with all political leaders uploading their key speeches (and the errors of their adversaries) to. Offline publications with online versions (above all the Murdoch stable of newspapers including the highly influential Sun and News of the World) are pored over by political activists as they call in their journalist friends for election favours. Then there’s the usual collection of tongue-in-cheek joke sites which get personal about the various political characters involved (one noting that Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg is the best-looking of the three main party leaders and has the hottest wife).

The effect of Britain’s political blogs can’t really be measured until after May’s General Election but it would be an understatement to say that politicians are not ignoring them this time round. It promises to be a very interesting five weeks indeed this side of the pond.

 

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