RSS

BOWBLR

I've been blogging for five years and it's time for a change. Tumblr is certifiably awesome and Movable Type is beginning to feel like a proper millstone. I'm already using Tumblr over at Speechification so I'm going to try it for my personal blog for a while. If it works out, I'll switch to Tumblr full time. The only impediment I can see right now is the lack of comments - but I read that the Tumblr people have something comment-like up their sleeves. Can't wait. In the meantime, write to me at steve@bowbrick.com.

December 15

IMG_1191

December 14

West End, sky

December 11

Gordon Brown

December 10

Scott Mills

December 9

Bendy Euston Tower

December 7

In the studio for Radio 2 drivetime

December 6

IMG_1171

December 2

The daily PM debrief

December 1

Occupy language

Dan Gillmor, citizen journalism ninja and Silicon Valley watcher, in a widely-syndicated piece about the language of the occupy movement published last week, is hung up on the linguistic abuses of both sides of the occupy divide. He hates the euphemisms rolled out by government (‘enhanced interrogation techniques’ for ‘torture’, for instance) and urges occupiers to do better:

I realise the Occupy Wall Street folks have more pressing issues than asking the media to use precise and neutral language. But emotionally slanted language – even when it’s been widely used for decades – has helped the banksters and their allies profit so outrageously. If we’re going to take back our societies from the people who looted the economy, we need to use every honest means at our disposal. Language should be part of that strategy.

But his whole premise - that there’s a neutral language we should aspire to - is flakey. He proposes ‘profit’ as a better verb than ‘earn’, for instance, but both are so loaded as to make the distinction meaningless. What we should aspire to is honest language, open about our motives and desires - wherever we live on the occupy spectrum. An authentic occupy language will be unhysterical, fair-minded and accepting of disagreement. It’s a tall order but a worthy goal in the context of the hate-filled invective of much of the anti-occupy media.

Read the piece in The Guardian.#mce_temp_url#


November 28

The Jag

Next »