Anthony Barnett (London, OK): While suffering from a bad cold I got a very interesting long email from David Marquand who started with our Networking Democracy initiative, and said
I like the idea in principle, but the tone of the comments both on the OurKingdom piece and on your Guardian piece is so deeply depressing that I have to say I doubt if anything of great (or even any) value will come out of the exercise. The trouble with internet communication is that people blast off the first thing that comes into their head, without thinking through a coherent argument. There is a discipline in writing for print publication which the internet loses; and the gains in spontaneity and freshness (which are real) are outweighed by the loss in responsibility and accountability. The more I see of it the more I feel that internet communication is rather like a conversation in an overcrowded pub, where everyone is shouting so loudly that they can’t hear anyone else, much less think about what other people (or for that matter they themselves) are saying.
I know what he means although it is a little bit unfair on OK - I told a couple of CiFers how I felt. However there are also constructive reflections popping up across blogland such as a thoughtful one from Podnosh who also links to the connected republic. Jon is away in Florence we'll post up more of the responses when we can. But CAN YOU HEAR ME?











Paul C (not verified) said:
Sat, 2008-03-29 19:56I have to agree with Marquand, unfortunately, which is also the reason that I didn't comment on your original post on Networking Democracy.
The fundamental problem is that the Web does not reflect public opinion in any significant sense; while it presents technological and economic barriers to entry, it also has absolutely no basic requirement for any sort of knowledge on a particular topic. As a result, discussions on critical subjects frequently degenerate into a shouting match where those with the biggest chips on their shoulders ("pretentious knobs", Gareth?) and the most time on their hands dominate. People therefore tend to congregate with the like-minded - as they do in real life, but the key difference is that in real life we cannot avoid other opinions, whereas on the internet it is perfectly possible to live in an echo chamber.
I agree with Gareth that the internet is "democratising" - and that this is a source of fear for professional politicians is something I welcome - but I sometimes wonder what people actually mean when they use the word "democratising". More pertinently, I wonder whether people truly realise the impact that technology will have on democracy, because it is entirely possible that the forms that it is likely to develop into may to be forms that they themselves will not like.
Nobody should accept experts' statements on face value, but nobody is an expert on everything. The internet is an extremely useful tool for developing the former point, but if you don't recognise the latter then you are simply part of the problem rather than part of the solution.