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Of Hecklers and Bores

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What makes the quality of a blog? I am not a journalist or a professional in this domain, but I do have a certain amount of hands-on experience over the years. I often have comments from people who don’t agree with my “party line” and others who debate with each other. I think I am quite tolerant, but this is an old subject.

Each blog owner, moderator, call that person what you will – the person who set up the blog with the blog hosting service and gave it a name and a main subject – deals with comments in different ways. Some blogs don’t allow comments at all, but rather invite people to write e-mails without the cover of anonymity, and at the other end of the spectrum, you have a completely laissez-faire policy. That sometimes results in 50 or more comments in a thread dominated by two or three persons who are determined to prove themselves right.

My own ideal is something of a compromise somewhere between the two ends of the spectrum. I have exactly twenty-one e-mail addresses on moderated status, because if left unchecked, some of those persons would just take over the blog like a malignant cancer tumour – profiting from the blog-owner’s tolerance. The blog is then transformed into something else: a peaceful moderate country becomes a totalitarian dictatorship run by criminals. You know, it happened to a certain central European country in 1933! The first sign I find about such people in the blogosphere is that they are not here to discuss but to heckle and dominate. I am brought to think of the song in The Mikado by Gilbert and Sullivan:

All prosy dull society sinners,
Who chatter and bleat and bore,
Are sent to hear sermons
From mystical Germans
Who preach from ten to four.

Where is their empathy for other people?

So I am obliged to keep control over this minority of individuals, so that conversations can be subtle and interesting, and not crushed out by deafening “radio jamming”.

I may be accused of being a “despot, a tyrant of this blog”. I would only be accused of such by one who himself wants to be a despot and tyrant – riding piggyback on my achievement of having gained a number of regular readers. He could start his own blog, but it might be such a boring soap box rant at Speaker’s Corner that people just wouldn’t listen or who would walk away and find a more interesting speaker. I have even had a blogger who doesn’t allow comments on his blog sending comments to mine to provoke comments to his comments. The thought that came into my mind was that he was dumping his trash in my bin, or putting it more crudely, crapping on my doorstep. The man is on moderated status and I have gained more experience in blogger tactics and strategy. The blogosphere is a free world, and anyone can set up his own blog. The more interesting ones are those set up for the benefit of other people. I leave others to judge the quality of this blog. Comments are a part of this spirit of service to others, the quality of the blog and its future.

There is nothing obliging me to let hecklers and bores onto this blog. They are the same persons, and their literary style remains the same even when they change addresses. Some are trolls, and others are just hobbyists, fanatics and bores. Imagine if Word Press, Blogger and other blog providers introduced a rule saying that we were not allowed to filter our comment boxes, that everyone has the right to jam, troll and spam at will, I would end the blog immediately. I had scruples about this when I had the English Catholic, not any longer. Filtering is accepted practice and I will continue to do so for as long as I blog.

Indeed, I have not to heed moralising reproaches about honesty on account of not allowing the blog to be taken over by some young neo-Fascist hothead from Los Angeles or the bore at the Captain’s table of a cruise ship – among others. Perhaps my blog is boring or uninteresting. It certainly is to people not interested in religion for example, but people are free to look at what they want and not look at what doesn’t interest them. However, I am perplexed by those who say they rarely find my blog interesting, yet they want to plaster their digital graffiti all over it!

Most commenters here have a free hand and will find their comments published the moment they send them, and I trust those people. They represent a diversity of views from conservative Roman Catholicism, Orthodoxy, classical Anglicanism, free and liberal points of view. The difference is that they respect that their view is a part of a diversity of views that make up the wealth of spiritual humanity.

I have noticed over the past few weeks that morale is low in the very narrow interests represented by this blog and two or three others. Posts are getting rarer as subjects become worn and hacked to death. I am aware of this. The Devil was indeed in the details of too many events of the past few years. Most of us have to one extent or another “made our beds” and decided where our spiritual and ecclesial loyalties lie.

My advice to those who comment is that I read other blogs and observe the activity of the hecklers and bores who migrate from one to the other desperately seeking to leave their mark. Their dominance has reached such a level that I hardly ever comment on those blogs any more. I am not going to allow that here. So that accounts for the moderated twenty-one e-mail addresses, some from the defunct English Catholic blog and which are probably themselves obsolete. In reality, I probably have no more than three or four to keep a vigilant eye on.

I am open to diversity of opinion and discussion. I am not interested in the “Speaker’s Corner” style where a guy gets up onto a soap box and rants, and is then shouted down or is able to shout down his hecklers. Speaker’s Corner is an old institution in London. It originated in the right of a condemned criminal about to be hanged on the adjacent Tyburn gallows to have his last word before his death. It then became a place of free speech. Discussions often become spirited and downright rude.

It’s another world. I don’t want my blog to work in that way, but rather to be like a university seminar or a peaceful fireside chat and constructive dialogue. There are commenters who are obviously concerned to win converts for what they believe to be the “true Church”. They believe this to be their duty, and I respect their conscience. The difference is that they present rational arguments all in respecting diversity. Just a question of empathy for other people and courtesy. I also draw attention to the fact that there are apologetics site and blogs, and some of them are very good. Frank Sheed would have been a great blogger!

For those who have had anything to do with boats, my analogy is the difference between a military Naval captain running a tight ship and the humble and kind skipper of a small yacht or a fishing boat. My way is the latter. I give the compass bearing and just a minimum of what I think is needed to keep the vessel from being sunk by the kraken and the rocks, and those who want to be aboard know what to do with the sails, ropes and all that…

My attention was brought to 3 Despicable Internet Behaviors (That Are Really Your Fault). Not bad, as both bloggers and commenters, like teachers and schoolchildren, prison “screws” and prisoners, anything, can be just as twisted as each other. It’s a pretty twisted world as beauty is in the eye of the beholder. So, let’s keep this blog informal and friendly while it’s still here. Books burn when you set light to them and information on a computer’s hard disk or a server can be instantly effaced with a magnet. Vanitas vanitatem! Everything is vanity. It’s as simple as that and painfully obvious for most people who do care about others.

Indeed, like Speaker’s Corner, a blog is only a reflection of the world we live in and nothing will ever be utopian or ideal.



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