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By Arianna Huffington
(Editor's note: On March 13 the Huffington Post posted a
compilation of quotes of George Clooney related to the war
in Iraq. An Internet controversy arose when Clooney claimed
the post, approved by a publicist, was misleading.)
As you might imagine, over the past few days, the [George]
Clooney blog episode has prompted many interesting discussions,
as well as a good deal of reflection on my part. Here's some
of what I've been thinking:
First of all, is the blogosphere powerful or what? As has
been endlessly noted, the Clooney blog was drawn from answers
he had given in interviews with the Guardian and on Larry
King.
Neither of which garnered much, if any, reaction.
But when the same words and ideas were repackaged in the
form of a blog, they were suddenly exposed to a new audience,
infused with a new currency -- and exploded into the public
eye, drawing an overwhelmingly positive response and provoking
a great deal of valuable discussion.
It was a testament to the power of blogging, and it's why
I remain, despite the dustup, an unrepentant evangelist for
the value of bringing to the blogosphere some of the most
interesting voices of our time that are not already there.
So while this is definitely the last time I'll rely on
an okay-to-publish from a publicist, it most assuredly won't
be the last time I'll recruit for the blogosphere and try
to get the uninitiated to blog -- even folks who don't know
a hyperlink from a permalink or who need a Blogging 101 tutorial
and a lot of hand-holding in the process.
But, some have asked, is a blog still a blog if it contains
repurposed material? My answer is: absolutely. Who cares
if the ideas were first expressed in a book, a speech, a
play, or an interview? The medium isn't the message; the
message is the message. With the right medium providing the
needed amplification.
We live in an age of information overload. We're bombarded
with words and images from our 500-channel universe and the
infinite Internet. We're obsessed with the newest, the latest,
the freshest. And what was said yesterday is old news. In
this kind of atmosphere, it's all-too-easy for important
ideas to be lumped in with the disposable ones and deleted
from our internal hard drives. Lost in the cacophony and
the ether. Which is why the gems need to be plucked from
the pile and put on display.
Indeed, that was the reason I asked George Clooney to blog
in the first place. Not in order to add a celebrity to our
blog roll but because I felt the ideas I'd heard him eloquently
express in interviews bore repeating in a different, new,
and contagious forum -- particularly his critique of Democratic
cowardice in the run up to the war.
We would not be in Iraq if it were not for that failure
of leadership. And the ongoing horrors coming out of Iraq
show just how high a price we continue to pay because of
their fear of being criticized.
That's a message that needs to be repeated again and again.
From high and low, on TV, in print, and, yes, in blogs. If
this drumbeat is not kept up, Democratic leaders will continue
to falter, and continue to fail to provide leadership on
Iraq. This lesson of repetition is one the other side has
learned to great effect (witness the 46 percent of the public
that still believed, as late as February 2005, that Saddam
Hussein was involved in 9/11).
So, for those of you who missed it, here is what George
Clooney had to say in the Guardian:
"In 2003 I was saying, where are the ties [between
Iraq] and al-Qaida? Where are the ties to 9/11? I knew it;
where the fuck were these Democrats who said, 'We were misled'?
That's the kind of thing that drives me crazy: 'We were misled.'
Fuck you, you weren't misled. You were afraid of being called
unpatriotic."
Wow, rereading that, I have the same reaction I had the
first time I read it: I'd love to see him blog about that!
Hmm, where did I put that publicist's number...?
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