Increasingly,
we see the "mainstream media" retreating and retrenching to their old
worldview -- with themselves singularly at the top of the information
pyramid and hierarchy, rather than seizing the leadership in the greatly
expanded brave and bold new world -- in circling the wagons ever
tighter, and even building moats against the continuing encroachements
against their hegemony -- as the only people "fit" to tell us, "What in the world is going on?"
-- in an era when the information makers can speak for themselves, and
often do, because they can say it better, with real understanding of
what they mean.
That's always been a problem for the intermediaries of any time and place
-- when everybody becomes the principals and no longer feel a need for
those to translate and interpret "specialzied jargon," for the now
possible and preferred universal language -- that doesn't create the
enclaves, bureaucracies and hierarchies.
Where is their place in such a world -- when everyone who wants to,
beocmes a journalist -- despite the protestations that they can't be?
but then, it can also be pointed out, that they can't be Everyman too --
if they insist on their "special rights" not to be like everybody
else. One can't have it both ways -- in the old worldview.
But
in the new, one can play all the roles and functtions -- as best they
can, until they run into the few with vastly greater knowledge and
expertise than they can acquire -- as the undoubted prodigies of that
field. But not everybody is -- despite their attempts to form
assoications that recognize them as exclusively such. That manner of
deference began to decline in the medieval ages and the trade guilds
that defined one definitively for life -- as the only way they could
be. But now we hope in the new age and era, people can be everything
they want to be -- in the broadest sense of that meaning -- to be their
own computer expert, health and lifestyle expert -- without having to
hire those who claim that exclusive turf for themselves -- as the way it
always has been, even if they just made it up yesterday.
But merely hoping for a return to the good ol' days, never
made it happen -- as glorious as the Pony Express and Wells Fargo
stagecoach once were. Progress never goes backwards, even if one calls
themselves the "progressives" and "liberal" in desiring the return to
the days before their passing.
Everybody
has to take it to the "next level" -- and not just remain the leaders
in the old memories of how things used to be and should remain
forevermore -- in the unchanging world of the town newspaper, schools
and post office, as the exclusive gateway to the world of information
and participation in the greatest life of these times.
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