Wombaticus Rex wrote:Outsider voices = people who don't show up to General Assembly to participate in good faith.
Ah! Brilliant! That's it isn't it, the pivotal nub that transforms outsiders into insiders.
It's just what Raimond Gaita has said about "spin" - which presumes an undeclared agenda ie
bad faith:
In Plato's Gorgias, Socrates makes a similar point about the political role of orators (read ''masters of spin'') who boasted that they had great power because they could manipulate people to believe whatever they wanted them to believe. At one stage, Socrates tells a young orator, Polus, that he (Polus) is good at oratory but bad at conversation.
Conversation (or dialogue) is, Socrates believed, a condition of sober judgment, because real conversation - the kind that someone celebrates when she exclaims joyfully, ''At last, someone to talk to!'' - presupposes the possibility that one might call one's partner in conversation to seriousness and that she will respond authentically to that call. ''Come now, can you mean this? Do you take me for a fool? Why do you so constantly resort to cliche? Why do you yield so often to your sentimentality?'' And so on. These are calls to a kind of sobriety that cannot survive inauthentic forms.
Socrates believed that oratory was not a morally neutral skill that can be directed at good, bad or indifferent ends, but intrinsically rotten because it betrays the trust necessary for genuine conversation and, in so doing, erodes the conditions of political (and other forms of) judgment. We should think the same about spin.
Thinking here: If I apply that insight to the Tunisians who trolled Obama today, I would say that they did what they did in the spirit of "good faith" .. yes, I think so .. which in effect hardballs ousider status back at Obama. Hmm. He can only respond with spin of course and he can't control both sides of the dialogue anymore, so he's pooched. Except that he has a shit-load of power. Extrapolating to face-to-face encounters with embedded disinfoneers on the streets, I'd say, most effective response would be to turn away and instead seek out those who are there in good faith? IOW, don't feed the trolls! Ha!
And it's actually pretty easy to tell if someone is being not "in good faith" I think, no matter what words are coming out of their mouths. The genesis of a great pro-tip there?
And this:
"the kind that someone celebrates when she exclaims joyfully, ''At last, someone to talk to!'
I've being seeing in a lot of people faces lately - a kind of irrepressible surprised delight. Like here:

So, that's something not the same-old-same-old at least.
Wombaticus Rex wrote:"People seem quite excited to have proof of their own importance." - after the police eviction and the subsequent shock waves of conflict and drama it generated, I have a newfound appreciation for the utility value of police provocation. This microcosm is reflected nationally in Oakland tonight, as the classic conversation about "property damage as violence" becomes situational ethics with a Whole Foods full of customers.
Agreed. Actually if you invert Girard's theory of sacrificial violence, what you get is a psycho-social mechanism that disrupts social order (rather than maintains it) though violent sacrifice of the "wrong" kind ie the sacrifice of an innocent (Jesus/ Mohamed Bouazizi/ Khaled Said), a victim, rather than an offender (Oedipus/ Bin Laden/ etc). That's one big reason to adhere to a strategy of non-violence. The other is that violence (according to Girard, if not MM) is contagious, just like courage. We don't want a blood bath. At least I don't.
[the British] government always kept a kind of standing army of news writers who without any regard to truth, or to what should be like truth, invented & put into the papers whatever might serve the minister
T Jefferson,