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Edited on Sun Feb-28-10 12:15 AM by quark219
Eleanor, I’ve been trying to engage in a dialogue with you, but you seem to be taking it personally, which is regrettable.
Let me respond to your recent post in as dispassionate a fashion as possible so we can keep the focus on your ideas.
1. In your first paragraph, you say that I “insinuated” that your group’s name comes from the Iranian revolutionaries of the past year. I never “insinuated” anything ("insinuate," after all, means to make a disparaging implication). Rather, I openly stated that I suspected that’s where the name of your group came from, but also plainly said that I did not know if that was the case.
While you seem to have been offended by this, there was no insult intended. I think the behavior of the Iranian revolutionaries in 2009 was an inspiration—and I figured anyone who is calling for American citizens to act and demand change of their own government would have been following the Iranians closely. I know I was. The audio of the revolutionaries crying out from the rooftops all over Tehran in the wake of Neda Agha-Soltan's murder was profoundly moving. Frankly, it puzzles me that anyone could decide to call a group “Rooftop Revolutionaries” in the months following that uprising and be surprised that others would make the connection.
Note that another poster was guessing that your group’s name comes from the phrase “voting from the rooftops,” a euphemism for armed revolution. I didn’t agree with that theory (while allowing it might be right), but responded that “I'd like to hear from Eleanor G. She's responded to feedback on DU before, and I'm hopeful she'll do so this time.”
Well, you certainly did respond—and with indignation that strikes me as misplaced. Eleanor, if you post videos on the Web, and name a group “Rooftop Revolutionaries” without explanation, it will provoke questions. Being offended by the questions is a bit like walking out on the street painted green from head-to-toe and then becoming angry when passersby ask, “What’s with the green paint?”
Your explanation of your group’s name (that you live on a roof) certainly clears things up. Thank you. But without your saying that up front, how were your viewers to have known?
2. In your second paragraph, you begin by making the statement “ideologies are incredibly dangerous,” which is nonsense. Ideologies are simply “the integrated assertions, theories, and aims that constitute a sociopolitical program” (Websters). They are the very basis for political action. There is nothing wrong with ideologies or ideologists, per se; the only case where ideology becomes problematic is in the case of the ideologue, one who is a “blindly partisan advocate of a particular ideology” (also Websters).
I’m taking pains with this error of usage because I think it is contributing to the confusion in your thinking. You seem to believe that any ideology is, ipso facto, bad. And therefore (according to this reasoning) argue that the only way forward is to avoid all ideologies. (Thus the slogan of your group: “Not left, not right, but forward!”)
What seems to elude you is the fact that there is no way to move policies forward without that movement tilting the political landscape, however slightly, more toward the left or more toward the right.
Also in this second paragraph of yours, you suggest I read Tanenhaus’s “Death of Conservatism.” I already have, but in light of your post, I took it off the shelf to review it. I can appreciate how this book has become central to your thinking—but I have to say that when I first read it, it struck me as containing a lot of muddled thinking—and now, in the wake of Obama’s first year in office, it already seems hopelessly out of date. Nonetheless, I do have to ask: You are aware, are you not, that the general thrust of Tanenhaus’s book is that modern conservatism is “dead” because the conservatives, unlike the liberals, have become increasingly extreme and have lost the ability to reason with and work with their opponents? In short, Tanenhaus argues that conservatives have become ideologues.
Since you’ve recently read the book, I’m surprised by your oft-stated position that liberals and conservatives are equally to blame for the current state of affairs and need to meet in the middle. (“Screw conservative principles, screw liberal principles—we need to meet in the middle." --Rooftop Revolutionaries, Video 6, 2/7/2010, 1:46-1:51.)
3. In your third paragraph, you talk about the flag kerchief you use to hide your face in your videos. This seems to be in response to my main post, where I point to an apparent contradiction: you label yourself, and appear in your videos, as a revolutionary—yet revolutionaries, by definition, advocate an overturn of the status quo, which is almost always conservative in nature (as it most certainly is now in the United States). I find it odd that you are labeling yourself and appearing in your videos as a revolutionary, but far from being a progressive or liberal, you argue against all ideologies.
You explain the use of the flag kerchief by stating that it is “to show that this country is strangling its own people,” which is interesting and original. But it doesn’t answer the central question: How can you expect to foment a revolution without taking a political stance?
4. In your fourth paragraph, you claim that I wrote that “anyone who questions the left is a member of the Tea Party movement or is harboring an NRA membership.” That’s a fabrication; I never wrote any such thing. What I did state, after seeing the advertisements for the John Birch Society and other far-right political groups on your website, was that I was “beginning to think that you may have an ideology closer to the Tea Party movement than to the progressive ideologies found on DU.”
Your indignation about this comment of mine, mild as it was, is all the more peculiar since you have already stated in one of your videos that you were, in fact, recently a member of the Tea Party movement. ("The Tea Party movement began as a populist movement about a year ago in response to the bailouts and the stimulus plan—and, actually, I was a part of it." –Rooftop Revolutionaries, Video 5, 2/5/2010, 0:49-1:01.)
In the same video, you state your reasons for leaving the Tea Party, which is all well and good. But I have to tell you: few of us at DU would ever have joined the Tea Party at any point. Its ideology has never made much sense. Unfortunately, you seem to still be espousing some of that Tea Party policy confusion. For example, in one of your recent videos, you decry the state of America’s infrastructure. ("This country's infrastructure is fucked and we need to do something about it ASAP." –Rooftop Revolutionaries, Video 7, 2/10/2010, 3:31-3:38.) But somehow it doesn't occur to you that the very same stimulus bill that you were protesting against as a member of the Tea Party does more to repair that infrastructure than any piece of legislation in the past 30 years.
5. In your fifth paragraph, you remark “nice try” regarding my observation that your website has several ads and links for far-right conservative groups. Eleanor, I wasn’t trying to “get you” or implicate you dishonestly; this isn’t a game. I think it is a legitimate cause of concern when someone shares their webpage with advertisements for the John Birch Society and the “Los Angeles 9/12 Project for Glenn Beck Fans.” You respond that you have no control over those ads. But similar to my response regarding your membership in the Tea Party movement, I’ve got to tell you: very few of us in DU would be willing to share our Web presence with ads for groups championing Glenn Beck. We’d find another medium that didn’t force us to rub elbows with someone who is dishonest, appeals to the lowest common denominator, and is stirring up fear and hatred.
You close out your final paragraph by characterizing the feedback I’ve offered you as “blindly thrown, ill advised, and poorly researched insults.” I’m sorry you’re not able to respond to my points, but view them as some sort of personal attack. That’s not the spirit in which they were offered. You've got a lot to learn; but with such a hair-trigger temper in response to feedback, I'm not hopeful.
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