from the Muslim blogopshere. They're quoting condolences. I wonder how representative that is. If only it were.
: LATER: Various commenters are going after me for that last night. I'll repeat what I said in response to one in the comments on the post above:
New news
: Fred Wilson says "this [my post below about witnesses to news reporting it on their blogs] is what its all about and why CNN with its 24x7 news channel is hopelessly out of date."
Not if CNN et al are smart enough to take advantage of the millions of new reporters who can keep them on top of the news.
: Ironically, I was supposed to have lunch yesterday with the president of such a news network to talk about just this. But, of course, we had to cancel because of the big news. But we did reschedule.
: I also think this is ironic: The blog segment on MSNBC, which I was to do last night, was preempted by the London news. But, of course, there was news -- at least Londoners' stories about that news -- on the blogs.
: As I also noted yesterday, it is now reflex for the BBC and the venerable Times of London to solicit stories from the public and to publish them. Of course, they didn't have to ask. All they had to do was go reading their local bloggers.
: I'm also struck by the new definition of news. As I wandered through the London blogs listed by subway station, I found, again and again, bloggers using their new tool just to tell their family and friends, "I'm fine." That is the news that matters most, isn't it?
: ALSO: I found Technorati -- its search and its tags -- useful in finding London bombing news and reaction yesterday. They put together a special page aggregating the tags.
: Joe's Dartblog as a montage of front pages.
Equivalencies
: In the Guardian, Polly Toynbee argues that the Olympics should be London's memorial to the attack -- and, stiff upper and all that, I can see Brits taking on the games with just such determination.
She also joins in the game of equivalencies that tries to make terrorism equal something. For Galloway, it equals retribution for Iraq. For her:
How barbaric, Tony Blair rightly said, that the terrorists should strike just as the G8 at least strives to do better on Africa and climate change. Yes indeed. But then barbarism is in the eye of the beholder and every act of war is justified in the warped minds of its perpetrators. Barbaric might also be 30,000 children a day dying in Africa while a mere 25,000 US cotton farmers keep their trade-denying subsidies. Or Bangladesh soon to be washed away in global-warming floods. Or arms sold to those who will force them upon child soldiers, or any number of worldwide atrocities.
Dangerous game, that. Cotton farmers... soldiers hunting down terrorists... and terrorist themselves won't appear in the same sane dictionary under "barbaric."
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