Riots in the Streets vs. Internet Attacks
Violence in the streets scares the shit out of the authorities. More than guerrilla geeks, student rioters in the streets send the authorities into a panic, making them so repressive that the violence boomerangs. The authorities lose control of the situation and whatever moral highground they may claim. Guerrilla geeks also frighten the authorities, but Internet attacks are an abstraction even when damaging. Watch this 15-year-old British schoolboy lay out the stakes with courage and eloquence. Is he a younger version of Mario Savio for 2010? Those Brits seem tougher, way tougher, than our candy-ass American students.
Update: Jan. 3, 2011 -- "They can't stop us demonstrating," he said,
"they can't stop us fighting back, and however much they try to imprison us in the streets of London, those are our streets." But, as it turns out, it's not their Internet. The video of the speech has been taken down from YouTube. Other videos showing the riots in the streets, including one also linked in this blogpost, have been taken down as well. Apparently the Internet itself scares the shit out of the authorities.
Sites to See
Abstract City
AmericaBlog
American Leftist
Andante
Antiwar.com
ArkivMusic.com
Articulate
Arts & Letters Daily
because they are dead
Blogcritics
Booknotes
Bright Lights Film Journal
Buck Fush
C-SPAN
Center for Cooperative Research
Noam Chomsky
Consortium News
Cost of War in Iraq
Council on Foreign Relations
Crooks and Liars
TheCuttingFloor
The Daily Howler
David E's Fablog
Dark Roasted Blend
Democracy Now!
Devil Ducky
Editor's Cut
Ehrensteinland
Eschaton
Glenn Greenwald
Good Reads
The Guardian (London)
Herman (Literary) Archive, Northwestern Univ. Library
The Huffington Post
Inter Press Service News Agency
International Relations Center
Internet Movie Database (IMDb)
Doug Ireland
Henry Kisor
Krugman's Blog:
Conscience of a Liberal
Lannan Foundation
Life During Wartime
Los Angeles Times
Low Culture
Metacritic
Museum of Television & Radio
Nat. Arts Journalism Program
National Security Archive
The New York Times
NO!art
Onion Radio News
Open City
Open Library
Osborne & Conant
The Overgrown Path
Greg Palast
Political Irony
Postclassic Radio
Rain Taxi
The Raw Story
RealityStudio.org
Bill Reed
The Reeler
Rhizome
Rwanda Project
Salon
Seeing Black
Slate
Studs Terkel
TalkLeft
The Theater Times (Cris Gross)
The 3rd Page
ThugLit: Writing About Wrongs
Times Square Cam
The Tin Man
Truthdig
t r u t h o u t
Wading in the Velvet Sea
Walking Man
The Wall Street Journal
Wikigate
Wikipedia
The Washington Post
James Wolcott
World O'Crap Man

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