annwfyn: (tarot - the devil)
[personal profile] annwfyn
Because the Times employs clever people to write their columns they succeed in articulating things that I cannot...

From Michael Gove's column today:






    Shield of anonymity blunts blog’s point

    I’ve become, over time, an obsessive blog reader. From Iain Dale to Andrew Sullivan, Conservative Home to Alpha Mummy, Comment Central to The Spectator’s Coffee House, any spare time I have in front of the screen is spent admiring the perceptiveness of a gallery of brilliant commentators.

    But there is one aspect of the blogosphere with which I am not yet perfectly attuned. The habit that many readers have of commenting on what they’ve just read entirely anonymously. Sometimes you find, after an admittedly controversial post, that a string of commenters have offered their own distinctive, often bilious, take on the argument behind the shield of anonymity. Some of these comments get to the heart of the weakness in the original post. But others can be just random abuse, attacks that seem to carry proportionally less weight for being made anonymously. If a poster wants to attack an individual without having the courage to identify themselves, we are unable to pass appropriate judgment on their own credentials as a critic. Doesn’t that weaken, if not negate, the substance of the critique? In any case, isn’t hurling abuse at someone from behind that anonymous shield a form of moral cowardice itself? How would any of us react to a letter that made a series of trenchant points, but to which the sender had shrunk from adding his signature? I’ll look forward to the responses to this one...


I really, really strongly agree with this. I didn't use to be quite so vehement on the evils of anonymous commenting. In years gone by, I suspect I may even have left a couple of anon comments on the long departed [personal profile] grimjim LJ. Nothing very vitriolic, I think, but I was very scared of Grim, and therefore found it safer to say "I think you're wrong" whilst not attaching a name. This only happened a couple of times, and then IP tracking put a stop to that.

However, over the years, I've gotten more and more intolerant of people who comment on blogs, on columns, or on livejournals and don't leave their names. I think it is cowardly, and more than that, I think it's intrinsically weak. The vile spoof blog that someone (I don't know who, althought I've always wanted to know for sure) put up about the Darbyshires always struck me as being most obnoxious in its anonymity. Someone wanted Leah and Robin to feel hurt, but didn't even have the courage to be honest in their attack. A lot of the Lib Dem bloggers weren't exactly pleasant during that time period - and I've got a long ramble about different forms of subtle bullying which is lurking at the back of my brain - but none of them left me with such a nasty taste in my mouth. Vivienne Raper, Duff Whatisname, and the assorted merry band of bloggers were snide, sarcastic and at times very provocative, but they all posted under their own names. They all took their hits too. One doesn't have to like them at the end of it all, but I never really felt contempt for them. I did feel contempt for the people who were only prepared to attack from behind some big faceless internet, apparently quite happy to let a third party take crap for it (if it was an innocent third party who was blamed - I've never been entirely sure about this).

It was cowardly. It was cheap.

The same goes for the vast majority of anonymous comments, which I believe is why [community profile] theladiesloos (which is a quite interesting women's only community on LJ) stopped letting its members comment on other people's entries anonymously. There is still a specific account which is used if people wish to post anonymously for very personal problems which they are not ready to be publicly known as having, but they don't let anyone leave comments without adding their name under most circumstances.

Anonymous commenting - 90% of the time it's bad, m'kay. And Michael Gove articulates it so much better than I ever can.

********************************


In other news, can I recommend this blog to everyone. It's the blog of an American woman from Louisiana who has cancer, and has been dealing with the American health system from the point of view of someone who has no health insurance and is relying on that medical care that the state is willing to provide.

I've been reading it with increased horror, and a kind of sickness in my stomach. For those who don't know, my mother died of cancer when I was 22 (I think). She was sick for six years prior to that. At first she was treated on the NHS, and then we went private, due to my family being relatively privileged. However, I did get to see a lot of the NHS during those early years, and I'm honestly shocked and appalled by the story that Liz - the American woman in this blog is telling. I've heard people say that the NHS isn't any good, that it's not reliable, that Americans feel safer with their own system.

But, y'know what? The NHS does provide treatment without a 12 hour wait to see an oncologist. The NHS does not leave people with their credit ratings in shreds, or with horrible debts hanging over them, because they had the misfortune to get sick. The NHS offers back up and help from your GP when you're sick - I lost count of the number of times our local doctor came out to see Mum when she was sick. He came to our house at 2 am on occasion. He dropped by to see Mum when she was at home.

Honestly, I don't even want to think about the state that [profile] pierot and I would be in financially or physically if we lived in the states. I suspect that a private healthcare system would not be kind to a man with chronic asthma, re-occuring pneumonia and severe respitory problems.

I know that we Brits tend to be quite sanctimonious on occasion when talking about America, and I try not to be. I do genuinely think America is a fantastic country, that I have many many fond memories of visiting. Lots of stuff the US does get right. But I am really really quite shocked, reading this blog, and hearing about what life is like without healthcare.
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