Letters posted here are associated with the following Salon Premium Member:
Published Letters: 159
Editor's Choice: 3
I certainly didn't mean to insult you, so I'm glad you didn't take it as such.
In answer to your question, I feel that way for several reasons. When you get right down to it, some of them don't have a whole lot of hard support beyond that I do feel that way, just to be honest straight off. I think some do, though.
It's like this for me: You are in a curious position with regard to the use of a blog. The words here apply to more than just the blog. You're not a blogger running a blog, you're the Editor of a major online publication. So it's a bit odd to me to look in your blog for stuff that applies to the publication outside your blog, regardless of the fact that it's effectively not separate from the publication.
I myself find blogs to be curious creatures with their mix of helpful facts and real-world experience or actual journalism...and the flipside: pure opinion, bad journalism or no journalism, et cetera. Blogs are no doubt an evolutionary step in new media, but we don't know what they'll evolve into yet.
But given what they are right now, I wouldn't expect, by way of analogy, to find statements on my company's direction and policy on my company's chief exec's blog.
Similarly, I don't expect to have to read a teammate's blog to get part of the information picture about the project we're collectively producing. If there's something we need to know, I expect that to be put out on a channel that's all signal and no noise. There's plenty of blogs out there that are inside views on some project or group process, but I can't think of one that's also being used as an actual management tool by the project participants themselves.
Blogs are often signal and noise. Like your going to the ballpark isn't quite on the same level as your changing the anonymity policy at Salon. Know what I mean?
My opinion is that it's bad information architecture and usage. Like imagine it's 2009, and there's a new Editor at Salon because you expired in a paroxysm of ecstasy when Democrats retook the White House in November of 2008.
Let's say you're Joe New User and you're thinking about subscribing now (because of the obvious commitment to ideology the previous Editor demonstrated). You want to get the editorial policy and review its history.
Are you going to look at the previous Editor's blog archives to get that? Or X Editors down the road's blog archives? Wouldn't you kind of gravitate toward a From The Editors section if one was provided? Dunno, maybe I'm just wired incorrectly, but that's where I'd be looking to pick up the signal I was after.
I look at your statements as the Editor as being like an ongoing evolving contract between you as a publisher and me as a subscriber. I don't expect to have to reread my terms of membership every time a policy changes, for instance. Nor would I want those, say, spammed to me in my e-mail to make sure that due diligence is being done in regard to keeping me informed of what's going on with something in which I'm a participant.
From The Editor is a good place for this content. I like that the blog is by and about Joan. I also like that From The Editor is by and about Salon, if you follow.
I understand your feelings about using From The Editor. Having to be the community member that Puts Out The Word on thus-and-such. The leader, speaking from the lofty position that doesn't feel very lofty at all, but ain't nobody else gonna do it. Been there. It's yucky. Yeah, people think you're an ass, no matter what. But sometimes it's got to be done, right? Can't please everyone and all that.
Tough line to walk. I don't envy you. I have liked this also, I think it's been good too, in this particular instance. I just think as a matter of consistent practice it would be possibly not so good to adopt. Just saying.
Enjoy your weekend!
I've been out of active duty ten years now, so weight my statements appropriately.
Maybe for some positions, it should be gender-blind tests of strength and endurance. Then, only those men and women who can meet the requirements would be allowed to serve in those units. But that would exclude a lot of puny men, who are out there.
This is already the case in a great many areas. You don't meet the standards, you're out. Yes there are different physical standards for men and women. People with an endomorphic build are advantaged. People with a mesomorphic build are even often disadvantaged in meeting military standards, and have to take an additional body-composition measurement to ensure that it isn't just their weight alone that's blowing the standard.
Although that does bring up the problem of women (and men too, possibly) falsely accusing their commanding officers of this kind of thing to get out of going on the dangerous route.
I saw this happen in my significant other's battalion in peacetime. Two slugs by any gender conspired to level sexual harassment accusations against their supervising sergeant. He was a good man and the accusations baseless, but they managed to tie up ops for a good couple of weeks in the ensuing investigation.
Rape and sexual harrassment in the military is disgusting and should not be tolerated, full stop. But I'm an idealist who's seen reality and the one sometimes colors the other.
I view it largely as an American military cultural and not a written-regulations problem at this time. The one influences the application of the other. And the writer who wrote the quoted article needs to get her dumb butt in a uniform and find out for her own self.