“Comrades need to stop complaining on the
internet and bring their concerns to branch meetings”. I paraphrase, but
variations on this canard are repeated quite often, sometimes with an addendum
along the lines of, “we need to engage with the real world”.
We do need to engage with the real world
but moral injunctions about branch meetings are just the opposite of such
engagement. Revolutionary socialists advocate direct discussion and open voting
against closed meetings and secret ballots, but this fine, hard won principle
is not being applied intelligently.
Any medium is by definition is exclusive.
You’re either online or not. You can either attend a meeting or you can’t.
There are plenty of reasons why someone might not be able to make regular
meetings on a Wednesday or Thursday night, too many to list. It certainly
doesn’t make you lazy or devious or your opinions invalid. It can equally be
said that electronic communication provides an invaluable resource for people
not able to meet face to face. In fact it allows a far greater pooling of
experience and information than a geographical branch.
But there’s more to it than this. There is
an unacknowledged bias that has been hardened by the misapplication of the idea
of direct democracy. Why does a branch meeting count as the real world (when quite often
it’s a group of ardent left-wingers agreeing with each other then arranging a
paper sale) when online discussion does not?
It is, in part, a residual prejudice of 20th
Century thought. Using McLuhanite terms, under print media
the written word is dissociated and cool, whereas the spoken word is involved
and hot. The written word had elevated status because it was recorded, for all
time.
Thanks to electronic media the written word
can unfold as fast as spoken conversation. There is no going back to the old
ways of thinking. The internet not only has an idiom of its own (idiom being a
sure sign of intense involvement not cool dissociation) but is affecting
language and communication in general.
The party must come to understand
electronic media and incorporate them as part of a democratic mix, including
print media and public meetings, or it will become irrelevant, and all for the
sake of principles transformed into shibboleths. To put it another way, if you
don’t like what people are saying online don’t hide away in your branch
meetings, get out into the real world, get online.
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