Follow up to: Idiot University Student

VCDan found some great t-shirts inspired by the whole "Don’t tase me, bro" event.

The first one, with the stick figures, that’s my favorite. Christmas is coming up, y’all.

Yeah, you knew I couldn’t stay away from this bit about the UF student (here’s his website, by the way) that got tasered at a speech by John Kerry. A lot of people are jumping to his defense, but I watched the video below and thought he was a total douchebag - rude, monopolizing the mic, out of control, resisting arrest.

You can’t do that, moron.

Seriously, he comes across in the full video, the video that shows what led up to the police stepping in, like someone with a mental problem. No, not trying to be funny, just an observation. I’ve said it before and I’ll say it again - I wish I knew half as much as I thought I knew when I was his age.

Forgive them - they too young and dumb to realize that once you add a “fee”, it defies the laws of physics that state that something that goes up must come down. Fees never come down, and volunteering to pay them damns the students that follow to pay escalations caused by an ever-increasing portfolio of “green projects”. After all, if I were a University president, every building in the planning stage would be classified as “green” and I’d rape that fund for every penny and hit those environmentally-aware-but-financially-stupid kids for every penny I could squeeze out of them. Or their parents.

Florida university students push for ‘green’ fees
Orlando Business Journal - 9:00 AM EDT Monday, May 14, 2007

Students from the University of Central Florida, New College, Florida Atlantic University, University of Florida are working to kick-start a funding source to apply environmentally friendly practices on campuses. and the

The first phase of the plan is to incorporate a proposed 50- to 75-cent “green fee” into tuition to finance projects that would campus energy consumption and greenhouse gas emissions. The proposals are asking for a campus sustainability committee made up of students, faculty and staff to oversee those funds.

UCF’s green fee campaign is expected to be voted on by students during the student government elections in the fall. It follows the national campaign Campus Climate Challenge, under which similar proposals have been made at southeastern colleges, such as the University of North Carolina in Chapel Hill and the University of Tennessee.

“Campuses use a large portion of the nations energy from non-renewable resources like coal which contribute to global warming pollution,” says Stephen Mortellaro, UCF student senator and green fee campaign coordinator, in a prepared statement. “We’ve got to do something and the [green] fee seems like a great first step.”

UF’s Gators for Sustainable Campus group recently passed a student vote with 78 percent approval. The issue is awaiting review by the board of trustees this summer.

I don’t talk about it here much, but I have several other blogs, including one that has a decent pagerank (for a blog) and brings in ‘moonlighting’ income from paid ad placements, not clickthroughs. I don’t say this to brag, just to present my blogging “cred”, if you will. I say this because I can probably claim some expertise in, and opinions about, blogging that don’t necessarily coincide with some expressed in this article.

*Note: If you’re interested in Jacksonville Blogs, visit the link to the original article. They list several from a variety of niches.


From The Florida Times-Union:
June 20, 2006
Bloggers in Duval proclaim their role

By CHARLIE PATTON
The Times-Union

Joey Marchy says he was a member of the school newspaper staff during his years at Stanton College Preparatory School.

But Marchy, Class of ‘95, doesn’t remember ever writing a story. He just liked to hang out in the newspaper office.

When he went to the University of North Florida, Marchy studied information systems. He makes his living as a computer programmer for nGen Works, a Web development firm in Jacksonville.

In his spare time, he practices an emerging form of journalism called blogging.

But Marchy, 28, doesn’t call himself a journalist.

“I don’t fact-check,” he said. “I don’t get credentials.”

A blog, short for weblog, is an online dated journal listing periodic essays, often on a specific topic that usually provides links to other news sources.

Marchy, who launched his blog, “Urban Jacksonville,” last June, got pretty fired up about the role bloggers now play in the dissemination of news when, in early April, he posted his “Urban Manifesto:”

“This city needs to wake up and realize that WE ARE THE NEW MEDIA,” he wrote. “WE the bloggers of Jacksonville, WE the people who post comments on message boards and more so, we members of this community have a right to expose what is going on behind the curtain. I am talking about all of us, the citizens of this community. We have a right to report, publish and comment on any story that is news to us.”

I visited Urban Jacksonville to read this comment in context because, frankly, it came across as immodest at a minimum, delusional at it’s worst. My wife said, “Wow, he sure sounds arrogant!” My kneejerk reaction was that if you need to “wake up” a city to make them aware of you, then you’re NOT the new media. In the context of the actual post, however, Marchy was defending the right of a citizen, who happened to be a message board poster, to contact contact public officials listed in public records and ask questions. I won’t bother with re-hashing the original issue. Regardless, taking the comment out of context probably did a disservice to Marchy. I, for one, was immediately turned off, and I’m probably as serious or moreso that Marchy about my blogs. I can only imagine what the uninformed reader will think. Anyway, get over and read it in context.

Tsk, tsk, Mr. Reporter.

I won’t bother analyzing the rest of the article. It was generally a positive article about the little man staking out a place to make his voice heard on any number of subjects. There were a couple of statements made with no supporting facts (”What blogs can do is have influence. People are paying attention to Marchy’s Urban Jacksonville…” Um, okay - which people? How were they influenced? - Not saying this is inaccurate, but to make a declaration without pointing to examples isn’t great journalism. Of course, what do I know, I’m a blogger and not bound by facts or reality. ;-) )… but we won’t go there.

Oops. Too late.

Anyway, that’s it for the article. Moving on to this:…

Even though Stephen Dare contends Metro Jacksonville is a blog, it does not allow readers to comment and participate in the conversation taking place on the website. This fact alone, prevents it from being classified as a blog. Enable comments, you have a blog.

Jeff Price’s blogTower of C, while it has the characteristics of a blog, it is actually a podcast. The only content is weekly audio post…

Now, THIS is arrogant. I’ve noticed that bloggers that begin to build audiences for themselves start taking blogging WAY too seriously. It’s usually somewhere between the 6th and 12th month of the blog.

Enabling comments makes you a blog? Some of the most widely read blogs in my other blogrolls disabled comments. For people like these, I imagine they tired of the “voices” all the time. I’ve disabled my comments on one of my other blogs once or twice also - the problem with blogging in a niche where the readers have disposable income and a willingness to gamble with it brings out the spammers in waves and some don’t care about comment moderation - there’s money to be made.

I’ve checked out metrojax.com, and there are certainly arguments to be made that would hold more water than “enable comments”. There’s ALOT going at that site. However, right there on the front page are a number of photographs and text entries listed in reverse chronological order. Updated more frequently than some blogs I follow.

As for “Tower of C”… I see a site with textual event listings and podcasts. Information of interest to the author, maybe to an audience, distributed and presented in reverse chronological fashion. Looks like a blog. Is it the audio? So, pictures are ok, but audio isn’t…

I don’t think it’s ever a good idea for bloggers to start eating their young with ‘that’s not a blog’ declarations. No two people are going to have the same opinion about what a blog is or isn’t, nor about the quality of good blogs versus bad blogs. Blogs come in many shapes and sizes, and the variety is as great as the number of individuals and organizations that use them. Seems to me I read something very similar somewhere:

My favorite quote from the article comes from Nick Strate of Ricotta Park. He says:

What’s so interesting about it right now is that you can really shape the form. There are not really standards, not really rules.

And this is so true and why blogging in Jacksonville is so exciting.

Ahem.

Finally, I find it odd when people link to wiki definitions to make a point, without going a step further (”… it is actually a podcast.”). How about this wiki definition:

A weblog, which is usually shortened to blog, is a website where regular entries are made (such as in a journal or diary) and presented in reverse chronological order. Blogs often offer commentary or news on a particular subject, such as food, politics, or local news; some function as more personal online diaries. A typical blog combines text, images, and links to other blogs, web pages, and other media related to its topic. Most blogs are primarily textual although many focus on photographs, videos or audio

Although blogs are typically a text medium, there are also non-text versions such as audioblogs (sometimes known as podcasts), photoblogs and videoblogs (aka vlogs).

Or this one:

Audioblogging is a variant on the blogging trend of online self-publishing, using audio to reach the audience instead of text used by traditional blogs. Audioblogs have similar form as blogs, using post-based entries cataloged by time and date. There is usually a title and brief description, but the bulk of content is in the linked audio file. Usually audioblogs are MP3 format, but occasionally in Ogg Vorbis, AAC, or Macromedia Flash formats.

Please note that nowhere in this rant post have I said what a blog ISN’T. I’ve learned from experience that it’s really stupid to set myself up as the judge of the blogosphere. To me, a blog is simply a usere-friendly way to distribute information at some regular or irregular interval of time. Sometimes, that information has socially redeeming value, like neighborhood advocacy. Sometimes, it’s audio files, baby pictures, and my fat blog.