“The Bullshit State of Politics in Canadian Libraryland”

Now, this is a good rant.

And what makes a good rant?  Truth is a big part of it.

This person hits the nail on the head that the situation at both Library & Archives Canada and CLA are disgraceful – LAC is being absolutely decimated by Stephen Harper’s War on Information while bending over and saying “Yes sir, may I have another?”  CLA, which said it was going to shift to more of a focus on advocacy during recent financial struggles and soul-searching, has done anything but.

(A great quote from a former colleague – “Well, CLA is irrelevant anyhow.  They’re what, the fourth, maybe the fifth best library association in Canada?  OLA is miles better, BC’s library association is better, Alberta’s in better, the Maritime Library Association is better.”)

I’m on record that I really like CLA and the role it can and should play as the national voice for librarians.  I really like CLA…in theory.  In fact, I have defended CLA against colleague who say that OLA and ALA are much better organizations – simply because they have splashier conferences or nicer member magazines.

Having come out of the world of cultural industry associations  – I know how important it is to have umbrella organizations that serve ALL their members.  The Sask Publishers Group did this when we, against lots of pushback from our traditional publisher member – not only accepted but actively sought-out self-publisher members.  The Writers Guild of Alberta showed this same type of leadership and forward thinking when their board decided that if they closed their Calgary office during a time of financial hardship, they might as well shut down the entire organization.

I’m not convinced that CLA has shown the same type of leadership, forward-thinking and outreach to counter the arguments against them and get people to see the value in membership – not just in a “What’s in it for me?” but in an “I need to join to be part of something larger than myself” sense.

Here’s such a small example but if you look at the CLA listserv and Facebook page, the majority of posts are done by a handful of people.  I’m not saying anything negative against those people and some, like Cabot Yu, are librarians I admire and consider friends.  (Cabot generously sponsored a prize for Spirit of Librarianship Award winners at FIMS when I went there – a fact he kept quiet even after I’d won the award!)

Those forums should be an active, engaged place for librarians from across the country to debate the issues.  Instead, I still remember how, after they set-up a Students-Only version of the CLA listserv and I sent an e-mail encouraging the members to post with a bit about themselves and their interests, I got chastised by a CLA employee who thought I had somehow violated a sacred trust by asking people to post a bit about themselves.

Librarians are the ultimate control freaks – in our workplaces, in our associations, on our listservs and Facebook and Twitter accounts.  I acknowledge that.  But sometimes I think we’re going to control freak ourselves into extinction.

And that’s my own rant on the subject. 😉

How Do You Make Santa Real For Your Kids?

This is a question I posed to MetaFilter last year and am now revisiting this year.  (I was reminded of that question after seeing a recent one about creating Christmas traditions for your nieces and nephews .)

This is, by far, the most favourited comment in that thread:

When I was four, my parents totally rigged a scene where Santa came on Christmas eve, while we were all at church. It had to do with distracting me so that one of them could run back in and throw all the presents under the tree, and I was young enough that I didn’t figure it out for years and finally had to convince my mom to explain how they did it.

So yeah, even though I intellectually understood there was no Santa by the following Christmas, it was really hard for me to give up the last shreds of belief until much later. I probably stopped believing in God before I stopped believing in Santa entirely.

In our family now that I am a parent, Santa brings absolutely absurd and over the top presents that we as parents would clearly never buy, and in fact we are horrified by his excess and his inability to understand our family’s values. My nine-year-old is absolutely convinced Santa couldn’t possibly be us, for this reason, since we are so boring.

We are very, very careful to give fun-but-enriching gifts “from us” to provide even stronger contrast between our gifts and Santa’s. I’m afraid we’re edging into the point where we’ll either have to accept that our kids will grow out of belief, or we’ll have to go Full Puppy.

Star Wars Uncut

The entire Star Wars movie recreated in mash-up form from 15-second, fan-submitted clips makes for a very surreal viewing experience…

(via MetaFilter which mentions that the sequel is now underway)

@ryanMeili Monday – Peeking Under The Troll Bridge #skndpldr

My colleague on the Meili 2.0 Team, Aaron Genest, has written a blog post about the level of animosity that he’s observed in the Sask NDP Leadership race so far.

The topic of how we talk to (and about) each other has been on my thoughts as well for a variety of different reasons – thinking of Twitter, my own blog posts about the leadership race, Ryan’s Official Facebook page, and some of our internal communications on Team Meili – plus how they all inter-relate.

Although I don’t think I’d categorize the tweets or exchanges on #skndpldr as “shocking” or “flame wars” like Aaron does, there have been a couple flare-ups (including some I’ve participated in, against Team Meili’s Social Media Guidelines (which I wrote for godssake!) and with my wife sitting beside me saying “You shouldn’t do that!”.  To which I say, mea culpa and saints forgive me! 😉 )

A lot of this discussion comes down to a fundamental question of when is the line crossed from an honest exchange of differing opinions to “trolling”?

A troll is (currently) defined by Wikipedia as: “someone who posts inflammatory, extraneous, or off-topic messages in an online community, such as a forum, chat room, or blog, with the primary intent of provoking readers into an emotional response or of otherwise disrupting normal on-topic discussion.”

I’d be hard pressed to find more than a handful of tweets in #skndpldr since this contest began that I’d personally classify as out-and-out trolling, especially by those who are clearly identifiable as supporters of one leadership candidate or another. Even the most provocative tweets or those targeted specifically at one candidate by a supporter of another, tend to have some basis in legitimate criticism even if the tone may leave something to be desired (after all, whoever wins is all but guaranteed to need the down ballot support of other candidate’s supporters to win.) And by far, the majority of tweets tend to be supporters of one candidate or another promoting their own chosen candidate.

It’s also important to remember that the line for when a dissenting opinion becomes a troll is different for everyone, whether on Twitter or in another forum. To use the analogy I shared with another colleague, some people tweet as if they’re writing for the New York Times, some tweet as if they’re writing for their hometown weekly and some tweet as if they’re writing for the National Lampoon (of course, you hope those Lampoon tweets have a smiley face at the minimum to help clue you in that the comment is at least meant somewhat tongue-in-cheek or humourously though that’s not always the case.) Depending on the circumstances, people will often write tweets in all three styles – maybe even within the same tweet!

Beyond Twitter, there’s other places online where people can be provocative while walking the line between “all positive all the time” to “constructive criticism” to “criticism for criticism’s sake” to “trolling” with many steps in-between and beyond these broad categories. These include blogs (and blog comments), comments sections of media outlets and so on.

I admit that I struggle with this line myself and how it fits with my own blogging. I try to be “mostly” positive but in all honesty, I don’t know if I could ever embody the “all positive, all the time” politics that Ryan represents and fulfills so well.

But that’s not who I am and not being true to myself if I tried to be. Especially on my own blog, I feel like I have the right to be a bit more pointed in my criticism. And even when some may read it as an “attack” on another candidate – such as a recent post where I observed that all leadership candidates except Cam Broten had previous professional careers that would make them naturals for certain cabinet posts – my point was not to undermine Broten but to highlight something that jumped out at me when listening to how all three framed their answers during the first Regina debate and what previous life experiences they drew mostly heavily on.

In fact, the response I’d make if I was a Broten supporter and read something like that is: “Well, if there’s no natural cabinet spot for him like the other three, the only thing left for Cam is to be Leader. Thanks for your endorsement!” (But if you respond like that, someone will inevitably label you a troll!)

There are other areas where people regularly straddle the line of what’s acceptable. Even with names attached to comments, Facebook is another space that’s filled with drive-by attacks that are often of a trollish nature. For example, we’ve seen a real uptick in the trollish comments appearing on Ryan’s campaign Facebook page recently (I haven’t been closely watching the other candidate’s pages to know if they have been as well . And even if I was looking, there’s no way to know if their policy is simply to delete any trollish comments.)

Frankly, I almost take the increase in trolls coming to Ryan’s page as a compliment since it means that others who disagree with Ryan’s message are targeting him more actively than they have in the past. If Ryan represented no threat to their views (and/or no threat to win the leadership), I doubt they’d waste the time pipe bombing his Facebook page.)

For the time being, our team’s approach is to let the dissenting comments stand as it serves no one to delete comments just because they present a different viewpoint that we don’t agree with or are stated in a less than constructive manner (a recent one simply said “I don’t support communism!” on a post that, as far as I could tell, said nothing about communism. Whew, glad you took the time to share that, ma’am! 😉 )

That doesn’t necessarily mean we’re going to let all comments stand and we’ve had internal discussions to find some common ground for our many social media team volunteers to make sure we have at least some internal consistency about when we know that line is being crossed.

That leads to the other place where dissenting opinions can cross the boundary into, if not trolling, then to a place where honestly intended constructive criticism can be taken as attacks, intentional or otherwise. In your internal discussions among a team, it’s important to have a positive, trusting working relationship but at the same time to be able to openly disagree with one another. The approach I try to follow (again, not always successfully) is to take it to a private forum when I feel that line is crossed – even beyond the shared spaces we have as a campaign team. Chatting with someone via e-mail or Twitter Direct Message or a private Facebook Message means, at a minimum, you’re not putting on a show for others – whether internal team members or external observers – as you discuss your differences of opinion.

There’s even one of our team members who’s smart enough to recognize that picking up the phone and calling someone when they have something important to discuss is often way better than trying to navigate the nuances of the written word no matter the online forum.

Wanna guess who that is? I’ll give you a hint – he’s running for Leader!

Positive, inspiring and adult enough to not get drawn into flame wars with people – how can you not support a guy like that? 😉

[Edit: Here’s an interesting article on Trolls and what makes them tick.]

Going Green in Calgary Centre? I Hope So (And I Don’t Care Who Knows!)

This is probably not a great thing to admit to while not only doing a lot of writing about but also heavily volunteering for one of four NDP leadership candidates here in Saskatchewan.

But I have to admit that if I still lived in Calgary Centre, I’m fairly certain I’d be voting for the Green Party candidate, Chris Turner.

There are a wide number of reasons for this:

  • I first became aware of Chris Turner when he was a stand-out writer with now-sadly-defunct magazine Shift and later, when I happened across the book he wrote on “The Simpsons” TV show in the discount bin at a Safeway store of all places.  I bought it immediately and found him to be as amazing as a long-form writer as in his magazine pieces (and I’m only slightly biased because “The Simpsons” was my religion around that time!)
  • He’s written a number of books since that first one, his latest of which, “The Leap: How To Survive and Thrive In The Sustainable Economy which had the incredibly great honour of receiving the “Hammy” no-prize award as the best non-fiction book I read last year.
  • He’s tapping into much of the same post-partisan, young professional, heavily tech-savvy supporters that defined the successful campaign of Naheed Nenshi. (Small-world coincidence – the author of the first article linked in this bullet point is another friend and colleague from my days working with the Writers Guild of Alberta)
  • He’s a long-time member of MetaFilter.  His profile isn’t exactly hidden but at the same time, I won’t link to it as I’m not sure how private he likes to keep it.  But I always look forward to his comments which just sparkle with intelligence, insight and humour.)
  • He was born in Saskatchewan which immediately makes him a great guy! 😉
  •  I started by saying it’s weird to admit that I’d be voting Green if I still lived in Calgary while so heavily volunteering for Ryan Meili, a candidate for the Sask NDP leadership.  But when you look at Ryan Meili and Chris Turner side-by-side, I’m not sure if you see much difference – authors, activists, well-established global worldview, environmentalists, well-received TED talks, strong Nenshi connections, tech-savvy supporters…the list goes on.  Some may say that just means Ryan’s a Green candidate in disguise (or that Turner is the best candidate the NDP never had – which is probably true).  But for me, I try to remember politics isn’t – or shouldn’t be – a team sport.  Although the NDP is the best fit for me right now given my own personal values, my worldview, my family situation and a number of other factors, I’m also not “NDP 4 Life” to the degree that I would never ever consider voting for a different party depending on circumstances and/or the candidates running.  In fact, when I lived in Calgary Centre, I DID vote for the Greens in the 2004 Federal Election because I liked their candidate better than who the NDP put forward (looking at those results, I wasn’t the only one!) and there’s something that appeals strongly to my innate sense of fairness to want to see more parties successful – on left and in right – and maybe even to eventually move Canada to a more European model of ongoing coalition governments.
  • Many people are opposed to strategic voting for a variety of reasons (I’m not and that’s part of the reason I supported Nathan Cullen in the federal NDP leadership race.)  But even if you are – you have to admit that Calgary-Centre has already proven that strategic voting *can* work – as shown when supporters of the NDP, Liberals, Greens AND Conservatives circled the wagons to barely but still successfully elect Joe Clark in 2000 over the candidate for the newly minted Canadian Alliance.  The same might happen again in this same riding but behind a different consensus candidate – in this case, if the vote of the crowd-sourced 1CalgaryCentre project which asked voters who they should mobilize behind holds and where Turner took 70% of the votes.
  • Also against the “my team, right or wrong” arguments, Turner is making the case that by-elections are one of the rare cases where voters are free to simply vote for the best candidate.  From his web site FAQ: “By-elections are unpredictable. Voters know they aren’t picking the next government, so they rally behind the best candidate. This time around, we know Calgary’s ready to have a real voice instead of just another backbencher.””
  • Although I obviously ran with a lot of writers while I lived in Calgary, I don’t think I ever met Chris.  But many of our shared connections are supporting him too and that’s also important to me.
  • There’s one other reason that I’m supporting Chris and it’s about being a father and I’m not meaning to be cryptic but that’s all I’m going to say about that.

Saturday Snap – Happy 60th Papa Dennis

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Friday Fun Link (Or ‘Friday Frightening Link’ If You’re Scared of Heights)

The Internet is amazing for the places it can take you and the things it can show you.  For example, when I saw a video for “World’s Most Dangerous Ride” posted on MetaFilter, I thought it was pretty cool…

But that thread led to more clips that were *way* scarier.

On a bike…

No safety harness…

This one is the worst…

Music Thursday?

So MeiliMondays have replaced Music Monday for the last couple months which is cool and fine but makes me want to just post a really awesome song now and again.

This little clip, a song I’m sure I’ve posted before but can’t find because I cleverly post song lyrics instead of song titles for those Music Monday posts, is both musical and political.

Perfect.

Plus, if asked to pick, Spirit of the West, is probably one of the bands that defined my college years as much as any other in terms of unadulterated good times.  To this day, I can’t go to a friend’s weddding without hearing “Home For A Rest” – although that’s not the song I’m posting here.  Instead, I give you a house concert version of “Political”…

“A Healthy Society” And The Role of This Book in the #skndpldr campaign of @ryanmeili

Today, Ryan Meili’s campaign announced a very unique fundraiser aimed at getting 50 people to donate $50 (or more!) for a copy of his book, “A Healthy Society” in celebration of the 50th Anniversary of Medicare.

For a $50 donation, people are able to get a signed copy of a book written by the person who could eventually become the next Premier of Saskatchewan (a pretty good deal if you ask me, especially as we head into the holiday season – the biggest book buying period of the year by far!)

Beyond being a useful fundraising tool, there are huge advantages to Ryan being the sole published [edit for clarity: book] author in this leadership contest:

  • It allows people to get to know about Ryan – his experiences, his values and his worldview – in a way that’s not possible with any other candidate.
  • It’s allowed Ryan to have a two-pronged approach to building his profile – both by attending events as a traditional politician but also by visiting towns and cities across Saskatchewan and beyond as a published author doing book launches and related events – which gets him in front of people and media opportunities that may not be available to a regular politician.
  • It also allows his ideas to travel far beyond where he can reach in person.
  • In an age of web sites, YouTube clips, blogs, magazines, newspapers, ideas can also travel widely in other ways. But there is still nothing better than a book for giving legitimacy to a person and their ideas.
  • Two of the main qualities to write a book are high level of intelligence and also perseverance. (If I had a nickel for every person I met when I worked for the Writers Guild of Alberta who said “I want to write a book” but never did, I’d…well, I’d be able to make another $50 donation to Ryan’s campaign in support of this fundraiser!)
  • Some of the most notable politicians of recent history – from Winston Churchill to Jack Layton to Barack Obama – were published authors – either before, during or after their careers in politics. (cue the “MeiliChurchill” anonymous attack account on Twitter! 😉 )
  • Beyond this one-off fundraising pitch, the sale of the book has been and will continue to provide an ongoing revenue stream for Ryan’s campaign. (The book was apparently a big hit when Ryan attended the Alberta NDP convention!)
  • Ryan donates a percentage of profits to SWITCH, a great program

The Future #skndpldr Cabinet

Others have weighed in with their thoughts on the first All-Candidates Forum (and one thing that is clear from the varied commentary I’ve seen online and heard directly from others) is that no one really “won” the debate and instead, by the end of the night, the (relatively) equal footing of the various candidates so far was re-confirmed.

I may add some additional observations at some point but for now, I want to hone in on one specific thought that kept occurring to me as I watched the four candidates last Saturday and heard them drawing on their previous and current experience to answer the various questions.

Obviously, the reality is that there can only be one ultimate winner at the end of this contest.  But even knowing that, when the NDP gets back in power, I’d say they’re poised to have a blockbuster of a cabinet.

Really, with one minor exception, all candidates would immediately slot into high-profile portfolios given their education and work backgrounds…

Ryan Meili – Health
Erin Weir – Finance
Trent Wotherspoon – Education

The only candidate who doesn’t seem to have had a professional career before entering politics that would naturally connect them to an existing portfolio is Cam Broten whose biography on his web site lists tree planting, teaching assistant at a University, government facilitator and policy analyst as his previous jobs.

That’s not a slam on Cam as I’m sure there are lots of portfolios that don’t obviously tie in to a person’s previous experience (as a silly example, I suspect most Highways Ministers don’t have much more experience with Highways beyond driving on them prior to assuming that vital role!)

And since becoming an MLA five years ago, he served as opposition critic for Advanced Education & Youth previously and now as Critic for Health, Seniors, Advanced Education, Employment, and Immigration (which also shows how stretched current MLA’s are after the disastrous 2011 election – Cam went for responsibility for two areas to five!)

But as I said, it jumped out to me at the debate that Cam’s the only one who doesn’t have a natural spot to be slotted in a future cabinet based on his education and work background – although I’m sure he’d excel in whichever role the future leader were to assign him.