Friday, April 07, 2006

Dear Ms. Halliwell: You're fired.


All right, folks, pay attention because we have a job to do and it's a simple one: get Janet Halliwell removed from her position as executive vice-president of SSHRC. A bit drastic, you say? Shut up. No, wait, let me explain.

To recap, Halliwell is, of course, the loon who, over here, made some abominably stupid statements regarding the evidence for biological evolution (emphasis added):

Janet Halliwell, the SSHRC's executive vice-president and a chemist by training, acknowledged that the "framing" of the committee's comments to Alters left the letter "open to misinterpretation."

Halliwell said confidentiality obligations made it difficult for her to discuss Alters's case in detail, but she argued that the professor had taken one line in the letter "out of context" and the rejection of his application should not indicate that SSHRC was expressing "doubts about the theory of evolution."

However, Halliwell added there are phenomena that "may not be easily explained by current theories of evolution" and that the scientific world's understanding of life "is not static. There's an evolution in the theory of evolution."

So, on the one hand, Halliwell is clearly suggesting that perhaps people are over-reacting and that maybe things are being taken out of context. OK, fair enough. But, really, how else do you interpret the emphasized parts above other than expressing a definite skepticism of the basic fact of evolution? In what context do those statements make any sense whatsoever? And what to do about them? I'm glad you asked.

We need to get her fired.

To be fair, we should follow this story closely and wait for all of the evidence to come in but, barring any sudden revelations of misinterpretation, it's clear that Halliwell is emphatically unqualified for the position she currently holds and should either resign or be fired. And what does the left-wing Canadian blogosphere have to do with this? Again, good question.

It just so happens I was pondering writing a piece asking whether the liberal (small "l" there) blogosphere in Canada could claim any actual "victories." As a basis for comparison, look south to see what happens when someone really pisses off the lefties down there. It can be thoroughly unpleasant.

Remember man-whore Jeff Gannon? Life for him went pretty much to shit once John at AmericaBlog got ahold of him. With the support of other big-time leftie blogs, it was only a matter of time before Gannon was driven from the White House Press Corps. Leftie bloggers: 1; Republican man whores: 0. And it doesn't end there.

Remember 24-year-old George Deutsch, Republican hack and NASA press officer? Once his idiocy became public, his career was effectively over, and it didn't take long, did it? Once he was in the cross-hairs, it was just a matter of time.

And who can forget serial liar and plagiarist Ben Domenech, whose career as a right-wing blogger at the Washington Post was measured in mere days before he was torn limb from limb and driven into the night in total disgrace? Oh, yes, the left-wing blogworld down south has definitely learned how to play dirty, and they get results. And up here?

Well, what exactly can liberal Canadian bloggers point to as victories they've accomplished, differences they've made, thoroughly evil people they've crushed? Not a whole lot, as far as I can tell. Why not? These days, Progressive Bloggers of Canada boasts well over 200 members, whose collective effect on the Canadian political landscape seems to be virtually nil. (And, let me clear, I'm not presenting myself as being any better but, given that there so many of them, one would like to think that that much manpower in one place should have some serious political clout.)

So we look around and, as a community, we seem to have accomplished next to nothing. We bitch, and we whine, and we dig up juicy little tidbits about right-wing nutbars up here, and we publish them and, in the end, most of those stories sink without a trace as if they never existed.

Maybe this Halliwell story is the one where we, as a community, take a stand and say we're simply not going to accept someone this criminally imcompetent in charge of a publicly-funded government agency. Maybe, just this once, we don't all just publish snarky pieces about it, make fun of her stupidity, pat ourselves on the backs and then move on. Maybe, just this once, it's time to say that someone's head should roll, and we know exactly whose head that is.

Or we can just go back linking to pieces in the MSM, adding a bit of amusing snark and moving on to the next topic, satisfied in the knowledge that we have accomplished precisely squat.

Time to make some tough decisions, I think.

WHO ARE THE BIG DOGS? Perhaps I should have addressed this point earlier. I think part of the growing success of the left-wing blogosphere in the U.S. is that there are a number of extremely high-profile, well-trafficked members of that community who are getting more and more publicity each week.

Consider Markos of DailyKos, John Aravosis of AmericaBlog, Jane Hamsher of FireDogLake, Josh Marshall of TPM and so on. These people pull in loads of hits every day, and they're now being invited to be on radio, TV and so on. You clearly don't need a lot of blogs when you have a few with this kind of clout.

So the obvious question is -- does the left-wing blogosphere in Canada have anyone of that stature? And by "stature," I mean people who, when they get pissed, can actually get results. To the best of my knowledge, we have no one, but I'm willing to be educated on the topic.

13 comments:

Anonymous said...

CC - I don't know about Halliwell, one doesn't get much context in the quotations in the paper. But here is some critical context from the Gazette article:
he members of the SSHRC committee that rejected Alters's application were: chairperson Susan Bennett of the department of English literature at the University of Calgary; Lawrence Felt of the department of sociology at Memorial University of Newfoundland; University of Ottawa history professor Ruby Heap; Gilbert Larochelle from the department of human sciences at the Universite du Quebec a Chicoutimi; and Ruth Rose from the department of economics at the Universite du Quebec a Montreal.
So, the people who decided that maybe Brian should prove that Darwin was right before they recommended funding his project were, an English prof, a sociologist, a historian, an economist and something unspecified. Does this give some insight into the process?
You might email Brian and ask him to post the SSHRC response letter so we have more info, but I think you might be able to guess at the dynamics behind this decision - a combination of sheer ignorance and post-modern crap, I suspect.
Firing Halliwell, while satisfying, won't fix that.

Robert McClelland said...

Well, what exactly can liberal Canadian bloggers point to as victories they've accomplished, differences they've made, thoroughly evil people they've crushed?

We don't have a media to back us up. It's not the bloggers that make a difference, it's the mainstream media who do when they pick up and give widespread coverage to what the bloggers are doing.

Have you ever seen the media pick up on what the progressive bloggers are saying? Me neither, but I have seen the media pick up on what the conservative bloggers are saying.

And that's because they have party apparatchiks like Levant, Coren and Weston, to name a few, who will push their idiotic lies into the mainstream. Compare that to people like McQuaig, Dobbins or Margolis who don't even seem to realize blogs exist let alone are willing to push our work into the mainstream.

So until we get people in the media who are willing to help propagate our points of view, progressive bloggers are on their own and won't have much success--except when stabbing their side in the back ala Kinsella or CG.

CC said...

robert mcclelland writes:

We don't have a media to back us up.

I don't think they're much better off down south. I mean, the MSM down there is about as pathetic as it gets. The only reason they finally deign to cover something is only when it becomes a big enough issue that they simply can't ignore it any more.

I don't think we can blame the media here.

Anonymous said...

I think that the American Blogosphere has alot of support from the already well established/well trafficked alt-media has alot to do with their success. Maybe it's because we don't have the solid intermediary between the blogs and the MSM that Canadian blogs don't get much coverage. We need something like a Canadian Alternet...

Anonymous said...

Maybe I'm not educated enough on what work has been done by Canadian web loggers, but the American examples cited as persons/scandal exposed by the online magpie society seem to have been the result of volunteer investigative journalism.

Said online journalism, amateur and professional, used good old reportage digging techniques, citing provable references of misdeeds and misrepresentations. Once that was done, the rest of the online news sharing community distributed the exposes with breathtaking speed.

Once the truth was legworked, found, collated and handed around, the non-Net journalism sources could be inundated with it until they paid attention.

I don't think that's happened up here, because we haven't had the scandals of the same grand scale up here. However, I've seen signs many are closely watching the Harper government for faux pas and deception.

I'd be interested in hearing if this grant application process was influenced by the change of the Federal Guard. (who's the new minister in charge of it?) If not, does the grant application board have a history of such decisions? Is this a weird deviation? Are there new board members?

Obviously this story /has/ been picked up by the non-Net press, given the source of the article, but perhaps Net investigators could provide some of that more indepth information.

I suspect there won't be any official position on the outcome by the CPC government. If the board is a Liberal set up, you'd think they'd be all over its mocking outcome, but then again, given the alleged catering to religious support as the reason for revisiting equal marriage, maybe not.

Anonymous said...

First, educate yourself on how SSHRC actually allocates funding. Second, delete this post to save yourself any further humiliation.

CC said...

Dear "anonymous":

You'd have a little more credibility if you actually explained what your point was. Just sayin'.

Anonymous said...

sbennett@ucalgary.ca
lfelt@mun.ca
rheap@uOttawa.ca
Gilbert_Larochelle@uqac.ca
rose-lizee.ruth@uqam.ca

The thing to do is to draft an email, forward it to people, get them to sign it, and then get each person who signs it to forward it to those 5 addresses as well.

Alison said...

Committee member Larry Felt issues an outrageous clarification that is infinitely worse than Halliwell's original statement in the
Vancouver Sun
Definitely PoMo crap.

And is it too much to ask Canadian papers to stop referring to the 9 guys of various disciplines who signed the US Discovery Institute ID petition as "university professors"?
Software developers and IBM electrical engineers are not university professors.
ID petition

Anonymous said...

I think American progressive bloggers have a couple of advantages not currently shared by their Canadian counterparts. First, the American left has languished under six years of Dumbya, which has provided an enourmous impetus to the growth of the liberal blogosphere south of the border. Not only is Bush the very antithesis of so much that progressives stand for, but the fact everything he does is colored by considerations of naked partisanship has greatly inflamed progressive opinion against him. Add the fact the progressive views are largely ignored by the MSM and you have a hothouse environment for the growth of liberal blogs.

In constrast, Canadians have only had a few weeks to get to know Stephen Harper, and he is in any case handcuffed by a minority government.

The other thing the American blogosphere has, on both the right and left, is a cadre of bloggers who do this as a full time job. Blogs like DailyKos and TPM Cafe produce a lot more content than would be possible for anyone doing this part time. Morevover, not only do they have huge readership in and of themselves, but because everyone reads them as soon as they post a hot story (even one they didn't originate) it travels almost instantaneously across the blogosphere, allowing them to reach an audience many times the size of their own. I think this is the key to the ability of the liberal blogosphere in the States to mobilize quickly and effectively.

(Apropos nothing, I also think the fact that DailyKos is set up to allow a much greater degree of reader participation than is usual in blogs is a key reason for its success).

In short, I think Canadian blogs still need to evolve (no pun intended) some more before they will attain the level of sophistication and influence they have in the US.

I don't think that's any reason for discouragement however, even Kos had to start somewhere.

Zorpheous said...

Not going into the whole SSHRC affair here CC, but I want to examine your take on Leftwing blogs and how we fail to make a difference (yes I consider my self leftwing when I look at Angry and Kate and the other heavy hitters who do seem to hold some power)

Remember back in the Grewal affair, myself, Mark of Section 15 and of course Buckets worked our asses off. Mark and Buckets wrote the material and I provided tech support, did site raiding, hack up a few files. Buckets did the heavy out-in-the-open work and published all the facts, we even produced that video that showed how the CPC tried to paste the Liberals as crooks.

So what happened? Nothing. We did all the research work and costly and time consuming analysis that the MSM will not do, because it is too labour intensive and cost to much. We gave them a free-bee. They could have beat the shit out of Harper with our research. But they didn't.

Mean while on the other side of the fence, Ezra will use Kate and Angry as sources, place them in the spot light, and it doesn't matter a lick of difference if they right or wrong about a subject. Right of center news sources will publish almost anything providing it would get in legal trouble.

The other MSM don't like the blogs, they see them competition or a risky sources for info. See we are ignored.

So what would it take? It would take getting some very talented writers, You and Dave from the Golloping Beaver would easily qualify, get a few other sane and excellent writers who are not afraid of taking a stand before all the facts are know. Then make a blog where all of you post, the throw some money (not a lot) at advertisement. And then pitch it to CTV and Globe and Mail and a few others, oh and place in quite little threat that if they don't except, 200 bloggers will start bashing them on a daily basis.

Saskboy said...

I'm not really in favour of getting someone fired if they are just a person behind the scenes and it won't help change the course of the panel.

The thing about bloggers is that they only get big with the help of other big bloggers, their previous fame from TV, Print, or Radio, or they have personalities pushing the blog as authoritative.

Small Dead Animals is a good example of this, it's not updated as frequently as some blogs that are much more worth reading are, yet it gets dozens of comments over the silliest of subjects. Kate's readers slurp up her spin that she somehow dreams up or passes along, and it's a self perpetuating Tory hatefest. Michelle Malkin in the USA is about the same thing as far as I've seen, with her whipping up disgust for the "big bad Muslims" instead of Kate discussing corruption in First Nations communities with no productive end in mind.

To be an influencial blog, you need the eye and ear of someone who's already in the main stream media spotlight. In SK, the news talk radio hosts push Small Dead Animals, Bourque, and Neale News. If we had radio hosts that mentioned sites like the non partisan Sask Blog Aggregator http://www.catprint.ca/saskblogs/ , or multipartisan Vast Left Wing Conspiracy, then we'd have a more balanced blog readership fostered by the media.

CC said...

"saskboy" writes:

I'm not really in favour of getting someone fired if they are just a person behind the scenes and it won't help change the course of the panel.

Then what would you propose with respect to Ms. Halliwell? No disrespect intended, but this sounds like what has afflicted the Democrats in the U.S. for years -- they keep promising that, next time, they'll finally draw that line in the sand, just you wait, yessir. Next time.

The 24-year-old NASA wonderwank George Deutsch was just a small, ignorant cog in the big machine, but that didn't stop the American leftosphere from (justifiably) destroying him, and good for them. The same with that worthless hack Ben Domenech.

I don't think it's relevant how big (or small) a player Halliwell is. I think, given her overwhelming ignorance, she needs to be removed from her position. I think it's time that the left-leaning blogosphere in Canada took a stand somewhere.

Why not here? And why not now?