Thursday, October 6, 2011

Cubans and Blogs

Cubans and Blogs
October 6, 2011
Dariela Aquique

Without Internet access many Cubans are limited to the "official
version" on issues and events.

HAVANA TIMES, October 6 — I'm sure that if one was to survey a good
number of Cubans, the overwhelming majority wouldn't know anything about
the phenomenon of "blogging."

The few chances of accessing the Internet by nationals, the almost zero
possibility of owning a PC or a laptop by the vast majority, as well as
the limited information about the existence of these types of websites
in the country (given the fears that people have of unofficial news),
have resulted in many professionals, university students and
higher-level workers remaining unaware of the meaning of the words
"blog" or "blogger."

They boast of an educational and instructional system at the level of
developed countries while the most fundamental advances in technology
and communications are sequestered.

Despite this, every day the number of people motivated to connect to
these sites grows as people are eager to learn and become familiar with
other perspectives on a given topic. The journalism provided by the
government remains manipulated and biased, as we have pointed out many
times. I say that because in Cuba there's no other recognized
journalism other than that provided by the state.

However the ranks are growing among Cuban bloggers who write for several
specific online sites as well as for their own personal blogs about
Cuba, with these coming from inside and outside the island.

There are now many of these as people who have started blogs with the
intention of revealing aspects of social, cultural, economic life and
commenting on national traditions and particularities. Sometimes it's
impossible to circumvent politics in blog entries; coming from how
politicized life is for Cubans in all aspects. But this isn't why the
posts of Cuban bloggers are neither orthodox nor definitively adversarial.

In an interview given by Professor Ted Henken in May of this year, this
scholarly expert on Cuba drew a map of the Cuban blogosphere that he
called Cartografia de Blogolandia (The Cartography of Blogland). In it
he traces a thematic map that divides the bloggers into six groups.

In Henken's opinion: "In Havana Times it is common to find criticism
from the left of the revolution, its contradictions, its hypocrisy.
They even defend freedom of expression for bloggers of Voces Cubanas.
Havana Times advocates democratic socialism where there's a right to
disagree…"

I should not, I cannot, speak for my colleagues. Each reserves the
right to have a private opinion as to why they write blogs. I believe a
good part of our group advocates democratic socialism. I, however, lean
somewhat more toward the opinion of Professor Alexis Jardines,
juxtaposing democracy and socialism, appealing to the position of the
first, ruling out the possibility of a socialist alternative.

Finding a blog.

Many people turn pale before terms like pluralism, freedom of
expression, individual rights, and democracy because they think these
are referred to as the neo-liberal status quo in most of the world,
which is considered to be in crisis.

I think all socio-political models are in crisis right now. We are
surviving in a wave of failures. The only thing that's undeniable is
that the great technological revolution will be the only thing the
drives the world forward. Like any practice, it will take a long time,
but only under these neo-liberal terms is change possible.

Social media's importance and influence makes it an undisputable part of
neoliberalism, although there are those who don't like the name. But I
also believe that nothing will ever be black and white.

Recently someone insulted me, ending up calling me a term for
pathological because they said that I praise the reality that I also
grumble about. I don't understand where in my statements that comes
from. There's no reason to be stubbornly intransigent. What's laudable
will remain and what's reprehensible will be denounced, but without
passionate extremism. Like the Bible says: "To Caesar what is Caesar's
and to God what is God's."

But how can the vast majority of Cubans take part in the discussion if
they don't even have an idea that opinions like these or contrary ones
exist, if they can't read Yoani, Elaine or me, and if they only hear the
official version of events. If the Cubans and blogs never meet, it will
be very difficult to make a new and better future for our island.

http://www.havanatimes.org/?p=52342

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