Subject: Re: proposal - punditry book |
From: Barrett Brown <barriticus@gmail.com> |
Date: 1/14/11, 16:15 |
To: Michael Bourret <mbourret@dystel.com> |
An unprecedented coalition of information activists and organizations have come together in an effort to advance the ongoing campaign against the informational tyranny that has been on view as of late in the context of Wikileaks, Julian Assange, and Bradley Manning. All three of these parties have been subjected to state oppression, without due regard for the alleged "rule of law;" all three have been maligned in dishonest and often bizarre ways; all three have earned such treatment by way of having together ensured that all of humanity may, for the first time in history, together learn how it is that their wealth, loyalty, and lives are being used by those who plead national security while having provided no such thing to their own citizens and even seizing it from those living elsewhere.
In response to these latest outrages against competence and decency, our coalition - comprised of veterans and anti-war groups, a faction of the Anonymous movement, the distributed think-tank Project PM, and a loose network of journalists, media professionals, scientists, former intelligence and government officials, and related organizations - announces a stepped-up campaign of information and direct action that begins tomorrow and which will culminate in a rally and press conference on the steps of New York City Hall on April 7th at 3:00 pm. This event, the Rally for Information Freedom, will be supplemented by a campaign on the part of Anonymous, Project PM, and related entities to bring attention to the dozens of significant stories that have been largely ignored due to the unfortunate dynamics by which too many media have come to operate. The New York conference - conceived by longtime resident activist, Navy veteran, and acclaimed photographer John Penley - will feature about a dozen speakers including Penley, author and Project PM founder Barrett Brown, key Anonymous activist and Chanology co-instigator Gregg Housh, and National Lawyers Guild executive director Heidi Boghosian. Messages from other figures in the pro-transparency movement will also be presented in lieu of their ability to attend.
Never in human history has mankind endured a period in which so much of the terminology employed at its end would have been unrecognizable at its beginning. The last twenty years have changed the landscape in which man operates, expanding the potential for human collaboration in such a way as to eliminate the barriers that rendered the nation-state a viable institution. As those barriers fall, so too does the primacy of the world's governments, which in turn have increasingly found themselves unable to maintain the secrecy through which they have run a great portion human affairs with results that may be politely characterized as mixed. The various states have responded to these developments with a collective message to the effect that such secrecy is necessary if they are to continue operating without the informed consent of their respective populations, though this has generally been expressed in slightly different words. Meanwhile, several such governments have, through their specific conduct in the wake of the last year, provided a timely reminder as to why it is that many of those who truly value liberty and morality have lost faith in those same governments.
This event is part of an effort to counter the dishonesty and injustice of the states which have reacted to such emergent phenomena with censorship and persecution while also forging greater coordination among the various parties that have been fighting on behalf of the cause of informational liberty. To this end, a series of meetings both formal and otherwise will be held throughout the first week of April; further information will be relayed in a second press release in late March.
Sure. That might help me to discuss with colleagues.--Sent from my iPadMichael Bourret, Vice President and Literary AgentNEW NUMBER (310) 363-0252Dystel & Goderich Literary Management1 Union Square West, Suite 904New York, NY 10003Would you like to see a chapter, perhaps?On Tue, Jan 11, 2011 at 1:40 PM, Barrett Brown <barriticus@gmail.com> wrote:
Hi, Michael-This is all I have in terms of a proposal so far; this was prepared for Ted Weisman, an agent with whom my colleague Barry Eisler arranged contact but who decided that the project was not commercially viable despite having enjoyed the first chapter and requesting this two-pager.
On Tue, Jan 11, 2011 at 9:39 AM, Michael Bourret <mbourret@dystel.com> wrote:
Barrett,Good to hear from you. Is this what you have so far, or do you have something more complete put together? I'm liking where you're going with this, perhaps because I so thoroughly dislike all the pundits you mention.Best,Michael--
Michael Bourret, Vice President and Literary Agent
NEW NUMBER (310) 363-0252
Dystel & Goderich Literary Management
1 Union Square West, Suite 904
New York, NY 10003
On Jan 10, 2011, at 4:29 PM, Barrett Brown wrote:Michael-Good to see you again or whatever we do. Here's the proposal I just wrote up for my next project, which originated with my previous publisher which seems to have been sued out of commission over the last few months. It's already written. Let me know if you'd like to see a chapter.Summary
In 2003, Thomas Friedman won the Pulitzer Prize for commentary. In 2005, Friedman was invited to join the board of the Pulitzer committee. Our nation is killing itself from within.
Most every industry contains within itself a system of negative feedback by which to ensure that those who fail in their efforts are discouraged whereas those who succeed are encouraged. The most notable exception is the opinion media, which is itself among the most crucial and fundamental of all industries, being fundamental to the manner in which the public thinks - and thus votes, donates, and convinces its fellows, with the cumulative process thereafter being translated into action on the part of the greatest superpower to have ever existed. Thus it is that one of the most influential institutions in the world - the institution of the American punditocracy - is the least accountable. Once a pundit is made, he is rarely unmade.
Thomas Friedman is one of the most influential individuals to work in the most influential of industries, having written a popular New York Times column for well over a decade, having graced the various network news and cable networks for a similar period of time, and having written several bestsellers which are themselves read and respected by a large swath of the nations decision makers right on up to the current United States president. That Thomas Friedman has made a large number of terrible predictions while not elsewhere having made any particularly astute predictions, that his assertions sometimes directly and hilariously contradict assertions he mas made elsewhere, and that other columnists and even bloggers of far lesser influence have exhibited a far superior track record without having won any comparable acclaim is among the most obvious of indications that the United States is incapable of managing and distributing the information it requires to perform its role as a global superpower with reasonable regard for the consequences. It does not help matters that he is famously read by the current U.S. president.
To the extent that we actually examine the output of the most influential and widely-read of what a hippie or Nixon might term to be the "establishment" pundits, we find the same extraordinary rhetorical and informational failures perpetrated by the majority of them. Charles Krauthammer has managed to get entirely and profoundly wrong every U.S. military conflict of the past twelve years along with a smattering of foreign engagements for good measure. Having opposed the surge before a year later supporting it and attacking those who opposed it, Krauthammer even missed out on the conservative consolation prize. Despite such predictive failures along with dozens of easily-discovered self-contradictions and errors of fact, the columnist has grown only more influential over this period and is now commonly counted as being among the finest of commentators.
The picture remains grim or hilarious - depending on ones sense of humor - even as we expand our view of it. Richard Cohen remains a respected staple of The Washington Post despite mounting evidence that he is unqualified for such a role by intellect and temperament. William Bennetts mediocre partisanship and routine delivery of demonstrably incorrect information on topics ranging from Prohibition to the present day have not prevented CNN from drawing on his talents for the benefit of historical election-night coverage that one might prefer consist largely of the competent. Martin Peretz continues to do his part in making anti-Arab bigotry acceptable by way of his purchased stewardship of The New Republic even as he earns further contempt from many of his own writers and others who share his views but can't help but notice the bizarre manner in which he seeks to advance them. And then, there are those less respectable pundits with whom we need not bother to criticize but with whom we nonetheless ought to concern ourselves in the literal sense of the term.
There are two bits of silver lining to a situation that is all the more serious by virtue of not being widely acknowledged. For one thing, the communications age has barely begun to make its presence felt in comparison to the new solutions it will soon bring thanks to those who have decided to take advantage of them. Secondly, the pundits who have caused all the aforementioned trouble are largely douchebags whose profitable forays into douchebaggery are just as profitably outlined.
Marketing
I have a number of methods by which to market the book from my end, some more conventional than others. My first book, Flock of Dodos: Behind Modern Creationism, Intelligent Design, and the Easter Bunny, was blurbed by Alan Dershowitz (Flock of Dodos is in the great tradition of debunkers with a sense of humor, from Thomas Paine to Mark Twain.), Matt Taibbi ("Here's the problem with America's born-again wackos: only a gifted comic is capable of describing them, but no one with a sense of humor can stomach being around them. That's why there are so few books like Flock of Dodos.), Cenk Uyger, (Jesus Christ and lesbian monkeys in the same book. Brilliant. `Smart' and `funny' in the same book. Genius.), and others while also receiving universally positive reviews (except from those attacked in the book, who seemed not to have enjoyed it).
The book in question, meanwhile, has received advance blurbs from author and war correspondent Michael Hastings ("A hilarious, brilliantly crafted, full-on verbal assault on America's pundit class. Brown shows us just how lazy, stupid, and corrupt almost of all our nation's most beloved columnists have become. I'm now fully convinced that this entire generation of over-published bullshit artists deserve to be tasered in the face, one at a time, preferably on live television.), a former Newsweek contributor who is best known for his Rolling Stone article which in turn led to the immediate resignation of General Stanley McChrystal in 2010. Hastings is a longtime colleague and a founding member of my distributed think-tank Project PM. The manuscript has also been championed by bestselling author and former covert CIA analyst Barry Eisler, who will be citing an argument about Russia made therein in his next thriller novel in addition to serving as an informal advisor to myself and PM. Producer Robert Green, a former fact checker for Christoper Hitchens, is also working with me to ensure that the book and the ideas therein take hold; we are also producing videos for Will Farrels production company as well as a feature film based on a treatment Ive been asked to write.
Im a contributor to Vanity Fair, The Huffington Post, The Guardian, Skeptical Inquirer, and D Magazine, and my work has also appeared in Skeptic, The Onion, New York Press, Nerve, National Lampoon, American Atheist, and dozens of other outlets. My work has been linked to by Andrew Sullivan, Glenn Greenwald, John Cole, Allison Kilkenny, and other prominent and not-so-prominent bloggers and journalists.
Project PM, which I founded in summer of 2010, is made up of about 150 scientists, journalists, authors, and other media figures who are intent on taking a more active and technology-driven stance against the media structure described above while also developing similarly information-based methods by which to solve a variety of other problems. Upon formal launch in early 2011, PM will consist largely of two different networks - a blogger network and a citizen network - both of which operate under the same fundamental schematic that I've designed for the purpose. More information can be provided on request; suffice to say that the manuscript has been instrumental in bringing together many of our participants and will benefit from serving as the central manifesto around which this group is organized.
Aside from whatever useful bits of notierety I've gained through my early support for Wikileaks and my work with key figures in the Anonymous movement, I have also appeared on a number of media including Fox News and Russia Today, recently served as an advisor to Virginia Democratic Senate candidate Wynne LeGrow, have long acted as director of communications for the Godless Political Action Committee, and have otherwise been involved in a variety of efforts that will be useful in bringing attention to my work in general in and this book in particular.
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Regards,
Barrett Brown
512-560-2302
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Regards,
Barrett Brown
512-560-2302
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Regards,
Barrett Brown
512-560-2302