Lurkers with Strong African Features

Many of us here in California—so close to Hollywood—have heard the old story about how the old lady sends her letter to the producers of a TV show and how much of an impact this has. A show that has millions of viewers only receives a handful of these old-lady letters.

Back in 1998 when a younger, more innocent Bryan Wilhite started kintespace.com, my assumption was that the reign of the old lady and her letter is over… Wrong. More people—by orders of magnitude—are passively viewing the content they actively discovered. Even in the mainstream Internet sites like YouTube.com, or even a tech site like Channel9.msdn.com, you will see an item that gets 30,578 views but only 15 responses. So when my eye reads the kintespace.com numbers and these numbers are measured against the direct responses from the kintespace.com audience, my conclusion is not that kintespace.com sucks. My eye sees lurkers with strong African features—and a whole rainbow of people from all over the world who really dig human voices.

1970s Bryan at the 6th Grade But this Blog post is about the lurkers with strong African features. My shabby, sloppy survey of this demographic dates back to my years in elementary school. Just for those of you who are familiar with “inner city” Los Angeles, my most dear elementary school was Raymond Avenue School. Back then, little Bryan was a star science student. They called me a “gifted student.” Since you have never seen this in a Hollywood movie, you really, really have to work hard imagine a little Black boy stepping into a classroom full of little Black children lecturing them about some subject of science I can’t remember now. Sadly, even young self-described “black” children of 2007 may have trouble imagining this… Anyway, when I finished my little lecture, I would ask about any questions. And not one person said a thing.

Eventually, one teacher pulled me aside and told me that I was “intimidating” the students—that’s why they are not asking anything. The students were “too scared” to ask questions about the subject matter. Years later, my guess is that the teacher used words like “too scared” to replace a more subtle, complex phenomenon related to captivity in a “free” society. Many of the children, my fellow students, came to school from a home far away from whatever I was talking about—me standing there talking about a subject that has nothing to do with making money, playing or eating was—and still is—simply not worth the expected level of participation.

1970s #73So, for most us who are driven to present content to the public on the Internet, ‘the expected level of participation’ did not include 30,578 views but only 15 responses. Most of us who have been doing this for years, way before the Blog and outside of “mainstream trends,” have had to get used to the indirect responses we get from our audience. But every now and then the lurkers mentioned earlier surface. Catching a lurker with strong African features is like catching one of those rare deep-sea creatures living under extreme pressure—when they come out to the surface they often explode. Since clearly Bryan Wilhite here in the rasx() context is too far gone and is clearly beyond help, I don’t experience these explosions like I used to…

However, AG of bkaeg.org caught one on February 22 in “Sun-City—Renaissance of South Africa.” This one is Paul Hue of reformedleftist.blogspot.com. Here are my reckless assumptions:

AG’s professor who claimed that the Egyptians weren’t Africans is nuts.

And:

My daughter attends a cracker-majority jr high. It appears that any “hiding” of black history has disappeared from the official education curricula; AG, you might be fighting now an already won war. She is learning about all sorts of astonishingly horrible things that honkies have done over the years to non-honkies. One thing she is not learning in her history classes is that honkies have also committed these horrible acts to other honkies (exception: WWII); and non-honkey civilizations have committed these acts as well, both to other non-honkies and even to honkies.

So it seems that Mr. Hue is “tough on white folks” like everybody running for office these days needs to be “tough on crime.” He’s using words like “cracker” and “honkey” but he also insinuates statements like “that cultural imperialist, enslaver, and genocidal maniac Shaka Zulu” or “AG, you might be fighting now an already won war.” This is a classic way of showing “balance” to the “silent majority”—those peculiar “average” Americans.

These are the reasons why Mr. Hue should not discover me by accident and then, perhaps, try to open a dialogue:

As of this week, Mr. Hue has a high level of comments per post on his Blog, reformedleftist.blogspot.com. It seems that he breaking my 30,578-to-15 rule. I guess I must be dumb… I’m definitely not that popular guy from 37signals.com—but these tech people (and their tech audience) are a special lot. But most of Mr. Hue’s “real world” Blog posts are inflammatory, political button-pushers designed for affluent colored people with new computers and chatty white liberals of all dupable colors—it’s John-C.-Dvorak-style social engineering that attracts road-rage-esque anger (and more eyeballs). It reeks of the very thing that Anil Dash says is “Threatening to Kill Blogs.” There’s good money in savages.

rasx()