>From The Register (www.theregister.co.uk - worth checking out regularly). 

This gave me a good giggle - but also enough serious content and raised 
questions to be worth mulling over for a few minutes...?

Nice bit of Yank bashing too, which I always enjoy <evil grin>



 Posted 13/12/99 9:58am by Thomas C Greene in Washington

 Washington tech summit urges Net
 education

 US Commerce Secretary William Daley served as moderator
 during a Thursday roundtable discussion of America's so-called
 digital divide, a growing disparity in technology access and
 computer "literacy" among populations according to income,
 location and race. 

 Internet evangelist Bill Clinton launched the festivities from the
 White House with inspiring words and a lofty national goal. "We
 must connect all of our citizens to the Internet, not just in schools
 and libraries, but in homes, small businesses and community
 centers, and we must help all Americans gain the skills they need
 to make the most of the connection," the President said. 

 Thus invigorated by the Presidential benediction, Daley and
 company made the short pilgrimage to a Washington convention
 hall, to be greeted by a packed house overflowing with IT and
 telecommunications executives, community special interest groups,
 federal and state civil servants, and sneering journalists. [All right;
 one of them was sneering, anyway.] 

 Wire the Poor 
 Daly opened the meeting with a brief slide presentation graphically
 demonstrating the digital divide and plotting its recent growth. It
 was indeed evident that rural Americans have less access than
 urban ones, and that Blacks and Hispanics have less access than
 Whites. It was further evident that the divide is growing, as Whites
 in all income categories get connected at a faster rate than all
 other groups except Asians, who are the most wired tribe in the
 nation according to several surveys. 

 "In a society that increasingly depends on computers and the
 Internet to deliver information and enhance communication, we
 need to make sure that all Americans have access," Daley said. 

 "I pledge to go to twelve cities in twelve months to shine a spotlight
 on the digital divide," Daley vowed. "This will be a Digital Divide
 Tour. I will be looking to our roundtable members to help." 

 From there the roundtable got under way, an immensely tedious
 show-and-tell session during which numerous minority advocates
 whinged about various obstacles to connecting the particular group
 of low-income Americans whose interests they represent. No one
 dared question either that this ambition is desirable to society in
 general, or that it is likely to be welcomed among those populations
 soon to be conscripted for regular duty as Netizens. 

 Darien Dash, CEO of , a Black-owned Web services firm, best
 illustrated the lack of criticism with which the task of wiring the poor
 is understood. Dash noted that he is personally acquainted with a
 number of people, presumably black, who think nothing of spending
 "four hundred dollars on sweatshirts and sneakers. [And] you don't
 think they have the money for a machine?" 

 No doubt they do have the money. It is a question of values, and
 Dash unintentionally provides an opportunity to question his
 fundamental assumption that black folks would buy great heaps of
 computers if only they knew how cool they are. The Register is not
 so sure about that. 

 First, we are prepared for the shocking possibility that black
 Americans might decline to buy computers and connect themselves
 to the Web because they don't wish to buy computers and connect
 themselves to the Web. What is even more heretical, we are willing
 to confront the possibility that this reflects not ignorance, not
 madness, not moral bankruptcy, but a perfectly respectable and
 rational choice. 

 Second, we note Dash's implicit assumption that computers are
 necessarily more virtuous objects of consumerist lust than athletic
 gear. We are not so sure about that, either. Sweatshirts and
 sneakers, after all, suggest an energetic life of athleticism, good
 health and sexual desirability, while computers suggest lethargy,
 timidity, underdeveloped bodies, and pale, pimply complexions --
 conditions in which we are at a loss to find any virtue whatsoever. 

 Furthermore, as slavery was abolished some years ago, we have
 the idea that black people are no longer under obligation to satisfy
 the needs, preferences or even the expectations of white people
 and the business establishments which they own and operate. We
 imagine this freedom would legally extend to absolving them of
 obligation to present themselves in large numbers for victimisation
 by the "online community" of e-tailers, pornographers, hackers,
 ISPs, and software and hardware manufacturers and vendors so
 beloved among the Clinton Administration. 

 The questions that might have been raised by this roundtable
 summit are indeed fascinating and relevant. Are there cultural
 differences at play in the digital divide, not merely economic ones?
 Is it reasonable for mainstream America to urge computer and
 Internet use upon minority populations? Is it reasonable for minority
 populations not to give a damn about it? Should minorities be
 "educated" to value it as the mainstream population reportedly
 does? Or is that racist? Does everyone have to espouse the same
 values, or is the US a big enough country to accommodate the
 "diversity" it harps constantly about? 

 The United States would be an interesting subject for those and
 similar questions, if Americans had the stomach to confront them.
 There are few countries where issues attaching to race, social
 class and tribal politics affect the populace so dramatically, yet
 where everyone from the man in the street to educators to
 government officials to the media is at such a terrible loss to speak
 honestly about them. Dialogue among the university educated, and
 among all whose words might bear public implications, is limited to
 euphemistic infant-babble filled with such empty incantations as
 'diversity' and 'empowerment', while dialogue among the Great
 Unwashed, regardless of race, tends to convey a blend of irrational
 fear, uncharitable speculation, envy and mistrust directed towards
 the dreaded "others". 

 It is hardly surprising, then, that a public forum ostensibly devoted
 to untangling the sticky threads of American tribal politics and
 online economics would instead have cowered behind
 politically-correct slogans, meaningless demographic enumeration,
 and careless assumptions about the desire of American minority
 populations to emulate Yankee WASP culture in all its glorious
 dimensions. A pity, really; we have seen enough of Yankee WASP
 culture with our own eyes to respect the choices of those who
 would think twice before blindly embracing it. It would have been
 nice to hear from them. �

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