Saturday, October 12, 2013

BLOGS CREATING STORMS SOMETIMES.

Hello Friends 
I am not an author but during my teaching learning time I have experienced that how the statements given by fervor produce energy. When a teacher addressing his student talks about discipline, values, hard work with the intensity it creates heat. There was a time when technically we were not much advance, there was almost no medium to convey your message, our political and  religious leaders used to blog, but not in a way we are doing nowadays. They would do it in his general conversations and it would spread out and create waves and sometimes storms.

In India when Mahatma Gandhi entered into the freedom struggle. He gradually became the mass leader as the statements given by him made a large number of people to follow him. His words "civil disobedience is civil breach of unmoral statutory enactment" convinced the people to break laws which were against the Indians. People followed his words with great conviction. It generated a wave of patriotism. Finally the British had to leave India.


The social reformers of the world used general 

opinion (Blogs) a way to aware people. Today 

the world we see today is a result of revolutions 
followed by the Blogs of Great Leaders''. 

Storm surges are caused primarily by high winds pushing on the ocean's surface. The wind causes the water to pile up higher than the ordinary sea level. Same way when a statement given by any person is of mass interest, whether in favor or against , generate energy . We see the energy in form of comments.




In 2002, when many bloggers focused on comments by U.S Senate Majority Leader, Trent Lott , at party honoring Senator Strom Thurmond, praised Thurmond by suggesting that United States would have been better off ,had Thurmond been elected president? Lott's critics saw these comments as a tacit approval of Racial segregation, a policy advocated by Thurmond. This view was reinforced by documents and recorded interviews dug up by bloggers and helped to create political crisisleader.
Similarly, blogs were among the driving forces behind the' Rathergate scandal'. Dan Rather presented documents  that conflicted with accepted accounts of President Bush's military service record. Bloggers declared the documents to be forgeries and presented evidence and arguments in support of that view. Consequently, CBS apologized for what it said were inadequate reporting techniques.
I mean to say that  Blogs today has forced to multiply the opening so it should be used with much care.

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