Monthly Archive for August, 2005Page 2 of 6

A Less Excellent Way

Found this excerpt over at J.R. Brigg’s blog, on the destructive force of excellence as a value:

Recently Rick Warren challenged me to think carefully about this as he facilitated a small group of pastors in a discussion about how to build an equipping church. He said that if you want to build an equipping church, you have to tear down the idol of excellence. Why? Because most people are not excellent; most people are not extraordinary. Most people are ordinary. If you’re going to do ministry through ordinary people you have to give up the notion of excellence.

From the book “Leadership Baton”

Leadership Baton, The : An Intentional Strategy for Developing Leaders in Your Church

Dear Pat

Here’s the deal. We know you’re in a difficult position. The ensuing crap tornado from your statements early in the week have finally caught up to you, and you realize that your credibility is on the line. You have to find a way to quell the outcry, without losing the support of your regular viewers (and financial supporters), many of whom see nothing wrong with the Manifest Destiny of the Judeo-Christo-American Empire, and think your statement was right on the money.

So I offer this advice, not so much out of any sense of pity or compassion, but because we work for the same guy, and your words seem to keep sullying his reputation. You’re looking for middle ground. You’re trying to formulate an apology that says, “I didn’t mean kill” and “but it might be a good idea” and “the biased media misinterpreted my words” and “but it did draw attention an important issue” and “I obviously misspoke out of frustration.” This is known as the shotgun approach. It doesn’t work.

You did mean kill. Assassinate has a rather narrow range of meanings, and your context makes it very obvious that you meant a team of undercover operatives putting an X on the forehead of Chavez, and splitting it open.

It’s an awful idea. Look at how quickly everyone from the State Department to other Evangelical leaders have distanced themselves from your comments. Note their tone of voice. It’s not just political expediency, it’s actual repugnance. People are disgusted by the idea.

Nobody misinterpreted your words. Know why? Because we all saw the video. We saw the whole thing. We watched you speak them, we saw the earnest fervor on your face, and we knew what you meant. Unless you mean that the 700 club accidentally replaced you with an animatronic robot who made certain statements with which you disagree, in which case, you might be OK, because robots are cool.

Yes, it certainly did draw attention. I’ve got two problems with this. The first is that it drew attention, and gave newly minted international political clout to a petty dictator from a country that would barely register on the radar if not for the fact that they have the hookup for our national sweet sweet crude jones. You don’t think he’s politically savvy enough to work this thing up into a stronger following in Venezuela? The second problem is this: you seem to be justifying an ethical error by means of a consequentialist solution. I know some of those words are a bit long, and you got your degrees in an era when Christianity was scared of philosophy, but it means this: you’re saying that something bad can be made good if enough good things happen as a result. Kind of like saying that it’s OK to cheat on a medical school entrance exam if it lets you get a medical license to go treat sick people in poor urban areas. Consequences are not sufficient justification for ethical errors. Also, shout out to my Talbot homies. Keeping it real. And by real I mean epistemic internalism, moral realism, libertarian free-will, and properly basic theism. Logos Up.

Maybe you did say something out of frustration that you didn’t intend to say, at least not in a public forum so easily disseminated around the web. In fact, I think your best play here might be to embrace this, to gather up any remaining benefit of the doubt among your followers, and to say that it was a mistake. Say it often, say it loud. Here’s the problem, P-dawg. You can’t say this, and dilute it with any of the other statements. You can’t say “I made a mistake, but is was a good mistake.” You can’t say, “I made a mistake, and I was misinterpreted by the liberal media.”

This is your line. Stick to it. Take every interview, speak to every reporter, and say this, and only this, every single time.

“I was wrong. I was wrong morally, biblically, and politically. Whatever differences we may have with Chavez’s leadership in Venezuela, assassination of political leaders is never a justified response. I apologize to Chavez, to the State Department for making their position more difficult, to the Evangelical church that the public erroneously assumes I am a spokesman for, and to the American people, for perpetuating the global perception of an American Evangelical Imperial junta. Please forgive me for my grievous error.”

Pat, this is what those of us in the industry call a “Real Apology.” Here’s the thing that public personalities can’t seem to understand; it works. It works in a way that half apologies, qualified withdrawals, and public stonewalling don’t. Admitting error regains some credibility. Refusing to deliver a real apology crumbles any remaining public trust that you may have engendered.

Pat, do it for our sake. Do it for those of us who have to disassociate ourselves from you before we can do kingdom work. Do it for the children. Do it for the sake of that guy whose name you wear, and whose reputation you impact every time you get on the TV screen. Do it, because I can only think of one reason why you wouldn’t:

Pride.

Love,
Michael

The Bible Podcast

I’ve been pluggin away at a new project for the past few weeks, and it finally goes live September 1st, so I wanted to take a chance to plug it here, and maybe start generating some visibility for it.

www.thebiblepodcast.org

So far, we’ve had about 20 people from 3 countries agree to take part in the readings, and if any of you are interested in helping out, that would be great. I’m excited about this project, and everyone that we’ve approached with the idea has been pretty excited about it too.

Good grief.

Pat Robertson’s at it again. When is somebody gonna rebuke him? Are we over rebuke? Did I not get the memo?

Creativity and Compensation

I’m going to just throw this out there, and call it true. Communities that produce more creative works are better than communities that produce fewer. Ten researches discovering new treatments for disease are better than one. Ten musicians creating innovative new works are better than one. Ten computer programmers creating new widgets for my beautiful, beautiful mac are better than one, unless that one is Mike Kelley, who obviously could rock them all in a massive coding caged death-match.

Every interesting conversation takes place in the boundaries, in those areas where two strong principles crash into each other, and each recommends a different course of action in the same moment. The current state of intellectual property in our culture has all of the makings of just this sort of interesting conversation. If we buy that statement above, there are two following statements that seem equally as strong, but taken together recommend different courses of action in the same moment.

First Principle: Communities that compensate creativity allow more people to spend more time at creative work. At this point, someone will need to stand on the obligatory soapbox and cry out, “Artists don’t create for the money!” Of course they do. It may not be the sole motivation, but it is certainly a necessary component of the creative life. Without the Betty Friedman exhibition, and the money that it brought in, Jackson Pollack would have stayed holed up in a tiny barn on Long Island, and we would likely never benefit from the works he created in the ensuing years, freed of financial burdens. Not only that, but put aside the esoteric and very romantic vision of the tortured artist, struggling alone with her craft, unconcerned with the response from anyone outside. Think about creativity in broader terms: the medical researcher who develops a better malaria medication, the architect who is designing a city library. These people are also creating new works, and they are certainly more likely to do it if we compensate them fairly for it. In our culture, there exist two primary means for this compensation: grant money given to support innovation in specific areas, and an economic model that treats creative work as property, thereby allowing it to compete in the marketplace. Everyone wishes there were more money available from grants, but we have enough working creators on this blog to recognize that the money from the marketplace is the primary fuel of our creative culture.

Second Principle: Communities that promote a broad and free distribution and re-use of creative works create an environment conducive to creating new works. In 1997, I wrote a full concert of original music as part of my music theory degree. Most of it was for a 17 piece Big Band, a setting I had not worked in before, and a style that I was not completely familiar with. I spent 9 months copying CDs from friends, checking out scores from our music library, photocopying big band charts from our school jazz band, and immersing myself in the creative works of others. Keep in mind that much of what I was doing was illegal under our current copyright law, but keep in mind also that the financial burden of buying 50 CDs, and leasing original scores would have been obscenely prohibitive for me. By appropriating the free distribution and re-use of other people’s creative works, I built an environment for myself conducive to creating new works.

This is evident in the open-source software culture as well. There are freely available pieces of code called plug-ins for Word Press that do fantastically creative things, and they came about because the authors borrowed code from other plug-ins, merged them together with other open-source PHP snippets, and created something new, a derivative work. If every developer locked down their own code, and refused to allow it to be distributed and re-used, nothing even approaching this sort of robust culture of innovation would exist. We could say the same about shared scientific research, indie record labels, graduate programs with collective learning; those pockets within our culture that promote the free exchange of ideas tend to engender new innovation.

By now, the tension is obvious. A society that protects creativity as property engenders more creativity. A society that promotes the free exchange of creativity engenders more creativity.

The rub is this - there is an obscene amount of money hanging in the balance of this question. Companies like Microsoft are built entirely upon the basis of intellectual property. The entertainment industry here in LA runs on the fuel of intellectual property, as does that hotbed of publishing, Ventura. And because there is such an obscene amount of money involved, the legal system too is deeply involved. Companies like Disney have the kind of financial and political resources to extend copyright control over their property indefinitely, ensuring that the first principle (compensation for creation) has a much more prominent place in the law that the second principle (read Lawrence Lessig’s excellent book Free Culture for a full exposition of this). Artists who want to create derivative works, new works that make use of old material, or people who wish to immerse themselves in an environment rich with the innovative ideas of others have to do so by forcing themselves through an absurdly ambiguous crack in the copyright law, the fair use clause.

The result is a system that is breaking down. In the face of onerous restrictions, new innovators are either ignoring the property rights of others, as both hip hop and the white-label remixes did in the early 1980s, or submitting their works to the editing of lawyers, editing done wholly on the basis of copyright clearance, and not on the basis of artistic insight.

So what’s the way forward? In my next post, I’ll suggest several areas where I see middle ground emerging.