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Macedonian bloggers and other new media users offered their own responses to the question
“How internet changed your life?”, posed in an article
[MKD] on BBC's Macedonian language site.
Darko Buldioski of Komunikacii.net applied a style
figure reminiscent of Slavic
antithesis to rephrase the question into “If I had no internet…” and
posted the following answers:
I would not have…
…been able to write on my blog, in which I invested much and got much in return :)
…known that BBC covers this topic, as I don't listen to radio news, I read it all
online
…met a bunch of excellent people with whom I regularly communicate about different
subjects
…ordered various trinkets that my brother transports for me when he comes from America
(it's supposedly cheaper there)
…worked on what I do now, because my work is about Internet.
Linking to the relevant South Park episode - “Over Logging” - Buldioski also
invited others to share their thoughts.
Dozens of Twitter users offered their
opinions via the hashtag #danemaseinternet [MKD] or “If there
was no Internet”…
…I would have to carry a notebook with me like [the author] Venko Andonovski to record
my thoughts [- Sead93]
…by God I would have dealt with scientific research and as a result I would have found
evidence to disprove the Theory of
Relativity [- goranmitev]
…I would never have discovered what life on a farm is like [- lazyvlad]
…and a number of them blamed the internet for not being in shape, lack of muscle mass or
excess fatty tissue.
Marjan Zabrcanec considers his blog Golemata
slika (The Big Picture) and his Twitter and Facebook profiles his “loudspeakers”
for exercising his right to the freedom of speech. He explained [MKD] that he opened his
first e-mail account 15 years ago, and that without internet he would not have known “which
topics and arguments are used by debaters from all over the world. Research would have been
tremendously hard. Now, there's Debatopedia,” and
would not have been able to effectively manage his NGO, or offer
cheap but powerful internet marketing campaigns for the clients of his current employer.
Vasilka
Dimitrovskareckoned
[MKD] that without Internet she would have never learned how to blog and use new media to
“detect, present and protect cultural heritage,” and influence the public opinion,
including appearing on TV.
…I would have remained just one more archeologist in the sea of unknown and anemic
archeologists in Macedonia without any attention from the society, and with even less respect.
Ribaro (The Fisherman) responded via a
vlog post, with audio in Macedonian and English subtitles.
Viktor Arsovski wrote [MKD] that without
Internet he probably would have continued to teach English, and not take part in the founding of
IT.com.mk, and…
I would take our media “for granted,” and not read information from other
sources.
I would have never known that some things in the society can improve.
I would not get frustrated by watching football (soccer) on [Macedonian TV] Sitel. Now by
watching online streaming I know there are quality anchors who explain about the sport instead of
talking nonsense. Therefore, even though it sometimes makes me nervous, at least I know that the
Internet offers me a choice!
Bloggers who posted on this subject also included Kihu Potru [MKD], who
emphasized the Internet's importance in sharing art and establishing connections between artists
- from visuals to haiku; Kuzmanov [MKD]; Martin [MKD]; and
Dzaman
[MKD].
Finaly, some people responded through comments on blogs of others, like
Oksimoron, who said [MKD]:
If there was no internet… I would have walked around more, I would have been a better
housewife, and would not look silly laughing alone in front of the monitor :-)
…would not have enrolled into post-graduate studies (found over the Internet)
- I would not have stayed awake till 5 in the morning
- I would not have known many of my current friends
- I would not have been able to book a hotel in Nice
- I would not have been able to surprise my loved ones who are far away with gifts
And for certain I would not have known that one day the Internet will die [MKD] ;)
Belarus Digestreports that
“the Belarusan-American Association starts a new campaign with compelling slogan ‘Are
you proud you’re Belarusian? Identify yourself on the 2010 census form!'”
A detailed account of the ongoing “battle for
Khimki Forest” - by Yevgeniya Chirikova at OpenDemocracy.net: “The plan
to construct a section of the new Moscow-St.Petersburg motorway through the legally-protected
Khimki Forest Park will destroy a rare eco-system. Dogged local resistance has turned this into a
national, even international issue. But it has not derailed the plan.”
Links related to the March 17 European Parliament hearing with Mustafa Dzhemilev, former Soviet
dissident and Chairman of the Mejlis of the Crimean Tatar People: Dzhemilev's speech (.pdf file); an
overview at Window on Eurasia; an overview at Unrepresented Nations and
Peoples Organization (UNPO);
a written address by MEP Heidi
Hautala at her Human Rights Diary; an RFE/RL article by Ahto Lobjakas -
“Going
Nowhere Fast — Crimean Tatars In The EU.”
Andrei Loshak's much-discussed text about corruption and “the normal functioning of an
irrational system” in Russia has been translated
into English by OpenDemocracy.net (the Russian-language original
is at OpenSpace.ru).
Kirk Johnson of Americans For Bosniareacts
to retired NATO commander John Sheehan's homophobic comment
on the Dutch troops' performance in Bosnia in 1995: “Regarding the Srebrenica Genocide;
there are many things for which we can hold the Dutch military at fault, but allowing gay Dutch
citizens to serve their country in the military is not one of them.”
Yaamyntalks about an
extremist blogger who has issued death threats to a number of people including another blogger
and the first lady of the Maldives.
Indrajit Samarajiva at Indi.careacts to the recent news that the
Sri Lankan opposition alliance is abandoning their candidate Mr. Sarath Fonseka, because he is in
jail now.
Emily Haas' Armenian Experience, a blog by a Peace Corps Volunteer (PCV) in the former
Soviet republic, post photographs and an insight into
the lives of women in Armenia. The blog says that the
project is to “show how hard the women in Armenia work and the important and overlooked
role they hold in society.” Meanwhile, Ianyan has started to publish a series of posts on what it means
to be a woman in general.
How
not to give money to charities in Africa: “Do not watch TV images of Africa and feel
only pity: starvation, war, HIV-AIDS etc..., Do not give money to Africa in an attempt to make
yourself feel good, Do not give money to Africa because you feel guilty about
colonialism…”
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