Who Is Afraid Of Colombo Telegraph?
By Malinda Seneviratne -August 26, 2013 |
The blocking of websites is first and foremost silly. Those who really
want to visit such places can do so at the cost of just a few
mouse-clicks. It is therefore childish. Now we don’t know for sure who
blocked CT, but let’s assume that the Government had a hand. If that
is the case, the Government is not doing itself any favors. Indeed, it
can be argued that it is detrimental to the Government to block CT or
those other classes of websites referred to above.
As I argued in a piece titled ‘The staunchest friends of the regime’ that
sites like Colombo Telegraph helps the regime. It’s an old theory,
true, but dissent and criticism is more containable within democratic
structures and in this case such opposition gets off loaded into virtual
space largely inhabited by invective-spewing hotheaded cowards who are
loathe to walk the talk.
Colombo Telegraph has more uses than this dissent-offloading business.
Even if you thought CT was run by nutcases with nutcases and for
nutcases with narrow political objectives that are against the larger
interests of the citizenry, it can be taken to be a place where the
enemy shows up, shows face, spouts criticism. Knowing the enemy by
face, name and word is very useful in politics.
But CT is bigger than that. CT gives
space to a wide range of political views. While it has its complement
of regime-haters (mostly out of disappointment and rage that preferred
outcome(s) did not materialize), there is enough cogent criticism to
make such whiners irrelevant and even sufferable. The benefits outweigh
the negatives. Read More
