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It's
the snow that appears late at night on our TV... it can reach across
oceans and mountain ranges and beyond...it has the potential to provide
a channel of access to many independent broadcasters, which is why the
big telecoms are trying to seize it,"explained Eloise Rose Lee, from
Media Alliance based in California, one of five people speaking at "The
Future of the Internet" panel at the National Conference of Media
Reform held in Minneapolis last week.
The walls of the
conference hall auditorium were white and tall and engulfed the humans
who sat in rapt attendance. I sat quietly, in panel after panel, afraid
to move or make too much noise as tech-embedded words like, White
space, Bit Torrent, Net Neutrality and Blogosphere floated past my
ears. They bounced off the walls and knocked up against my head like
thick steel rods, knocking my fingers off their tenuous hold onto the
edges of the digital ravine, which seemed to grow sharper and taller
with each obtuse reference to a technology I had never had the time,
privilege or the access to learn in all of my 38 years of poverty and
homelessness.
"I want to make sure that everyone knows about the plans by
corporations for the take over of white space", panelist Jeff Perlman,
from Public Knowledge, concluded an extensive talk on the current and
future plans of corporate take-over of the internet, the recent acts of
censorship of our cel phones and text messages by telecoms like Verizon
and the very strange phenomenon of "white space"
Perhaps this "white space" was also a metaphor for the
conference, the internet in general and/or much of the race and class
divide that exists between poor people of color and rich, mostly white
people in power locally and globally? I mused.
The panel was one of over 50 panels and workshops on issues
ranging from New journalism to Faith based Organizing and Media Reform,
as well as films, presentations and plenaries featuring former
corporate media stars Bill Moyers and Dan Rather and progressive media
producer Amy Goodman from Democracy Now.
"I am asking for 10 ambassadors for One Web Day" Susan
Crawford, another panelist spoke about her personal crusade to create
one day a year that was dedicated to the preservation of a free and
open internet, which this year will fall on September 22. Ms Crawford
was hoping to engender as much excitement as there is for Earth day
with the mission to create, maintain, advance and promote a global day
to celebrate online life.
"In this way we will ensure access for low-access people who
are lacking skills, and access to the internet," She concluded her
presentation on why the internet should remain open and free and then
added the strangely codified term of "low-access people" to her list of
beneficiaries.
This reference sounded strange to my ears and yet oddly
similar to several other terms used in this conference for poor folks
of color like myself. When she was finished the other members of this
and other panels at the conference followed suit with references like
the "so-called digital divide", "unskilled people" and "people on the
margins of the net"
Once again I mused, would we all be members of the "low-access" tribe if we had more of that handy "white space"?
"We use the internet to do research, to reach across the
channels of access and without it being free and accessible, poor
people like us would never be able to get this information and help to
make change for our communities," Gloria Esteva, one of the reporteras
from POOR Magazine was suddenly speaking in Spanish on the big screen
into the minions of Auditorium One, breaking through the malaise of
euphemisms about people in poverty that were being thrown about with
such ease . Quite unexpectedly for me, Eloise Rose-Lee who was the sole
woman of color on the panel, centered her presentation on the future of
the internet, access and in some ways for me, the real notion of media
reform itself on the powerful voices of poverty scholars from POOR
Magazine's Voces De Inmigrantes en Resistancia Project, a new project
that teaches POOR's brand of revolutionary journalism to migrant
workers in poverty, who spoke at an FCC hearing last month at Stanford
University in support of keeping a free and open internet or "Net
Neutrality"
Her presentation loosened the imaginary chains that had
begun to tear into my hands, I was free to question what I believed to
be real media reform. True enough, the words of Bill Moyers were
important, the "radical" actions of Dan Rather were crucial, but so was
the words and actions of poor youth, adults and elders of color across
the globe who everyday are systematically silenced and excluded from so
many channels of access on the internet, in racist, classist school
systems , in the criminal Injustice system, in the access to resources
and beyond.
So if we were to truly achieve media reform as this
conference stated was its goals, it must be with the inclusion of the
Dan Rathers and the Gloria Esteva's, with the Amy Goodman's and the
poor youth of color from West Oakland and Spanish Harlem.
I know that the conference organizers were beginning to try
to practice some inclusion with panels on Hip Hop Activism and
Grassroots Lobbying but they have a long way to go.
As I left the Minneapolis conference hall I reflected on the
strange concept of "white space" and how it actually has the potential
to provide real access to poor people of color locally and globally –
which sounded oddly like some kind of 21st century digital reparations
and how it was potentially being ripped out of our hands by possible
corporate take-over before we even have the chance to benefit from it.
Which made me wonder if there will be any white space left for me..
Lisa Gray-Garcia aka Tiny, poet, poverty scholar,
revolutionary journalist and lecturer is the founder and executive
director of POOR Magazine/ PoorNewsNEtwork (PNN), the author of
Criminal of Poverty: Growing up homeless in America. Printed courtesy
of the author and PNN (Poor News Network). |