Pagan Quotations (Blogging Edition)

Pagan author, teacher, and ADF Archdruid Emeritus, Isaac Bonewits explains his increasingly sporadic blog activity, and admits to having some issues with this whole “blogging” thing.

“I’m still a bit unclear as to what a blog is really for, if one doesn’t have something important to rant about day after day.”

I find it difficult to believe that someone of Bonewits’ infamy doesn’t have something to rant about day after day (or at least a couple times a week), I also find it odd that someone who has contributed to Daily Kos in the past isn’t quite sure about the many and sundry uses for the blogging platform (and ultimately a “blog” is just a transmission tool for content). However, I do agree that merely ranting every day isn’t that sustainable, that’s why most of the really successful blogs don’t simply climb up on soap-boxes and howl into the digital void. They share wonderful things, talk about books, promote music they love, provide you tips and tricks to an easier life, and discuss feminist issues. Heck there are even Pagan blogs who manage to find news items to share every day.

Ultimately, I think Bonewits portrays an interesting (and growing) development. Like many people, he’s doing most of his online discussion and interaction on Facebook, and as robust social networking sites become ever more ubiquitous, fewer people will feel the need to create a blog to establish themselves on the Internet. This is a good thing, not everyone is suited to a blogging platform, and we are now reaching a point where there are many ways besides the traditonal long-form regularly-updated blog to get one’s ideas and ideals across. That said, if you are looking for great regular Pagan blogging content (aside from mine, of course) just look to my blogroll, or the in-depth Blog Elysium for a cornucopia of choices, approaches, and points of view.

Quick Note: Examining Paganistan

Several folks have written in to alert me that Pagan scholar Murphy Pizza has become the official Minneapolis Paganism Examiner for Examiner.com (the ultra-conservative funded pay-for-pageviews blogging site). This is exciting news because Murphy Pizza’s dissertation is about the history and formation of the Pagan community in the Twin Cities (aka “Paganistan”), so you could not ask for a better local commentator. In her first entry Pizza explains the unique character and long history of the Pagan community in Minnesota’s Twin Cities.

“A number of years ago, one of the Pagan priests in the Twin Cities coined the name “Paganistan” for the long-lived and feisty Pagan community here. It was tongue-in-cheek, but the name has stuck; it’s a name that the Twin Cities Metro Area Pagans have proudly taken on as a moniker. Many people are surprised to hear that the Twin Cities boasts the second largest contemporary Pagan community in the US (only San Francisco’s Bay Area is larger). Often, they are equally surprised to discover that it has its formative roots as far back as 1972, when the Gnostica Bookstore was holding spiritual seeker classes on topics like magic, contemporary Witchcraft, and other occult traditions down on Hennepin Avenue … It isn’t only the size that makes Paganistan a unique and vibrant community. It also has been a religiously innovative community both in terms of the creation of traditions and practices, and in the way it expresses a diversity of paths and organizations.”

I wish Ms. Pizza a long and healthy blogging career. The Pagan blogosphere needs more local community-oriented coverage, so hopefully this will start something of a trend (I anxiously await Salem and Bay Area-centric blogs). So be sure to add her to your blogrolls and rss-readers ASAP!

A Quick Note About Comments

I’ve noticed that the IntenseDebate commenting system has been acting a little buggy today. Specifically, I’ve noticed that some previously posted comments have disappeared. I’ve sent in a service request, and I’m hoping things will clear up shortly. My apologies if you’re having problems, if this persists I’ll look into suitable replacements that offer similar features.

In Case of LiveJournal Failure

Many of my regular readers also happen to subscribe to this site via a LiveJournal syndication feed. Today the Valleywag blog brought the news that Sup, the Russian Internet startup that owns LiveJournal, has just laid off 2/3rds of the popular journaling site’s staff (though some argue it’s more like 1/2 than 2/3rds).

The bubble in social networking has burst, decisively. LiveJournal, the San Francisco-based arm of Sup, a Russian Internet startup, has cut 12 of 28 U.S. employees — and offered them no severance, we’re told … The company’s Moscow-based management has told employees it blames the “global economic downturn” — the kind of pat excuse every boss is giving for layoffs, even when mismanagement or a bad business plan is really to blame.

This has unsurprisingly caused many to wonder if the site will be around for much longer (others are urging people to refrain from panicking). Whatever the ultimate outcome, if this latest disturbance in the Force Internet has got you thinking about packing up and leaving for higher ground, The Wild Hunt has several subscription options so you can still keep track of us no matter where you go. There is a syndication feed at InsaneJournal, a haven for many LJ dissidents and free expression (and fanfic) proponents, a Twitter feed for fans of the popular micro-blogging site, and you can even have this blog’s posts delivered to you via e-mail. Of course you can always just visit us directly at patheos.com/blogs/wildhunt/ or subscribe to the RSS feed (I’m a fan of Google Reader for keeping track of sites, personally) if you prefer the direct approach. Whatever the fate of LJ, I’ll hope you stick with us as we bring you the latest in Pagan news and views.