A home for politics is a depressing place


by Hopi Sen    
April 9, 2008 at 12:32 pm

So politicshome got launched yesterday. My first visit gave me the distinct sensation of having the entire collection of Sunday papers dropped on my head. It was neither pleasant nor enjoyable.

I have nothing against the people behind politicshome, and if they think they can make money out of collecting together the outpourings of all the pontificators and savants of British political journalism, fair play to them. It might make it easier for me to be irritated by Simon Jenkins smug, self satisfied banalities.

That said, my immediate sensation on seeing their collection of top ten columns to read, plus another ten “if you have more time” (After reading ten thousand words of verbiage already? How much time do we have to spare here?), their collection of 100 political observers, their tracking of the top blogs, their aggregation of well, everything… was to want it all to go away.

When confronted by such a dense barrage of opinion, reaction, comment and views, my response was “Please, shut up already”. When concentrated like this, distilled into its essence of assertion and prognostication, it becomes clear that collecting together political commentary just increases the noise to value ratio to an unbearable extent.*

I’m biased perhaps, because I’m just finishing ‘Black Swan’, the book on probablity by  Nassim Nicholas Taleb. At one point in the book he says he refuses to read newspapers, insisting that they merely give the illussion of understanding current events, when in actuality they merely work as any other self confirming, self propagating organism (like hedge fund managers, or movie reviewers, all pulling each other in the same direction, until some completely unexpected event causes them to change direction together).

Seeing politicshome made me realise that Taleb is right. There’s little actual value in trying to absorb all the views out there, because you can do better things with your time. Most of what politicshome will collect (Maybe even this blog, if it ever becomes a “top 100? blog- another century of waffle right there!) will be of almost nil value.

Now, that doesn’t mean politicshome is a bad site, or that you shouldn’t visit it. I suspect it’ll be useful as a way of seeing what the conventional wisdom of the day is. Just don’t make the mistake of thinking that knowing the conventional wisdom is in any way helpful in anticipating events. It’ll only help you understand the way the market is moving, not what will happen next. For that, you have to think for yourself.

In the end, you’re better off trying to develop your own theories. After all, if there’s one thing the cacophony of opinion should make easy to hear, it’s that your voice is as valuable as that of anyone else.

* PH say thay have a “dedicated team of professional political observers paying constant attention from 730am to midnight every day… …an intelligent filter, picking out everything that is newsworthy, provoking controversy or of long term significance“. The poor sods have my sympathy.


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About the author
This is a guest post. Hopi Sen blogs here.
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Reader comments


I agree. It makes me feel more than a little nauseous. Although I am not sure if that is due to the concept or the people. I had to remove Iain Dale from my RSS feed. Too much, too banal.

I think bits of it will be useful (and stop me relying on the BBC website quite so much even though I loathe them!).

But the design is awful and I think the PHI 100 gimmick will go by the wayside in the end.

Why the hell is it black and green with shades of grey? It looks like they’ve transported a fourteen-year-old slightly gothy sci-fi geek through time from the mid-nineties to design it. And I *like* slightly gothy sci-fi geeks.

Full disclosure – I’m on the PH100 panel! And I think one or two of the other Conspirators might be too. I did tell them though that the design was awful.

“Why the hell is it black and green with shades of grey? It looks like they’ve transported a fourteen-year-old slightly gothy sci-fi geek through time from the mid-nineties to design it. And I *like* slightly gothy sci-fi geeks.”

I think it is meant to look a bit like Bloomberg news.

Got to admit I got a kick out of seeing “a home fo politics is a depressing place” flash up on their blog linker thingy. I’m so childish sometimes.

I did tell them though that the design was awful.

What did they say?

Never mind the design, the site has just failed the most basic of all tests.

1. Visit Home Page

2. Hit the Discover RSS feeds options in Sage.

3. Wait for a bit.

4. Get a response – ‘no feeds discovered’.

5. Give it up as a bad job and go elsewhere.

I’m getting a server error at the moment as well – not exactly a good sign after just a day.

Hopi Sen?

Sunny never stops picking the best of the blogosphere to contribute.

As for PH. A’hem.

@Alix: “And I *like* slightly gothy sci-fi geeks”

* blush *

You say the sweetest things

@ Sunny: if you’re on the board, point them towards The top ten mistakes in web design.


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