You can write for #informationwar....easily and on a format...kick that writer's block in the junk!

in informationwar •  7 years ago  (edited)

I swear to g*d I had a post in mind when I sat down to the computer; after checking my feed and replies, that idea is gone, although I suspect it will come back for me to put down on keyboard at some point later on.

However, writing daily is easy, I PROMISE. Take #informationwar, which I will use for an example...

Don't know what to write about? Don't want to cover the same story everybody else is working on? Picking a subject that catches your interest is easier than you think.

Make sure you have several sources that you can draw on daily for new information
I use:

  • Ace of Spades, especially The Morning Report
  • @newsagg here on Steemit
  • 4chan /pol(use the catalog link here)
  • The Last Refuge, more popularly known as The Conservative Treehouse, which has been on fire in it's coverage of the Deep State conspiracy of Trump. Note - this is an area I have written a lot about, so it's an area I'm interested in - we'll return to this thought!
  • The_Donald, on Reddit
  • your feed here on Steemit...that is if you are following people whose work interests you, rather than just follow-exchanges!

Now you don't have to use these sites; my point is that you build your own stable over time. I'd also like to introduce you to RSS feeds, and a good app to use them here;
Using Zotero to save RSS feeds, and adding feed items to your library

You should have found something that interests you by now.

Good. Read the link. Now stop.

DO NOT JUST COPY AND PASTE THE LINK

Commenter @chieppa1 is not the only one who has noted that copy/paste provides no value to Steemit, or to your readers. So, I'll repeat...

DO NOT JUST COPY AND PASTE THE LINK

Now you've read the article, keep in mind what the most important points you think are in it. Don't worry about being "right". You are writing your thoughts and responses here!

Now back it up! Reinforce! Support it!

Go find 3 (or more!) other articles about the same thing. READ THEM. Find the important points in these articles. Find supporting evidence, a different point of view, an insider's voice, or any other thing that YOU think is valuable to share.

So yeah, you gotta make sure that these additional articles you find aren't just copy/pasta of each other LOL! You'll find both Left and Right have circle-jerk clickbait sites which repeat the same crap over and over.

Which moves us to...VERIFY!

You need to verify two things

  • Bias
  • Accuracy

You should not be afraid to use biased sources, as long as you know they are biased, and prepared to admit they are biased if called upon it...or to admit upfront; biased does not mean wrong. It means information may have been manipulated in presentation.

As far as checking accuracy...
You are not required to drive to the other side of the country and re-interview the subject of an article you use, but you should make sure you aren't just gossiping or spreading rumors. In #informationwar, there are lots of things that can not be verified (disinformation, unknown unknowns, dead sources, deep state secrets, etc.). But when you use unverified data, make sure you put a source on it.

So-and-so says this. Maybe he's wrong, maybe he's lying. (down the road, I'll go into credibility and validity...for right now, I think we're good on the concept)

And now you can even go back into your own writing, and mix in the things you have discussed before!

Start writing

You will be making an argument

1.A claim – the key point being made
2.Evidence to support the claim
– Empirical data, published work, studies, etc.
3.The warrant – making the logical connections
– the reasoning drawing our the evidence
4.Qualifications:
conditions limiting main claim
– This argument only works within these limits
Constructing an Argument

Now you can copy and paste...(if you need help in formatting this, ask in the comments!)
BUT

  • you are copying and pasting from this source and that source
  • you are showing your source for each quote
  • you are comparing them against each other
  • you are adding in your own thoughts...I think this Steve guy is a damn liar, and he smells funny too!
  • add in a chart or a graph
  • you are organizing these points in a way that makes sense to you
  • does your personal experience come into play? use it, but prove it!

Pretty it up!

Add pictures...make a chart...use fancy formatting...bold it...italic it...do both...(but on those last three, do it where it calls attention to important points!)

Did I say to add pictures? Yes I did! Adding pics will get you more views, and thus more engagement.

And finish it!

Write a conclusion...how do these pieces fit together? Remember Information War demands critical thinking. You don't have to be original, but you do have to make an argument, and be reasonable in proving it..remembering that there are things we can not prove 100% with the evidence we have at hand, so make the best argument with what you have, not what you have faith in! Remember that you may be wrong based on evidence you don't have, but stick to the logic and facts that you have, until there is enough evidence to disprove your argument, and if so, be gracious!

And you can use this process on any other subject that you'd like to...except for fiction. You're on your own there ;>

If there is interest in an Information War writing seminar, let me know in the comments, and I'll put one together.



My Books

Authors get paid when people like you upvote their post.
If you enjoyed what you read here, create your account today and start earning FREE STEEM!
Sort Order:  

Hate it when I have an idea and then it vanishes!

I find that my ideas come to me when I am "mindlessly" doing things like showering, doing yard or house work, or after waking during the night -- I put "mindlessly" in quotes because of course, I can never shut my brain down, and thus when I am doing something that requires my hands but not my brain, my brain cogitates all on its own, and tends to "speak" a narrative of running thought that sometimes goes in interesting directions, that sometimes considers unique aspects or unusual comparisons to an issue.

What I have decided to do with this is to stop whatever I am doing and jot down the idea in my phone when it comes to me. I have a running list of post ideas that is about 20 or 30 long, so if I'm at a loss I can just pick one and go.

In some ways, ideas are like playing racquetball, if you've ever played. I learned early in racquetball that you usually only get one chance at the ball. You may think you will just wait until it bounces off the back wall and hit it again as it is going forwards, but it usually bounces off at a speed or in a direction that is unreachable, and then you end up sprinting fruitlessly after a ball you have no chance of catching. So always take the shot when you have one even if it is not ideal!

I get the same for most of my ideas; they tend to pop in while I'm about other ideas; I try to log them as you do

I have found that the more you read and the more you write, the more frequently these ideas pop up

Mine always seem to pop in when I lay down to go to sleep. My mind slows down just enough to let the consciousness flow. I tried keeping a voice-activated tape recorder by the bed- but no joy. Now I just lay there and repeat the ideas over and over until they stick until morning. I used to do the same thing with lectures.

Curated for #informationwar
Relevance: engagement with tag
Our Purpose

To add to @stevescoins list of assets:
http://www.theduran.com
http://www.fort-russ.com
http://www.zerohedge.com
http://unzreview.com
http://russia-insider.com
http://www.cointelegraph.com (for politics and crypto).

#informationwar here on steemit.

Find something, anything, then put 2+2 togetther... get 5 and post. Because if you can't synthesize two disparate pieces of information into 1 more interesting one, you haven't found the essence of the information war.

cant believe I missed ZeroHedge!
I've heard good things about The Duran, but havn't checked it out yet
Also check out Tom's work here and at GoldGoatsNGuns ;>
I'll also add, now that I think about it @informationwar here on steemit, #fakenews here on steemit

The Duran is good. Alex Mercouris is excellent. Also, sites like Katehon (a russian think tank) isn't bad either. Asia Times. Moon of Alabama for geopolitics,even though b. is a German leftist... still good info there.

Beep! Beep! This humvee will be patrolling by and assisting new veterans, retirees, and military members here on Steem. @shadow3scalpel will help by upvoting posts from a list of members maintained by @chairborne and responding to any questions replied to this comment.

Well, somebody beat me to ZeroHedge, but American Thinker, Daily Signal, PJ Media and (dare I say it) Life News. I also get ideas from Y-Tube but I don't watch the same stuff most other people do. These are mostly for ideas about subject matter anyway- after I get the idea, I start digging elsewhere (like that floppy which was the culmination of YEARS of research).

Ah three sources- the good 'ol academic method- I thought she was dead and buried. In your sub-chap. Back It Up you have a typo copy/pasta* you must have been hungry (I told you extrafries but you never listen my son). Reading through I think you have the makings of a fine article. For myself, I find that writing more journalistically, or editorially works for me... I think academia is a bit dry for this format... kids want to be entertained- Like you said, throw in some pictures and maybe a video.

I hope you got the email I sent- if you haven't seen it, you need to look!!!!! PELIGRO!

thanks for the feedback!

I was used to academic writing from grad school, but I was told by a few folks to dumb it down and let Steemers have the chance to understand it.

American Thinker is a good one. I'll have to look/see Life News

I'm still working off the extrafries damn it!

And thanks for the Electrum headsup, too!

I got so far into academic writing that even the professors couldn't follow it. I was having difficulty interacting with people in everyday life. So now I've "trained" myself to always consider my audience- it doesn't do any good to tell someone something if they don't understand what you're talking about... it kinda defeats the purpose of language. (I'm also much happier). In my writing I don't focus so much on "proving" what I say- what I write about is almost all based on over 20 years of research and experience, so I'm pretty certain of the veracity. I just make sure to keep it understandable.

Someone on here yesterday wrote a post about Electrum's security protocol being breached (thank God I saw it). I upgraded my wallet. It said that the password protected wallets weren't hit YET.

I've been doing kind of a paleo diet (rib eyes) and talking berberine which is supposed to be a miracle supplement as far as blood sugar, cholesterol and triglycerides go. I have diabetes and haven't had to take but 1 shot in over a month.

the language of academics can be addictive, the multi-syllable, pseudocognitive, thieve's cants of researchers (but particularly in social "science" researchers)has a rythm of it's own. I fell into the same trap

"trained" myself to always consider my audience

I wish I did, I still drop into Professor Steve mode more often than I should to tell folks what I'm gonna tell em.

rib eyes....mmmmmmmmmmm

couldn't help myself

good to know you're doing better!

I've become an acolyte of Occam's Razor and, of course, as you know Andrzejewski's Law.

And those steaks are ruined... Burnt to death. "We have a name for that where I come from- shoe leather!"

my brother does an orange juice, brown sugar, soy rub that always looks burnt, but damn it good

Andrzejewski's Law.
cant say as I do

Google it and look who you find lol! You did it before. "Verbiage increases to the extent that ambition exceeds knowledge."

I do a variation on Black Forest steak... I put a pat of butter, about 1 tsp of whutsdishere sauce, and 2-3 tbsp maple syrup and microwave for about 35-40 secs (until butter melts) and pour it over the steak... It makes a great dipping sauce.

dint see anything under "Andrzejewski's Law." but I did find the others by searching the quote

and that steak sauce looks damn good. gonna try it!

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

To continue to add to the list of sources:

unz.com
antiwar.com
theintercept.com (sometimes)
Consortiumnews.com
Lobelog.com
TomDispatch.com

Personally, since I have a boring 9-5, I roam these sites daily looking for a topic or two. Once I find something, I spend the week collecting articles (past and present). I'll read each one while taking notes, then create an outline for my write up and my podcast episode.

Only way to keep yourself organized and not fall into the cycle of having way too many topics in your head.

not fall into the cycle of having way too many topics in your head.

too late for me. ;>

If I had the time to do a post a day it definitely wouldn't be an issue.

I'm enjoying my funemployment, gives me time to write...but if Steem gets back up to 8 and floors out there, i wont be doing bad!

Thanks. It's sometimes difficult to find something to chew over and write about. So far, reading my feed is giving me ideas to write about, but I've only been here 3 weeks :p

You're right about the copy/paste blog. It's frustrating to go in and find that they've not written about the subject, just left a link.

I like how you've condensed the advice to write a well-rounded blog. Cheers.

cheetah used to nail a lot of those, idk if the bot still runs

but you're right, copypasta is a timewaster!

it needs to run... clean the place up of clutter :)

welcome aboard! I see @frankbacon's evil hand in this LOL

Curses! And I would've gotten away with it too if it weren't for you meddling kids!
Imgur

I stay powered up with scooby snacks

@therealalexjonesshow is an oxymoron... thank God it's only @frankbacon at work (or play) I almost powered down and scrapped Steemit for good!

But that's too hard!
Can't you just upvote my cat picture post?

.... but I don't have a cat picture post, what if they actually try to upvote it...

I find the most difficult part in finishing up a post.
I have many that really need an image to explain it. An infographic or a cartoon. And these take time... and they take a plan/outline/sketch

And nobody believes my facts, because the lies disprove my truth. /em crai.

Your cat's a whore, I fucked her last week... anyways, it's the middle of the night and I can't sleep... just sayin!

Usually sleep deprivation makes you write crappy posts, but sometimes, they come out really bizarre and people really like them and everybody votes for them. just sayin.

I am sorry you are not falling asleep during the time that you get to sleep.

It happens... I live with a lot of ghosts and sometimes they get really loud- it comes with the territory. I made a comment to another ex-military guy the other day: If you don't like living with ghosts, don't enlist.

I'm putting your theory to the test!

ROFL thats the same thing I bitch about! but I bet it's what eventually brings the crowds in...

I have many that really need an image to explain it. An infographic or a cartoon. And these take time... and they take a plan/outline/sketch

I don't mind using images that are already on the web...sometimes it takes a while to find the right one, but still better than the horrible pepe images I can create LOL

and I was just about to make sure we all know to surce images found from the web when i realized i didnt do it today...le sigh