I started
this blog and named it Viable Opposition largely because I live in a two
political party jurisdiction where we badly need a viable third party option.
It was a way for me to vent my feelings, lower my blood pressure and,
hopefully, get a few people thinking before they take the time to vote. I
began by dealing with local issues and quite quickly learned that it was akin
to crapping in your own backyard so, I changed my focus to national issues.
While that was fun, there was a huge international audience out there
and, as Europe's crisis began to wind up and BP fouled the waters of the Gulf
of Mexico, I thought it would be interesting to learn about issues that were
out of my comfort zone and deal with some that I knew something about. In
July 2010, I began to write about international issues that were either not as
heavily covered by the mainstream media or where I thought that my knowledge as
a scientist would offer a different and perhaps deeper investigation. As
those of you that read my musings regularly know, I very, very rarely quote
from media sources, rather, I head right to the source material. I guess
it's my science training; I strive to be as error-free as possible. As I
spend time viewing the online versions of newspapers around the globe, I have
found it interesting to see how little original writing there is out there;
most of what we read in our local newspapers is sourced from a handful of
writers around the English-speaking world. This means that we, as
consumers of news, are hardly getting an unbiased and original viewpoint.
Since I
started this blog two and a half years ago, I have set goals for myself as a
way to stay motivated. As many bloggers know (right MP?), motivation is
difficult for those of us with non-commercial blogs. Yes, I do have
Google Ads but the income from those click throughs basically pays for the
electricity that I use to keep my computer monitor lit so that's hardly enough
to keep a blogger motivated. When I first started out, I was trying to
post something every day. That didn't last; it was just taking up way too
much of my day and, other than friends who I basically begged to read my
musings, I was getting very few hits. My next goal was to achieve the
5000 page hit target. Next up was the magic one hundred hits a day; that
first happened during the G-20 Summit held in Canada during late June 2010.
It was a weird experience watching my counter rise past my usual 25 to 30
hits per day and, quite frankly, a bit creepy. By Christmas 2010, I'd hit
the 100,000 hit mark, a personal blogging watershed moment. As time went
on, I kept thinking that it would be great to get 250,000 hits then 500,000 and
so on.
Last night, my Google page hit counter looked like this:
Finally, I
have reached my goal. There were days went it seemed like it would never
happen.
In case you
are interested, this is where most of my page hits came from:
I'd like to
take this opportunity to thank everyone who has clicked on my blog deliberately
or inadvertently, those who have taken the time to post a comment because,
after all, this endeavour is about creating dialogue and getting people to
think, those who have added their names to my Followers list and those who have
clicked on a Google Ad. My sincere hope is that you have all learned
something. I know that I have. While I haven't met any of you and
don't always respond to your comments, I read every one of them and respect your
opinions, whether we agree or not.
Thanks again
for your support. It is humbling.
nowadays your blog is banned in China for unknown reason, otherwise you will find that a lot of hits was and would be from China
ReplyDeleteThanks for that bit of information. I did not see that one coming!
ReplyDeleteHuge congratulations! I remember how happy I was when I found your blog because you have that rare emphasis on clear, readable data. I appreciate how you've sorted through data, probably tons of it, to find those good sources. That's a lot of work and your readers, including me, reap the benefits. We owe you a lot of thanks.
ReplyDeleteI have to say I don't have much trouble with motivating myself to write. This is the first time in my life when writing has come easily. But what you do may be harder. But it is worth it, isn't it? I sure think so.
Again, many thanks and many congrats!
Congratulations, PJ. You are being read; your voice is being heard. Only one reader in a thousand? five thousand? comments. The silent majority is truly silent.
ReplyDeleteI, for one, appreciate your objective view of the world. The truth is a difficult thing to track down amidst the political rhetoric.
All the best to you in your world. I'm reading.
-wb :-)
Hi there,
ReplyDeleteOK, I'll come out of the dark and voice a hearty "Thank You" for the time you take to write this blog. I certainly learned a lot from your writings, stuff that we don't get to read in MSM. Not that I read MSM, I figured that one out long ago :)
It is nice, albeit quite sobering, to have the truth out before one's eyes to see. Depressing to come to realize also, in what kind of a s**t ocean we are swimming in these days. But facts are facts, reality is what it is even if we don't want to see it. Kinda scary, where all this is going. At least one who is informed can plan accordingly.
Again, thanks, and I sincerely hope you can keep on writing.
John
(Montreal Canada)
I like your blog as it usually isn't over my head and I learn a great deal. Glad you hit the million and keep up the good work.
ReplyDeleteAlso many thanks from me!
ReplyDeleteI find your writings very well-informed and detailed. Very well worth reading and occasionally passing along to others.
All the best!