Marshall McLuhan, forever associated with the expression, "The medium is the message," wrote in 1967 that we live in a "complex system of information, physically, physiologically, nervously, humanly." He wrote at that time that there had never been so much information. He referred to this increase in information as "information fallout." He described masses of information that one could barely absorb. He was concerned that we were losing a sense of unity with all these bits of information and this could lead to something worse than chaos.
What would he say today? Think about that. He had already written about the dangers of information overload before iPads and tablets, iPods, cell phones that are really computers, real-time video and audio postings, cars with computer touch screens that also talk, televisions with hundreds of stations competing for our attention.
He also wrote that as worrisome as the amount of information we were expected to synthesize, was the technology that dispersed it. Technology affects the way we look at the world. There are social implications as a result of the medium that we use. I think he was saying that we are so busy focusing on the content that we don't realize that the medium (technology) itself leads to social change, not always for the betterment of society.
Today, we have masses of information that are sent via instant messaging, tweeting, tumblr, YouTube. Speed is a priority, brevity is important. There are social implications that come with this technology. Among other things, we are losing accuracy and time for critical thinking. Tom Flanagan is a recent recipient of information fallout. He was asked about the Indian Act which was synthesized with a question about child pornography and something Mr. Flanagan might have said elsewhere. The comments, posted on YouTube, travelled at the speed of light. How was he to engage in reasoned discourse when the message had so quickly been massaged by others beyond the original thought or intent? Look how quickly he was judged and "dropped" by friends and peers. Is this our future: Fear of attacks on social media stifling different voices and difficult but necessary problem-solving?
McLuhan also taught that technology brings "extensions and amputations"; the good and the bad. McLuhan's example had been the telephone. Yes, it extends the voice, but also amputates the art of penmanship gained through regular correspondence. I would suggest that it also was the beginning of an amputation of person to person interaction which is necessary for the brain to pick up the minutiae of signals that enable us to "read" others. Today's technology fractures interpersonal relationships.
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We do our society a disservice if we only embrace the extensions and refuse to look at the amputations.
For all the good social media was meant to achieve by extension, opening the discourse to many who would never have been heard, it released unintended consequences by encouraging anonymity and grandiose infantile delusions of entitlement to say anything. Anonymity makes it possible for people to express feeling-based opinion that is often 100 per cent fact-free and rarely resembles anything close to truth. There is no accountability when one can espouse beliefs behind screen names.
Civility is a firewall meant to keep us from reverting to our petty, selfish, inner, ugly natural selves; from expressing dangerous hateful dogma. In the 1920s Freud wrote that without some form of controls, religious or otherwise, mayhem would rule as we fall to the lowest common denominator. Most recent studies from Yale University point to an innate lack of compassion from birth towards those who are different. Anything that takes the restraints away from civilization is welcomed by those who attack others whom they view as different or most often weak; easy targets. Orwell's Animal Farm online. The ordeal of civility is an ordeal for a reason.
Anonymous comments, "the new norm," on social media, have serious social implications. They can inflame a situation, feeding the baser emotions of readers and listeners. Anonymity makes it possible to taunt others, to agitate, to provoke but not educate, making room for a meanness that has insinuated itself into everyday communication; a meanness that promotes anger, the type of anger that in its vehemence can lead us away from compassion and empathy. It is acceptable, today, to speak rudely, disrespectfully, thoughtlessly throughout the public square and irreparably damage others.
Our young people, encouraged to bare all, are incorporating disrespectful behaviours into their daily interactions, so much so that Professor Jill Jacobson at Queen's University felt compelled last year to introduce rules of civility into her classroom "Discriminatory, rude, threatening, harassing, disruptive, distracting and inappropriate behaviour and language will not be tolerated." It is a sad comment on our students, today, that one would need a clause to ensure respect for our teachers. What was more surprising was the response that somehow demanding respectful speech would impinge upon freedom of speech as if the right to speak included the right to discard all things civil.
There is no doubt that social media is contributing to great positive changes in our world. But we must not forget or ignore its dark side. Our children, young and older, have become so comfortable expressing their feelings on their computers, phones, and iPads, they are unwittingly disseminating thoughts and pictures one would never share in public while at the same time they are opening their private space to new-age bullies and sexual predators.
Remember the nursery rhyme: Sticks and stones can break my bones but names will never hurt me? Not true. Words abused are weapons of destruction. And today, these words remain in the public discourse for perpetuity. There are no MRI's to detect broken souls; the result of language abused.
In the long history of human development, civility is nascent. The past century has shown us the ease with which the foundation of civility is breached; it is still a tenuous veneer. Social media, by encouraging anonymous communication can, bit by bit, fracture civility, the rock upon which a healthy society stands. A society without civil constraints falls into decay. The anonymous world of social media is unintentionally teaching us, consciously and unconsciously, to be unfeeling, uncaring, and insensitive. We do that at the expense of the health of our children and the health of our community.
Continuous impersonal communication prevents the development of civilized, emotionally well-developed, compassionate citizens capable of rational, respectful dialogue. We can't put the genie back in the bottle. But we must find ways to teach civility, again, or we all lose.
The message was not 'massaged' by others. His intent was painfully clear. This particular example is not illustrative of the 'dark side' of social media.
He said that statement for a second time, the other was in 2009 in Manitoba.
The FN's persons attending his lecture should be applauded for capturing his statement on viewing child pornography -- for they did what all of Flanagan's political science students failed to do over the decades of being subjected to his hard core hideous logic pattern.
This internet incivility is not a recent phenomena -- it started nearly a century ago in New York city when this group of powerful men took control of the U.S. media; http://bit.ly/NtT7SB .
From that control over information, the powerful allied elites could inflame/degrade/withhold issues fed to the population and forever keep them divided and hurling insults back and forth.
In Canada, the same media control/division exists -- the House of Commons being a additional cesspool of hurling insults.
So, the internet is just a speedy execution of the lack of civil debate found in every government classroom in the country.
Put two adults in each classroom, a teacher and a student personnel manager, and this internet behavior goes away.
HuffPo has this FAQ page: http://huff.to/hpWBcj , for expected posting decorum -- rarely is it enforced on all these "drive-by smear postings" -- that is the principal cause of internet incivility and anonymity has little to do with it.
I am very familiar with Tom Flanagan and his works and suffice it to say, this was the last straw and he better get on his high horse and get the hell out of Canada.
Social media may have said problems which even carries to the real outside world however, to counter your article, I find that the anonymity and social medias also brings out information and ideas not encouraged or freely expressed outside those circles and promotes a thought process that has been suppressed out of duty of civility.
With the good, comes the bad and with the bad, comes the good... like it or not.
Flanagan's comments on child pornography start at around the 1:28 mark.
http://news.nationalpost.com/2013/02/28/ex-harper-advisor-tom-flanagan-fired-from-cbc-after-saying-theres-nothing-wrong-with-viewing-child-pornography/
And for that we have to thank the availability of information. Social discussion, curiosity, research...and critical thinking are all valuable side effects of all those bits of information.
Civility is learned where it has always been learned ,in the home.
Could you not have used the recent death of the 12 year old victim of bullying? That would have been more appropriate for your story line.
But instead you headlined Mr Flanagan as a victim and then briefly devoted just half a paragraph to his "victimization" without really saying why he is a victim. Other than the fact that people did not like what he said.
In this instance I feel there is a strong thread of righteousness in the opinion of the social media to reject Mr Flanagan's "qualifying" remarks that perhaps viewing child pornography should not be criminalized.
There is nothing at all uncivil about rejecting that assertion.
Child Pornographyis heinous....probably the most destructive activity on the planet.
Making any excuse for any participants( other than perhaps mental illness which in my view would require being locked away form society) is to condone it.
Should the people of WW2 Germany have been granted the freedom to look the other way as their neighbors were marched away to their deaths.?
No different... babies are hurt, irreparably in the production of the stuff these monsters call their freedom.
I did not choose Mr. Flanagan to defend his views.This article is not about child pornography. It is about the dangers of social media. I connected Marshall McLuhan's concepts about the media to an act that took place over the weekend. And then wrote a great deal more.
I wrote a great deal in this article about young people being harmed by opening their homes to abusers through the internet as an example of the dark side of social media.
I am including a link to bullying and bystanders that I recently posted.
http://www.huffingtonpost.ca/diane-bederman/anderson-cooper-bullying-special_b_2792599.html DWB
The same questions regarding anonymity and civility could be asked of the use of cars.
While I always post using my name, and while anonymity removes certain responsibilities, it does also protect the persecuted, empower their voices, and bear witness to things that would not necessarily be brought to light. It removes one type of personal accountability, as it creates another more collective one: his feet were held to the fire for a remark he made in public. After all, were the anonymous remarks the provocation? No.