Wednesday, August 16, 2017

Social media's impact on events

Apart from the horrific events that resulted from the clash of people and their theoretical attachments what seems most different today is the instantaneous interaction of people worldwide as the events unfolded. Yes, people died, others were injured, and the sensibilities of people all over were raised to a passion. This seems to be the human predicament. We could argue over cultural clashes between meme saturated individuals that group themselves around others who speak the same memes fluently and maybe even think one another in their group understand the others – though this seems doubtful in the nature of how language works. Even individuals in the crowd retreated in horror on recognizing the reactions of people and back pedaled regarding their own espousal of the memes that were associated with the most radical – though really traditional - vocabularies. Nazi and so forth. While others embraced those very radicalities. Being in the same mob clearly does not imply understanding and cohesion. But what strikes me as radically different is the simultaneity of international response in the media. Everyone has something to say about it – myself included. We are all living those moments together in a way so universal it is astounding to me. The speed of light brings us through the virtual reality of the web into the conflict as it happens – even because of digitization a multiple review of the same view until what we see and experience is totally unlike what was experienced in those few moments by the people on the ground. What we of course belabor and rightfully so, is morality, behavior, radicality, evil. But being immersed in the universal living moment of this event – as well as others such as President Trump’s tweets – is the momentous change that restructures our social interaction.

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