Disclaimer: This isn't about the issue. It's an issue the issue raises that has to do with discussion, communication, and community.
The Burrard bridge bicycle lane trial has begun.
I'm not from Vancouver, I don't bike across the bridge, and I'm not really entitled to much of an opinion as I haven't examined the plans, read the council minutes, or really paid much attention at all - until today.
You see, every local-news outlet has a story on the bike-lane'd bridge. And in today's everybody-has-a-voice web2.0 social media mad world, that means every story has a comment thread a mile long.
In theory, enabling comments and discussion fosters debate and communication.
In practice, comment-sections quickly degenerate into useless strings of spin and vitriol only occasionally related to the originating article.
Insults are flung with wild abandon, key-messages drown out discussion, and somehow (I really don't understand it yet) the least intelligent among us manage to find their way onto the internet and whip out angry diatribes that only occasionally make sense.
It's depressing to think that those posting are actually the listening/watching/reading public. So, rather than be depressed I imagine this:
Massive banks of computers in a smoke-filled room, cigarette buts dangling from ashtrays on the corners of redbull-strewn desks. Each computer is staffed by a moron with a script, shit-posting to beat hell, while a balding man with dark circles under his eyes paces circles in front of a giant set of monitors looking for news to hijack.
It's like a telethon to save PBS, but instead of red-dwarf reruns we get the daily news. And instead of saving PBS the point is this is an intricate plot to degrade public dialogue to the point where it doesn't make sense to have a public dialogue at all.
I like to think this intricate plan is funded by the military-industrial-complex (do we even call it that now that it's really the everything-complex?) to weaken the public's role in any sort of policy development or implementation.
I then like to use that vision to get really pissed off, curse the lack of public spaces where debate and discussion occur in Canada, and then I do my best to either:
A. Write a coherent post engaging with the few people actually participating in some sort of discussion, then vote-up our posts with a host of fake accounts.
B. Respond to comments in earnest, with sourced arguments, but in the wrong comment thread.
Option B is way more fun, but usually just gets ignored.
The moral of the story is this, "The internet is too easy."
Or it isn't.
Showing posts with label discussion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label discussion. Show all posts
Monday, July 13, 2009
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