Does Time Mag Think Politics is Unnatural?


Apparently, Time Magazine doesn’t think that politics is a proper subject for social-networking sites such as FaceBook. In fact, one almost gets the feeling that Time thinks the Internet would be wholly free of passion and even vitriol were it not for politics making its evil presence known in cyberspace. And whose fault is all this vitriol? Why it’s the Jews, of course.

At the very least, Time is seen lamenting that politics has become such a lively part of the World Wide Web. In a recent article titled “Facebook Users Go to War over Gaza,” Time seems to say that social networking sites on the Internet were free of vitriol until politics and the war in Gaza came around.

Social-networking websites may have started out as online cliques where friends could swap opinions on music, pop culture and other bits of innocuous personal trivia. But as the conflict in Gaza has unfolded, it’s becoming evident that sites like Facebook are increasingly being used to express political views, adding an acrimonious, even menacing undertone to what were once lighthearted online forums.

What? Is Time saying that politics isn’t really a subject that average people are ever interested in? Only “music, pop culture and other bits of innocuous personal trivia” belong on social-newtworking sites? And, does Time imagine that there was no vitriol on the Internet but for the existence of political opinions?

Does Time not have any philosophical grasp on the salient fact that man is a political creature? That politics is not somehow outside of man’s normal existence but an integral part of it?

From reading this lament, it would seem that the folks at Time are truly that simple minded.

And, naturally they found another so-called “expert” to claim that this is all so “troubling” and “new.”

Rita King, who studies online communities as a senior fellow at the Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs, says the heightened level of hostility since Israel began its military operation is troubling. “Learning how to navigate this potentially dangerous new twist in human interaction is complicated, particularly with regard to issues of security,” King says. According to Lea Bishop Shaver, a lecturer at Yale Law School, threatening to kill someone through an online forum “can land you in jail for assault, even if you never touch the person.” But she added that making empty threats over the Internet rarely results in prosecution. “To trigger criminal prosecution, the threat has to be a serious one,” Shaver says.

Sorry, Rita, but there isn’t a THING “new” in this “human interaction.” It is perhaps more immediate, but these sort of passions and interactions are as old as man himself.

In any case, this Time “report” is at the same time filled with the obvious and blindly stupid of the nature of humanity. There are no insights here.


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3 Comments Leave a comment

Where were these people

RoxannaDanna (Diary) Friday, January 16th at 6:12AM EST (link)

during the last 2 years? They weren’t paying attention to internet bloggers during the campaign? They didn’t hear of or read DailyKos or the huffington post and the ugly lies they spread all over the ‘net about Palin and her children and the parentage of her baby son?

The internet was full of vitriol during this last campaign.

I think that what’s really happening is a slow, steady and stealthy anti-Semetic blame game, waged by the leftist media. We should be keeping a real close eye on what and how they are reporting their version of the “news”.

Yep

Warner Todd Huston (Diary) Friday, January 16th at 6:34AM EST (link)

I was wondering the same thing myself.

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Jealous?

maddog (Diary) Friday, January 16th at 8:57AM EST (link)

Could it be that Time is jealous or threatned by Internet? Print media has been bleeding circulation and customers. To paraphrase a scene in Animal House, “They can’t be in politics. Only we can be in politics” Well, the public has had enough of print media’s politics. The main stream media is no longer the gatekeepers of information they once were. The Internet is a wonderful alternative to by-pass the bias and prejudice the “journalists” inject. May Time magazine go the way of the Minn “Red” Star-Tribune.