Social media is destroying our humanity

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Arthur.....if you're a fan of Alan Alda......if not already done so check out "Same Time Next Year" from 1978 starring Alda and Ellen Burstyn.

A corny romantic comedic drama......and just fantastic, if you like that sort of thing. :)

A movie about two crappy people who cheat on their spouses. I bet Alda’s wife and Burstyn’s husband didn’t think it was fantastic.
 
M*A*S*H was such a good show. It's still running in syndication. When I was working as a foliage plant grower in Apopka right out of college late 70's, I also held a part-time job as a night clerk at a Cumberland Farms store in Mt. Dora. I was renting the back of a big house on Lake Jem and my whole life consisted on working in my profession during the week and going home to surf on the weekends.

I had a routine every day after my day job to come home, grab a bite, change clothes, and catch an episode of M*A*S*H before heading to the Cumberland Farms job.

We didn't have the Internet back then. No cell phones. Called & talked to people on regular telephones. We learned about humanity (in part) by watching shows like this.....

Under all that superficial bravado, Charles was a very good man. Well played character.
 
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The guy I worked with, who lost his marriage over it, was into some type of war game. Supposedly, he'd use PTO days to stay home and play them all day and on the weekends that's all he would do. His wife would want to do grown-up "married couple stuff," and all he wanted to do was play video games.

Dang. Up to this point in human history, vagina has been undefeated. I guess no dynasty lasts forever.
 
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I just had a conversation with my father, who said he was at a conference and Big Foot came by and messed with people's tents and was seen behind a fence. I don't think social media is necessarily the real core of the problem. Social media is more like an interstate where people go to drive with reckless abandon and smash into each other, all the while they blame the other crazy drivers for not knowing the laws they know and then call their insurance company to sue the other guy for damages.
 
I've given the title of this thread a lot of thought and thank @crimsonaudio for that mental exercise.

I've come to the conclusion that social media don't destroy humanity. Rather, they reveal humanity by removing any filter.

The outlandish positions, statements and endless provocations are what humans do when they don't think they'll be called to personal account for their actions.

For goodness sake, how many criminals are caught because of what they posted on one forum or another? It honestly never occurs to them that their statements are public record.

There are exceptions, of course, where social media facilitate either physical or mental rescues. But there are far more examples of feeding the maw.

When people are behind a keyboard, not face-to-face with the people they insult, condemn, or otherwise denigrate, they'll say things they'd never say in a different setting. It's exactly parallel to what goes through your mind, unvoiced, in a personal confrontation. Except there is no filter because there are no perceived consequences, real or potential.

To quote the famous philosopher Pogo (for the non-OFC, look him up), "We have met the enemy, and he is us."

It's a crying shame, but social media are not the destruction of humanity. They're who we really are, and always have been, when we think we can get away with it.
 
WE ARE A GENERATION THAT WILL NEVER COME BACK!!!
A generation that walked to school and then walked back.
A generation that did their homework alone to get out asap to play in the street.
A generation that spent all their free time in the streets with their Friends.
A generation that played hide and seek when dark.
A generation that made mud cakes.
A generation that collected sports cards.
A generation that found, collected, washed & returned empty coke bottles to the local grocery store for 5 cents each, then bought a Mountain Dew and candy bar with the money.
A generation that made paper toys with their bare hands.
A generation who bought vinyl albums to play on record players.
A generation that collected photos and albums of clippings of their life experiences as a Kid.
A generation that played board games and cards on rainy days.
A generation whose TV went off at midnight after playing the National Anthem.
A generation that had parents who were there.
A generation that laughed under the covers in bed so parents didn't know we were still awake.
A generation that is passing and unfortunately it will never return no matter how hard we try.
I loved Growing up when I did. it was the best of times!!!
 
WE ARE A GENERATION THAT WILL NEVER COME BACK!!!
A generation that walked to school and then walked back.
A generation that did their homework alone to get out asap to play in the street.
A generation that spent all their free time in the streets with their Friends.
A generation that played hide and seek when dark.
A generation that made mud cakes.
A generation that collected sports cards.
A generation that found, collected, washed & returned empty coke bottles to the local grocery store for 5 cents each, then bought a Mountain Dew and candy bar with the money.
A generation that made paper toys with their bare hands.
A generation who bought vinyl albums to play on record players.
A generation that collected photos and albums of clippings of their life experiences as a Kid.
A generation that played board games and cards on rainy days.
A generation whose TV went off at midnight after playing the National Anthem.
A generation that had parents who were there.
A generation that laughed under the covers in bed so parents didn't know we were still awake.
A generation that is passing and unfortunately it will never return no matter how hard we try.
I loved Growing up when I did. it was the best of times!!!

I guarantee the generation before you said the same things about you, that they were the last ones that did things right and you were ruining the world.
 
I've given the title of this thread a lot of thought and thank @crimsonaudio for that mental exercise.

I've come to the conclusion that social media don't destroy humanity. Rather, they reveal humanity by removing any filter.

The outlandish positions, statements and endless provocations are what humans do when they don't think they'll be called to personal account for their actions.

For goodness sake, how many criminals are caught because of what they posted on one forum or another? It honestly never occurs to them that their statements are public record.

There are exceptions, of course, where social media facilitate either physical or mental rescues. But there are far more examples of feeding the maw.

When people are behind a keyboard, not face-to-face with the people they insult, condemn, or otherwise denigrate, they'll say things they'd never say in a different setting. It's exactly parallel to what goes through your mind, unvoiced, in a personal confrontation. Except there is no filter because there are no perceived consequences, real or potential.

To quote the famous philosopher Pogo (for the non-OFC, look him up), "We have met the enemy, and he is us."

It's a crying shame, but social media are not the destruction of humanity. They're who we really are, and always have been, when we think we can get away with it.
I hate to say, but the gorillas in Uganda and Rwanda seem to be far more civilized than we humans...At one time I had faith in the "human race," but currently I am totally depressed. The days of Noah could not have been any worse than what we are currently experiencing.
 
I hate to say, but the gorillas in Uganda and Rwanda seem to be far more civilized than we humans...At one time I had faith in the "human race," but currently I am totally depressed. The days of Noah could not have been any worse than what we are currently experiencing.

As in the days of Noah, he will return.
 
I guarantee the generation before you said the same things about you, that they were the last ones that did things right and you were ruining the world.
Yes, you can find similar complaints in ancient Greece. However, I'd point out that the enumerated pastimes were activities which had been around for many generations, with a few exceptions (we didn't have TV until I was a sophomore in HS). The big dividing line is the screen, particularly the hand-held one...
 
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Yes, you can find similar complaints in ancient Greece. However, I'd point out that the enumerated pastimes were activities which had been around for many generations, with a few exceptions (we didn't have TV until I was a sophomore in HS). The big dividing line is the screen, particularly the hand-held one...
I'd also add that over the centuries, complaints have been mostly about the "younger generation."

Today, so-called adults are at least as bad. And that's a function of the real difference -- actual and/or and perceived anonymity behind a computer keyboard.
 
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Yes, you can find similar complaints in ancient Greece. However, I'd point out that the enumerated pastimes were activities which had been around for many generations, with a few exceptions (we didn't have TV until I was a sophomore in HS). The big dividing line is the screen, particularly the hand-held one...

Yeah the ancient Greeks probably thought it was weird when we started wearing clothes for the Olympics.
 
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