I just came across this CBC news report from 1993 which is kind of amusing now:
Wow...you mean people were CIVILIZED on the Internet once?
Boy, that guy totally underestimated the human tendency to screw anything up that we get our hands on.
I just came across this CBC news report from 1993 which is kind of amusing now:
It also seems like people don't get the fact that they should treat each other the way they would if they were in person.
Then again, the Internet seems to have even desensitized people as to how they treat each other in person. Flash mobs, cyberbullying, and phenomena like that have certainly contributed to it. Crappy parenting is certainly a key part of that problem; parents did not set appropriate limits for their children and then wondered why they ended up with little Alex-like monsters* that thought it was OK to raise hell on the streets and film it for YouTube.
*Clockwork Orange Alex
Please read the entire post before commenting. The Internet obviously contributed to the problem, but you apparently blew right past the comment that crappy parenting is a big contributing factor. Had parents set proper limits for their kids, then what is out there on the Internet wouldn't be anywhere near as big of a deal. Couple kids allowed to run wild with an environment that allows them to do it anonymously, and they will go crazy.
I don't think it's a "kids got no respect" thing. It's more of a "parents don't give a shit" thing. Of course, my opinion might be skewed right now; I deal with a lot of shitty parents in my job these days.
Didn't they?Anyone remember when all those bugs bunny cartoons were going to make us all psychopaths?
The only one that seems questionable is the medical info card.
Remember, that's "un-American."
I think that the continuing and growing problem with anti-social behavior - especially in the UK - is, in part, a result of the perceived anonymity that the internet provides. People are more likely to behave badly if they think they won't get caught.
I grew up during the 60's and 70's and yes, there was youth dissent and rebellion, just as there was in earlier generations, but kids back then were more fearful of contact with the police or the authorities. Assaulting a police officer would get the cr*p kicked out of you in a police cell. Going to jail was not considered a badge of honour or earn you 'respect', as a criminal record could effectively ruin your career - even relationship - prospects permanently. But kids today have fewer career prospects and relationships are far more liberal.
Today, it seems many kids have little or no respect for anything other than what they perceive as having value or kudos; other peoples property or lives appear to have little meaning to them.
The recent riots in the UK speak to that. Most of the looting and fires were simply opportunistic and had nothing to do with the original protests in London.
That said, the blame lays with the parents and society as a whole. People have simply lost the plot. The 80's mantra 'Greed is good' still holds sway. Parents working too many hours just to stay above the breadline, kids left to bring themselves up. Peer pressure and a 'Lord of the Flies' mentality.
Still, it could be worse.
Isn't the 21st century everything you thought it would be? Hover cars, men living on Mars, robots doing all the work, trips to the Rings of Saturn. Ah, this is the life! eh?![]()
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