musterion
Well-known member
Linked from Drudge:
http://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/69...a-culture-youth-teenager-mental-health-selfie
That a homosexual author is apparently making this point primarily for homosexuals is beside the point. Accurate description of a situation is accurate description, as far as it goes. Doesn't matter who makes it.
But he misidentifies the root problem. It isn't that society has become individualistic; only the hive-minded would think that is a problem.
The problem is that the basic corruption of human nature is exponentially floating to the top of modern society as people (including many children) become increasingly vain, selfish, arrogant and lawless. Is this a new problem? No. But social media, and kids' easy access to it, seems to make it worse as the cycle feeds and grows upon itself. I see evidence of this in my line of work all the time. And I could tell you a story about something I saw just yesterday in Dollar Tree that would make this very point but it would outrage some of you just because of your many politically correct Things That May Not Be Said.
At that same Dollar Tree, though, a tiny six or seven year old was pushing the cart way behind her mom. She had to pass between me and whatever I was looking at in the aisle. As she went by, she looked up at me, smiled and quietly said, "Excuse me, please sir." I had to smile at that.
http://www.express.co.uk/news/uk/69...a-culture-youth-teenager-mental-health-selfie
“There has been a Facebook-isation of life leading to a ‘look at me’ culture. Society seems to have become very individualistic with people obsessing about Me and I rather than supporting one another. . .The internet has created a very visual culture with huge emphasis on how you look and an obsession with celebrities. There have always been rich people but now we see them and their lifestyles all the time, and if you feel you can’t achieve what they do then the pressure mounts.”
That a homosexual author is apparently making this point primarily for homosexuals is beside the point. Accurate description of a situation is accurate description, as far as it goes. Doesn't matter who makes it.
But he misidentifies the root problem. It isn't that society has become individualistic; only the hive-minded would think that is a problem.
The problem is that the basic corruption of human nature is exponentially floating to the top of modern society as people (including many children) become increasingly vain, selfish, arrogant and lawless. Is this a new problem? No. But social media, and kids' easy access to it, seems to make it worse as the cycle feeds and grows upon itself. I see evidence of this in my line of work all the time. And I could tell you a story about something I saw just yesterday in Dollar Tree that would make this very point but it would outrage some of you just because of your many politically correct Things That May Not Be Said.
At that same Dollar Tree, though, a tiny six or seven year old was pushing the cart way behind her mom. She had to pass between me and whatever I was looking at in the aisle. As she went by, she looked up at me, smiled and quietly said, "Excuse me, please sir." I had to smile at that.