Us versus Them? It’s time for “We’re all in this together”

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The in-flight safety message on a recent Virgin America flight ended with a clever info-cartoon intended to raise awareness of how obnoxious airplane behavior impacts everyone on the flight called “We’re all in this together.” This is a message in short supply today.  We should take a cue from Virgin America & Method (who co-sponsored the message). Instead of politicians trying to convince voters that the other guy is the problem, or, like after the London riots or the BART cell phone shut down, that access to communications tools is dangerous, we need a new mindset.  It's time for a Public Service Announcement that focuses on the strengths that come from unity; a nationwide public relations campaign based on the understanding that we are all in this together. Social media and communications technologies are in everyone’s sights.  Technology does contribute to what David Altheide (2010) calls the ‘politics of fear.’  He talks about it in terms of the … [Read more...]

Perpetuating the Fear of Technology

Shame on LA Times columnist Sandy Banks for perpetuating ignorance and the fear of technology in her column “The stage is too big for kids” . If you want to see a parent who needs to learn more about technology, read this column. It exemplifies the response of people who aren't willing to learn what it's like to be a kid living with technology today. Let me say at the outset, I have a problem with people who quote research without at least telling me what research they are quoting so I can look it up and read it myself. But that's just a pet peeve of mine. The main point is that Banks' column is contributing to what communication scholar George Gerbner calls the "Mean World" syndrome, where the negative or violent content content of mass media makes people believe that the world is more dangerous than it actually is. In the first paragraph, Banks mentions cyberbullying, online perverts and “Facebook depression” as things “stalking our kids.” Kind of front-loaded … [Read more...]

The role for vigilantes: A little duct tape and plastic sheeting and all’s right with the world

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Pamela  Rutledge A version of this  article was published on PsychologyToday.com in the blog “Positively Media.” Dexter is a Showtime series about a serial killer with a code. He only kills the bad guys who deserve it. We love Dexter precisely because he finds bad guys and kills them before they can hurt us. In a world plagued by terrorism, lost jobs, shrinking retirement accounts, political scapegoating, outsourcing, and freeway shootings, it's nice to have a guy around with strict code of honor who doesn't mind getting his hands a little dirty to restore order. There are many television programs on this theme that identify and defeat bad guys using a spectrum of innovatively-employed physical and mental talents: Leverage, Human Target, White Collar, the Mentalist, not to mention the uber-avenger Steven Seagal, whose movies frequent Spike TV. Humans are order-seeking creatures. Our brains work hard to make things fit into the patterns we know; the … [Read more...]

Twitter, YouTube, and Another Man’s Shoes

Two things came across my RSS feeds today that show how technology is impacting our information environment. First, YouTube has added a News Manager (Olivia) to promote Citizen News content: Second was a blog entry by CNET's Dan Farber on Twitter as a viable means of spreading information. (See Jon's last entry below, too.) I am simultaneously excited by the prospects of such a wide range of information and the complications of it. How do I find the interesting and important stuff? (Certainly not always the same thing. Think Mentos and Diet Coke.) How do I manage the information flows that meet the interesting or important criteria? And a perhaps cautionary concern (or call it cynical) of how I can perform due diligence on all this stuff? How do I determine quickly enough to be useful what is reliable, objective, white-washed, agenda-laden, mean-spirited, or just plain wrong? We see errors enough in the official reporting establishments that suggest this is no … [Read more...]