(First published in The Dominion Post, May 2.)
HEARD OF Barraco
Barner? Possibly not. But according to a 20-year-old English beautician, he’s
the president of Britain and he really shouldn’t be getting involved in
Ukraine’s problems.
Here, starkly laid
bare, is the one of the downsides of social media and the digital information
revolution. Instant opinion, zero knowledge.
Gemma Worrall from
Blackpool wrote on Twitter that it was “scary” that “our president Barraco
Barner” was tangling with Russia. But the truly scary thing is that someone who
thought that Britain had a president, and that his name was Barraco Barner,
could so innocently display their rank ignorance for the world to see.
Ms Worrall’s tweet
shines a light on the existence of people whose view of the world is formed not
from the printed word, but from whatever they happen to overhear.
If she had seen
Barack Obama’s name in print, it’s unlikely she would have been so gravely
misled as to how it’s spelled. But clearly, she’d only ever heard it – perhaps
from customers chatting in the beauty parlour where she works, or from a TV set
playing in the background.
Add to that Ms
Worrall’s obvious belief that the world needed to hear her considered views on
Barraco Barner and Russia, and you have a lethal confection of foolishness and
conceit.
On the other hand,
these things are self-correcting. As her gaffe was re-tweeted worldwide,
thousands gleefully pounced, sneering at her error.
You might say this
is a good thing. A mistake was promptly exposed and corrected. But in the
process, another unlovely aspect of social media was laid bare: namely, the
propensity for abuse and bullying by anonymous cowards.
Never in human
history has it been easier for someone like Ms Worrall to express their
thoughts so instantly or freely, without the moderating intervention of someone
who might save them from embarrassment. And never has it been easier for others
to join in mob nastiness.
You could argue
that this is all very democratic. But is it progress?
* * *
I HAVE DOUBTS,
too, about the explosion in online opinion, even when it’s written by people
who know very well who Barack Obama is and how his name is spelled.
University of
Otago political scientist Bryce Edwards collates online political comment every
day and emails a summary to people who are interested in politics and curious
to know what others are thinking.
What’s notable is
that the volume increases with every week, to the point where it has become
almost indigestible.
On Monday I
counted 67 commentaries on the subject of Shane Jones’ departure from the
Labour Party. These ranged from generally dispassionate comment in mainstream
media to partisan rants by bloggers from both sides of the political fence. The
previous Thursday, Edwards disseminated 51 commentaries on the same subject.
As political
comment proliferates and the tone becomes more trenchant, so the temptation to
tune out – or at least to exercise greater discretion about how much of it one
bothers to read – increases. The law of diminishing returns kicks in.
In the early days
of the Internet, someone cleverly said that trying to keep up with the flow of
information it unleashed was like drinking from a fire hose. I don’t know what
you’d compare it with now.
Having one’s say
has never been easier, but the clamour and static sometimes threatens to
overwhelm reasoned debate.
IN THIS paper a
couple of weeks ago, Ross Bell of the Drug Foundation claimed New Zealanders
are “comparatively high” users of both marijuana and alcohol.
In fact OECD
figures for 2011 show per capita consumption of liquor in New Zealand was 9.5
litres. That’s exactly the OECD average – hardly something to get in a panic
about, especially when you consider that some countries on the table, such as
Turkey and Israel, have low levels of consumption because of religious factors.
New Zealand was
placed 10th of the 19 OECD countries for which statistics were
available. More complete figures for 2009 show we drank less, per head, than
comparable countries such as Britain and Australia.
What’s more,
Ministry of Health figures show that drinking across all New Zealand age groups
is in steady decline, and “binge drinking” by young people – contrary to what
panic merchants like Mr Bell will tell you – has fallen off sharply over the
past 10 years.
These facts appear
not to matter to the neo-wowser lobby, which continues to promote the myth that
we need to be protected from the machinations of wicked “booze barons”.
And there’s
another thing. Just who are these booze barons? The term might have meant
something in the 1930s, when men like Sir Ernest Davis controlled the brewing
and hotel industries, but these days it’s just a crudely emotive propaganda
tool.
Karl, the most scary thing about that 20-year-old English beautician is that she is able to *vote*.
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