Originally Posted by
Zorba
Thanks for posting the article.
I do feel sympathy for the people profiled in the story. Almost everyone has told an off-colored joke, said something wrong or something they regret at least once. There are jokes I'd say in front of my friends and family that I'd never say to a stranger (or tweeter for that matter). If you go to any comedy club, you will hear much worse than that AIDS "joke."
Something I learned at my last job, people truly expect much more from others than they do from themselves, and the more anonymous that other person is the more they expect from them. The same engineers that produced error filled paperwork as a matter of course, were the same ones that wanted mechanics fired for mis-drilling one hole (out of hundreds). See people understand why they themselves erred, so they can accept it in themselves or a family member. But that random guy over there? He has no excuse!
Now take that to the internet where everyone in anonymous, typically there is no context, no inflection, no body language and seemingly no sense of humor, people take it to an extreme. The same joke that would get a head shake in real life, gets death threats online and people calling for your job.
Another part of it, is I think people have become less social and have less friends in real life, so being caught up in the daily outrage and attack allows them to feel like they are part of the tribe. It also doesn't help that many "news" outlets have conditioned people to outraged all the time about everything, facts be damned.
Bookmarks