Monday, January 13, 2020
Argue for/against Social Networking
When sat down by a man, let us call him ââ¬ËVincent' for now, and asked to contemplate an understanding of modern society how does one react? Obviously ââ¬ËVincent' is looking upon you for a conclusive answer to this, after all, his rather stern look on his wrinkle free, cosmetically moisturised, face, nestled above a ââ¬ËSkinny-Fit' tight black suit worn on his gym harassed body, is expecting an answer. However, just as you begin to start an ââ¬Ëumm..' filled explanation of your personal interpretation to the very meaning of modern society he stops you; reaching into his pocket to silence his buzzing iPhone. ââ¬Å"Sorry about that, just had a new friend request on Facebook, you know how it isâ⬠. A response that immediately makes you realize that in fact your flawed theory of modern society is not as you first thought, but is rather sitting across the table from you in Starbucks (one of the select with free wi-fi, of course). Whilst naturally this metaphor is going to be biased in perspective it lays out many of the key features of society noted within the last few, recession deprived years. Major players being incorporated into our everyday life: the need for access to the internet, the surrounding claustrophobia of technology and the nonexistence absence of the likes of ââ¬ËFacebook' from our lives. Evidently however this is no such element of negativity in our lives, however could it be? We commit to our jobs, our families and our sharing of information ââ¬â all freely of course. Alternatives are there, the ââ¬â somewhat handicapped ââ¬â benefits system, a life alone and a disconnection from the knowledge of what society is doing as of now. The only reason this newly discovered element makes face into our lives is because we welcome it, embrace it for it's true value for society. Speaking of values: our friend ââ¬ËVincent' happens to be a combined banking-marketing-sales extraordinaire, knowledgeable of course on all products, on the money that we all value so dearly and without a doubt the economy. It is therefore an inarguably brilliant idea to approach him for his opinion on social networking, for us naà ¯Ã ¿Ã ½ve members of society have nothing to lose and all to gain in terms of knowledge on our own day to day living conditions. Now it is our turn to ask the question, but this is no feat for ââ¬ËVincent' to overcome. This brilliantly presented metrosexual man has his answer already prepared, after all, he knows. ââ¬ËSocial media is simply the greatest benefit we have made available to us' ââ¬â the first golden nugget of information we learn. Grasping onto each and every word we have little choice but to beg for an expansion on this idea, wishing not to be kept in the dark about his views. â⬠To people like meâ⬠, and I quote, â⬠the social network is the best marketing tool man could create' ââ¬ËIt allows for us to sell you a product at any time, but not just any product, a product tailored to you via all the information you provide dailyâ⬠. ââ¬ËTailored' to us? What better a reason could we have than this to enable identification of our lives; after all, modern society moves quickly, saving time in a way alike this is beneficial to all. In no way detrimental? â⬠Socially society has evolved, much in thanks due to social networkingâ⬠â⬠The electricity used in the use of social networking ultimately ends up benefitting the economy through tax and the likes ofâ⬠â⬠After all, how else could friend A and friend B communicate with such ease?â⬠I had to stop him there: ââ¬ËVincent' was blowing through my boundaries for enlightenment of brilliance for one day. He has a point, we all think the same whilst reading that. Socially we are all so much closer, universal, able to talk so fluently to one another over text, so flawlessly typed. Nowadays overcoming the boundaries of not seeing the other reciprocates emotions are simple, why one just incorporates a ââ¬Ë:D' to show joy, or a stigmatic ââ¬Ë-.-ââ¬Ë. The need for face to face social interaction is less than ever, something we as society naturally embrace, for interaction takes time, and our capitalist motto of ââ¬Ëtime is money' could never be truer. You get the point. Social networking's effect on our lives has been as great as the tone of menace from the strong, metaphorically feminist, business like woman sitting to our right, disgraced at the use of ââ¬Ëman-kind' and my creation of a ââ¬Ëman' for the wider metaphor rather than a unisex character named ââ¬ËSam'. Daily we offload information private to us without whole knowledgeable consent, daily we allow for our face to face interactions to be interrupted. These issues themselves are detrimental, but detrimental to modern society? How can something be detrimental to society if it is society?
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