437
Politically-engaged Redditors tend to be more toxic -- even in non-political subreddits
(www.psypost.org)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
We also have to deal with the fact that toxicity has become an almost meaningless label. The way we seem to apply it now, feels like we'd say there was a lot of "toxicity" around the time of the Civil Rights Movement, too. Or even the Civil War.
We've conflated "angry, hateful, bitter, disruptive, belittling" with "caring enough to get upset". There's been study after study trying to blame social media for the rise in "political toxicity", and every last single one of them seems to want to sweetly ignore the context of the moment in time we're living in.
People are acting volatile because there are a lot of volatile events happening that directly affect people's lives. And all these high-minded discussions about how people online are so mean and rude, or how people don't listen to each other anymore, consistently sidestep that very crucial piece of context.
So I ask, what do we mean by "toxic"? Because I have a strong feeling a good deal of women were being real "toxic" on June 24 2022. Why is the story not about why? And why does that deserve to be grouped in with the same toxicity comes from the people responsible?
I think you’re onto something saying toxic is a pretty unspecific term to use when talking about such things. Maybe it would be a better conversation to ask: when do the ends justify the means?
I'll even step the conversation back a hot second to: do the means even result in the desired ends?
I'd argue (supported by every study ever done on the subject), that it doesn't. The issue isn't that you haven't called your MAGA uncle a hillbilly redneck enough. No matter how many times you get called a woke liberal snowflake, I don't think you're going to genuinely re-think your position on building a wall.
If there IS an amount of verbal rage that could turn you into a MAGA, then by all means, disregard.
But... If there isn't, and you genuinely care about changing outcomes, then I strongly challenge people to consider if "the ends justify the means" is predicated on an earlier faulty assumption that the means even generate the ends at all.
Agreed. Always a good thought to have when one is considering going down that road. Is the future predictable enough to really expect that particular end?