Willie Nelson Comes to Jocotepec: The Internet and Social Fragmentaion

 

The existence of the internet may not be news in most places, nor that it does things astonishing to those alive before the net and boring to those who came after. But I wonder whether the net might have underlying consequences perhaps not well understood.

In particular, I wonder how to measure the influence of the internet in Battambang, Bali, Bukittinggi, or Tierra del Fuego. Or in small towns in Mexico, such as Jocotepec, down the road from me.

Fifty years ago, such places existed in near-perfect isolation from the world at large. Nobody, bright or otherwise, had much chance of learning much of anything. There was AM radio with a limited selection of music and governmentally controlled news. There might be a small library. If you lived near a big city, Guadalajara, in Mexico or Bogota in Colombia, there were good bookstores but books cost money. It was de facto intellectual imprisonment in an empty world.

The, ker-whoom, the internet. A kid in Aranyaprathet, Salta in Argentina near the Bolivian border, or a girl in Joco had virtually the same intellectual and cultural resources as people in Leipzig or Boston. This is nuts.

I am persuaded that it is also impossible, but since the internet is everywhere I may have to modify my views.

My question is: How much and what effect has this had without being quite noticed? Here in Mexico I watched my stepdaughter Natalia growing up from about ten. She was a bright kid. Bright kids litter the earth. Millions of metric tons of them have the internet.

Some things were predictable. Kids like music. Nata began spending long hours conectada, connected—plugged into earphones. So did her friends. Those earphones plugged into the entire earth.

One day she said that she had discovered a wonderful new form of music. What, I asked? “Se llama country.”  Ye gods and little catfish, I thought. Boxcar Willie had come to central Mexico. Soon she knew more about country music than I did, followed by an interest in blues, bluegrass, jazz, –in short pretty much every form of music that existed.

You might ask reasonably, “So what?” To American kids, yes: So what? But to kids in remote towns in the “third world”—whatever that means—it was a huge jump in cultural sophistication. They listened to bands in South Korea, Japan, all over Latin America.

Then of course came Kindle for books, giving Natalia (and the whole earth) the Library of Congress in a two–pound box and, of course, millions of books in lots of languages. Further, the net allowed easy access to news the that governments didn’t want people to have, and the social media allowed people unhappy with things to realize that lots of other people were also unhappy.

Presumably people were doing the same in Vientiane, Taijung, Yellow Knife, and Lost Hope, North Dakota. It was crazy. It still is. We just don’t notice it. What, if any, practical effect does this have?

Granted, some consequences  of the net were not so salubrious. Today there is a karaoke app that lets people on different continents sing together horribly.

Movies became equally available, junk movies ad Fellini and Kubrick and weird cult stuff nobody has ever heard of. Netflix, YouTube, pirated CDs put on-line. Larceny being a major component of adolescence, kids quickly learn to steal software, to use proxy servers (burlando los servidores, spoofing the servers) .Opera? I told Violeta that I’d like to hear the Habanera, whereupon she pulled up five versions that she liked–Callas, Carmen Monarcha and so on and one, so help me by the Muppets. On demand, streaming, good sound, no commercials.

Somewhat parenthetically, the universities in poor countries profit mightily from the net. In nations without much money, America’s ninety-dollar textbooks are out of reach. But when students have iPads, now expected at least hereabouts, a great deal of necessary reading is on-line.

And so I find bright kids, and the young adults they are turning into, far more sophisticated than I was at their age. In remote villages. What consequences does this have?

What about the effects of the net on the US? People in Casper now have access to most of the cultural and intellectual advantages of Manhattan of course, but what are the political effects?

Whether America has ever had freedom of speech or a free press can be debated. Until roughly the Sixties, free expression was limited by a combination of national consensus, governmental censorship, cooperative media, and lack of lateral communication. In the Fifties, television meant ABC, CBS, and NBC which, then as now, were almost federal departments. Communism was the hated enemy and nobody with any circulation questioned this. HUAC, the House Un-American Activities Committee punished dissent. Access to information that the government didn’t like barely existed. Minor socialist papers existed in New York, but people in Farmville,, Virginia had no access to them. Any sort of sexual content was quashed.

Crucially, there was no lateral communication: You could write letters to editors—vertical communication—which would be censored according to the editors’ whims. That was it.

The aggregate effect was a manufactured unanimity, or the appearance of one. In the post-war prosperity, Americans bought washing machines and tract houses and were content. Television was wholesome, sterile, and not very informative. Superman jumped out of window to promote truth, justice, and the American way, then thought to be related.

Came the internet. Fairly suddenly, every point of view became available to everybody: The KKK, the Black Panthers, communists, fascists, feminists, loon left and loon right, the-earth-is-flatters. The social media and comment sections allowed lateral communication with a vengeance.

A consequence was that the major media became known for what they were, propaganda organs of those who ran the country. Stories that the fossil media would have liked to ignore flew instantly to hundreds of thousands of inboxes, appeared on countless blogs and websites—often with cell-cam video.

What effect, if any, has the net had on sexual mores? When children of nine years can watch pore-level porn of any imaginable type, what happens?

A related question is whether any code of sexual morality can be enforced by a society with internet pornography. Almost all civilized societies in almost all times have imposed restrictions of some sort. Often these have been of religious provenance, and religion is fast being squeezed out of Western societies.

Another question is whether the internet causes, or merely reports, the current fragmentation of the public into warring groups. Today the country seethes with hatreds that were unknown in 1955—perhaps existent, but unknown. Without the Salons and Breitbarts, would their respective readerships even know of each other’s existence? Would misandrist feminism have the enormous traction it enjoys if CalBerkeley could not communicate easily with Boston U? Would all the deeply angry people of today have same political clout if the net had not allowed them to learn of each other and coalesce?

In a country with a fairly homogeneous society, the net may be less politically potent. If there is only one race and one religion, you don’t have racial and religious antipathies. But America is heterogeneous. When the internet forces very different regions—Massachusetts, Alabama, and West Virginia—into digital propinquity, does this arouse hostilities? When widely distributed members of fringe groups the governments don’t like can congregate on websites and in the social media, does this encourage fragmentation?

I dunno. You tell me.

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17 Comments
starfcker
starfcker
February 11, 2016 6:51 am

Fred, great column, but let me tell you, it’s no two pound box. It’s a fifty dollar phone that has all the knowledge in the history of the world stuffed into it, and it’s the size of a deck of cards. I don’t have a computer on my desk anymore. Neither does Donald trump. He runs his business, and his presidential campaign on a machine the size of said deck of cards. Truly amazing times.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
February 11, 2016 7:24 am

“Give ’em books and they’ll eat the covers”

Mark Twain

People, Fred included, mistake an access to information with a thirst for knowledge. They aren’t the same thing. If you could grab the first 100 random hand held devices/Ipad minis, tablets, etc from any given group of bipeds gathered anywhere on Earth, maybe 2 would be actively trying to educate themselves or research into something of value. For the rest it is simply a diversion, an escape, a distraction from reality and from human interaction.

SpecOpsAlpha
SpecOpsAlpha
February 11, 2016 7:44 am

N. Tesla predicted all of this over 100 years ago — a worldwide brain that we could access by a device we carry around in our pockets.

Listen to Tesla. 🙂

Great article, Mr. Reed.

SpecOpsAlpha
SpecOpsAlpha
February 11, 2016 8:00 am

Tesla in 1926: “When wireless is perfectly applied the whole earth will be converted into a huge brain, which in fact it is, all things being particles of a real and rhythmic whole. We shall be able to communicate with one another instantly, irrespective of distance. Not only this, but through television and telephony we shall see and hear one another as perfectly as though we were face to face, despite intervening distances of thousands of miles; and the instruments through which we shall be able to do his will be amazingly simple compared with our present telephone. A man will be able to carry one in his vest pocket.”

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
February 11, 2016 8:16 am

HSF, you think the number is that low? Wow! That’s depressing as hell. I must be one rare beast indeed because edumacation takes up 75% of my time online at minimum. It would be far easier for me to name things I have not looked up than it would be to list all the things I have looked up. I have to unplug sometimes just to mull over what I’ve learned. I guess I suffer from normalcy bias in thinking that everyone else has endless curiosity like I do.

No smart phone for me though. I’m still using my 2006 motorola flip phone. It still has all kinds of features I’ve never used.

stanley
stanley
February 11, 2016 10:31 am

Problem with the internet is that you have no way of knowing what is worth your time comprehending, and what is not.

So you get lost for hours or days or more in vacuous video uploads, useless forums, 2 dimensional porn, questionable ‘news’, tweets, and twaddle.

Still it’s better than having to buy a new 36 volume edition of the Encyclopedia Britannica every 5 years to stay up to date?

I’m with Fred. I dunno. I tried to learn the mandolin once thinking I had musical talent and hoping to expand my horizons; failed miserably. Now I can just find mandolinists any time I want on youtube –

kokoda
kokoda
February 11, 2016 10:38 am

“When widely distributed members of fringe groups the governments don’t like can congregate on websites and in the social media, does this encourage fragmentation?”

It will encourage the gov’t to control the Internet. Steps have already been taken – the Kill Switch and the NSA. Just waiting.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
February 11, 2016 12:14 pm

“It will encourage the gov’t to control the Internet. Steps have already been taken – the Kill Switch and the NSA. Just waiting.”

They don’t call it the web/net for nothing.

Far preferable to allow people to identify themselves, build their own dossiers and go about as if it were actually “unrestricted” than to try and shut it down.

Ditchner
Ditchner
February 11, 2016 1:25 pm

I’d say 2% is, perhaps, generous I don’t know a soul from my generation (baby boomer) that has anything close to an insatiable thirst for knowledge even though access to it is at our fingertips (for now; get it while you can). As for the generations that followed mine, it’s a constant distraction and they’re dumber than dumb.

My goto subject is Christianity. The truth of it and the hatred towards it, All this knowledge tells me that we are on the brink of the end times. Get yourself a Bible (online, of course) and repent. What do you think Jesus meant by “Keep my Commandments”? Ask most Protestants today and they won’t even realized he commanded it. Sad, sad, sad…

The Internet has allowed me to learn about the beast from the sea (Rome) with their white Pope and their black Pope (no, not Obama, the Jesuit general, the most powerful man on Earth.) Guess who the beast from the Earth is?

Iconoclast421
Iconoclast421
February 11, 2016 1:56 pm

“Fifty years ago, such places existed in near-perfect isolation from the world at large.”

Fifty years ago? You are describing current conditions for millions of indoctrinated socialist liberals. These people are completely isolated from both reason and education.

They believe that inner cities are falling apart because the government isnt spending enough! Seriously, they believe it in their bones. Facts dont matter.

They believe the tea party was created by wall street!

They believe it is racist to not want your kids to be raped at the local pool!

They believe that college education costs so much because the government isnt paying for everyone’s education!

They believe healthcare costs so much because the government isnt paying for enough of it!

They believe that the only way to eliminate the conservative vermin is to bring in as many immigrants from low IQ countries as possible, because they will vote for more socialism.

These people are a mortal threat. They are eating this country up like termites.

Stucky
Stucky
February 11, 2016 2:06 pm

“The Internet has allowed me to learn about the beast from the sea (Rome) with their white Pope and their black Pope ….” ————- Ditchner

You’re not using the Internet correctly.

Ditchner
Ditchner
February 11, 2016 2:38 pm

I know, Stucky, but, sadly, porn and bible don’t mix.

Bea Lever
Bea Lever
February 11, 2016 3:01 pm

I have asked this question before in a thread, since we have all of this high tech access to information and all the knowledge in the world, then WHY is humanity becoming dumber with each passing year?

Tesla invented the technology for the cell phone in the late 1800’s, good thing 90 years passed before everyone had one in their pocket because idiocracy would have taken us to a level of stoopid by now that we could not survive.

I/S- I too have a old flip phone, never use it. That one comment by you tells me you are worth saving. Also good call on your recent gold purchase as gold is soaring today.

Tucci78
Tucci78
February 11, 2016 4:42 pm

Bea Lever asks: “I have asked this question before in a thread, since we have all of this high tech access to information and all the knowledge in the world, then WHY is humanity becoming dumber with each passing year?”

It’s not. You’re interpreting the phenomenon as “humanity becoming dumber with each passing year” when it’s actually the case that with the Intertubez, you’re becoming better-appraised of how friggin’ stupid humanity has always been.

When diagnostic acuity improves (by way of screening tests, diligence in clinical investigation, widespread education of the lay public, etc.), the PERCEPTION of increased pathology incidence in the population is inevitable.

But it was always there to begin with.

Stucky
Stucky
February 11, 2016 4:52 pm

Bea

I have to agree 100% with Tucci, It’s just your perception.

Think of one of the most glorious eras in Western Civilization, the Renaissance. Imagine if they had the Internet, complete with Mark Dice interviews. What would that be like? My guess is that 95%, or greater, of the population was dumber than whale shit.

dave
dave
February 11, 2016 7:00 pm

To many voices, most uneducated,now rule the net. Tower of Babylon. The squeakiest wheel gets the most attention.

razzle
razzle
February 12, 2016 1:58 pm

— “you’re becoming better-appraised of how friggin’ stupid humanity has always been. ”

While I agree with the sentiment… people who would not have survived due to their decision making ability back then can not only easily survive now… but reproduce and communicate.

The range of intelligence has always been there, but the requirements to make it past childhood have dropped dramatically.