Text Wars on Smartphones and Frenzied Bullshittin’…

By Doug “Uncola” Lynn via TheBurningPlatform.com

In past articles, I’ve written about my political discussions with friends in my social circle and, most often, within a group of us who meet on Saturday mornings for breakfast.  These have included “Breakfast Club: Dining with Friends”,  “The Persistence of Their Delusion is Despicable”, “The Rants of the Libtards Ring Hollow then Echo”, and “The Conspiracies are Broad and Deep”.  We all know each other through a shared involvement and patronage of a community organization; and, although attendance has grown through the years, the majority of us are middle-aged, Caucasian, and college-educated professionals.

At least one in our group has no genuine interest in politics, but most of the others can’t stand Trump and consider me to be an ultra-right-wing, crazy conspiracy theorist.  I would say more than a few have outwardly embraced socialist policies, if not Socialism in toto, and then there is a RINO (Republican In Name Only) who responds to me with a loud “F*ck you!” whenever I’ve addressed him as such.

Continue reading “Text Wars on Smartphones and Frenzied Bullshittin’…”

The Textalyzer

Guest Post by Eric Peters

Yes, really.

They are working on a gadget that can tell the polizei whether you’ve been texting while driving.

For your saaaaaaaaaaaaaaafety – as depressingly always.

An Israeli company called Cellebrite – which sounds like the latest “ask your doctor about” pill to cure your ills – has ginned up this altogether different pill. Real-time and probable cause-free dragnet monitoring of people’s cell phone use and driving, so as to roust people who dare to ignore no-texting-while-driving statutes.

Continue reading “The Textalyzer”

GETTING A “LIKE” OVER HAVING A LIFE

As someone still using a flip phone, who racks up 4 minutes of talking time per month, whose texts consist of Yes, No, and OK, has never taken a selfie in his life, and doesn’t have a facebook, linkedin, or twitter account, I think I’m an excellent impartial observer of the extreme narcissism and shallowness of our iGadget culture. At the recent Foo Fighters concert I attended 80% of the audience was so busy recording the concert on their iGadgets they couldn’t actually enjoy the music.

The vast majority of people in NYC during my recent trip were mesmerized by their iGadgets as they blundered down the streets. Idiots sit in restaurants and take pictures of their food to post on Facebook as they check in and let the world know where they are and what they are eating. Meanwhile, their food has gotten cold and their kids are left to play on their iGadgets rather than talk with their parents. 

We are the shallowest culture in the history of mankind. Make sure you give me a like. My self esteem depends on it.

Society’s New Addiction: Getting a “Like” over Having a Life

New research shows obsession with posting photos, checking phones corresponds with lower enjoyment.

A mother of a 3-year old writes: “I disciplined my son and he threw a tantrum that I thought was so funny that I disciplined him again just so I could video it. After uploading it on Instagram I thought, ‘What did I just do?’”

A new study by Joseph Grenny and David Maxfield, co-authors of four New York Times bestsellers, reveals that more and more of us are losing connection with our lives in order to earn “likes” and social media praise. We have, in a sense, turned into social media “trophy hunters.” According to the study, 58 percent of respondents say posting that perfect picture has prevented them from enjoying life experiences—and has sometimes even caused them to behave in bizarre or immoral ways. One in four have even allowed their smartphone to distract during “intimate” moments.

What’s more, the online survey of 1,623 people revealed that this obsession with social media interactions and trophy hunting isn’t just distracting—it’s dictating lives. Consider:

  • Nearly 3 out of 4 people admit to being rude or disconnected from others because they’re more focused on their phone than on the other person
  • 91 percent have seen a tourist miss enjoyment in the moment trying to get it on social media—and many acknowledge doing the same thing themselves.
  • 79 percent have seen a parent undermine their own experience in a child’s life in an effort to capture the perfect post.
  • 14 percent have risked their own safety to try and get a good posting.

Many cited increased unhappiness due to:

  • Not spending time listening to or being present with people they cared about: “Trying to capture and post my daughter’s dance event, I completely missed it. She asked me, ‘did you see me?’ and I really didn’t. It was awful.”
  • Reckless behavior while driving: “I was severely disappointed in my myself every time I couldn’t ignore the urge to pick up the phone in the car. Thank goodness nothing bad happened.”
  • Embarrassing moments taking ‘selfies’:“I’ve seen people dodging cars, tourists and pedestrians to get a quick selfie in the midst of busy Hollywood Blvd. – only to yell out “Noooo” on the curb when they realized it didn’t turn out.”
  • Posting something online they otherwise normally wouldn’t have said.

Continue reading “GETTING A “LIKE” OVER HAVING A LIFE”

TEXTING CAN BE A PAIN IN THE ASS

Mother impaled by pole through her thigh and buttocks after she veered off highway while texting and driving

By Louise Boyle for MailOnline

|

A mother who was impaled by a pole during a car crash has admitted that she is lucky to be alive after she veered off the road while sending a text message.

Christina Jahnz had a pole go through her thighs and buttocks when she hit a guardrail last Wednesday while sending a text at the wheel in Elizabeth, Colorado. 

Firefighters were forced to saw the front and back off the pole off to get the woman out of the wreckage before transporting her to Parker Adventist Hospital where she underwent surgery.

 

Christina Jahnz has allowed the Colorado hospital to release this picture of the pole impaling her thighs and buttocks after she was injured when her car hit a rail while she was texting and driving. She released the photos of her horrific injuries so that others would be aware of the dangers of texting at the wheel 

Christina Jahnz has allowed the Colorado hospital to release this picture of the pole impaling her thighs and buttocks after she was injured when her car hit a rail while she was texting and driving. She released the photos of her horrific injuries so that others would be aware of the dangers of texting at the wheel

A mother who was impaled by a pole during a car crash has admitted that she is lucky to be alive after she veered off the road while sending a text message. The pole entered her car through a front light here 

A mother who was impaled by a pole during a car crash has admitted that she is lucky to be alive after she veered off the road while sending a text message. The pole entered her car through a front light here

Mrs Jahnz was sending a colleague a text to say she would be late for work when she veered off the road and hit a guardrail. She released the images of her totaled car to warn other motorists not to text and drive

Mrs Jahnz was sending a colleague a text to say she would be late for work when she veered off the road and hit a guardrail. She released the images of her totaled car to warn other motorists not to text and drive

She told 9 News that she had just dropped her daughter at school when she realized the girl had forgotten her saxophone.

She was on her way home to collect the instrument when she began sending a voice text to tell her friend she would be late for a work meeting.

Mrs Jahnz told 9 News: ‘I looked down to make sure it [the text] was all right. The next thing I knew, I was looking up, there was white powder from the air bags deployed.’

The mother said she had at least 40 stitches before she stopped counting and added that she also had to be sewn up on the inside. 

She said that medics told her if the pole had come through the front of her car at just a slightly different angle, she would have bled to death.

She was released from hospital on Sunday and is expected to recover fully from her injuries. 

Mrs Jahnz pictured with her husband Nicholas in 2008. She was left with at least 40 stitches after being impaled by a pole in a car wreck

Mrs Jahnz pictured with her husband Nicholas in 2008. She was left with at least 40 stitches after being impaled by a pole in a car wreck