---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Sun, 12 May 2002 20:32:51 -0700 (PDT)
From: Michael Christopher <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: [psychohistory] Global Village Idiocy

Global Village Idiocy
By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN


JAKARTA, Indonesia — During a dinner with Indonesian
journalists in Jakarta, I was taken aback when Dini
Djalal, a reporter for The Far Eastern Economic
Review, suddenly launched into a blistering criticism
of the Fox News Channel and Bill O'Reilly. "They say
[on Fox], `We report, you decide,' but it's biased —
they decide before us," she said. "They say there is
no spin, but I get dizzy looking at it. I also get
upset when they invite on Muslims and just insult
them."


Why didn't she just not watch Fox when she came to
America, I wondered? No, no, no, explained Ms. Djalal:
The Fox Channel is now part of her Jakarta cable
package. The conservative Bill O'Reilly is in her face
every night.

On my way to Jakarta I stopped in Dubai, where I
watched the Arab News Network at 2 a.m. ANN broadcasts
from Europe, outside the control of any Arab
government, but is seen all over the Middle East. It
was running what I'd call the "greatest hits" from the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict: nonstop film of Israelis
hitting, beating, dragging, clubbing and shooting
Palestinians. I would like to say the footage was out
of context, but there was no context. There were no
words. It was just pictures and martial music designed
to inflame passions.

An Indonesian working for the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta,
who had just visited the Islamic fundamentalist
stronghold of Jogjakarta, told me this story: "For the
first time I saw signs on the streets there saying
things like, `The only solution to the Arab-Israel
conflict is jihad — if you are true Muslim, register
yourself to be a volunteer.' I heard people saying,
`We have to do something, otherwise the Christians or
Jewish will kill us.' When we talked to people to find
out where [they got these ideas], they said from the
Internet. They took for granted that anything they
learned from the Internet is true. They believed in a
Jewish conspiracy and that 4,000 Jews were warned not
to come to work at the World Trade Center [on Sept.
11]. It was on the Internet."

What's frightening him, he added, is that there is an
insidious digital divide in Jogjakarta: "Internet
users are only 5 percent of the population — but these
5 percent spread rumors to everyone else. They say,
`He got it from the Internet.' They think it's the
Bible."

If there's one thing I learned from this trip to
Israel, Jordan, Dubai and Indonesia, it's this: thanks
to the Internet and satellite TV, the world is being
wired together technologically, but not socially,
politically or culturally. We are now seeing and
hearing one another faster and better, but with no
corresponding improvement in our ability to learn
from, or understand, one another. So integration, at
this stage, is producing more anger than anything
else. As the writer George Packer recently noted in
The Times Magazine, "In some ways, global satellite TV
and Internet access have actually made the world a
less understanding, less tolerant place."

At its best, the Internet can educate more people
faster than any media tool we've ever had. At its
worst, it can make people dumber faster than any media
tool we've ever had. The lie that 4,000 Jews were
warned not to go into the World Trade Center on Sept.
11 was spread entirely over the Internet and is now
thoroughly believed in the Muslim world. Because the
Internet has an aura of "technology" surrounding it,
the uneducated believe information from it even more.
They don't realize that the Internet, at its ugliest,
is just an open sewer: an electronic conduit for
untreated, unfiltered information.

Worse, just when you might have thought you were all
alone with your extreme views, the Internet puts you
together with a community of people from around the
world who hate all the things and people you do. And
you can scrap the BBC and just get your news from
those Web sites that reinforce your own stereotypes.

A couple of years ago, two Filipino college graduates
spread the "I Love You" virus over the Internet,
causing billion of dollars in damage to computers and
software. But at least that virus was curable with the
right software. There is another virus going around
today, though, that's much more serious. I call it the
"I Hate You" virus. It's spread on the Internet and by
satellite TV. It infects people's minds with the most
vile ideas, and it can't be combated by just
downloading a software program. It can be reversed
only with education, exchanges, diplomacy and human
interaction — stuff you have to upload the
old-fashioned way, one on one. Let's hope it's not too
late. 

http://www.nytimes.com/2002/05/12/opinion/12FRIE.html?ex=1022207275&ei=1&en=

=====
"We don't see things as they are, we see them as we are." Anais Nin 
 "You can safely assume that you've created God in your own image, when it turns out 
that God hates all the same people you do." Anne Lamott
"Expectations put the will to sleep." Unknown

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