Where has all the kindness gone? I believe it is still here,
and that it never left. Complaining about negativity on the internet is still
negativity itself, and does not help anyone. It is ridiculous to think that
social media is the cause of hostility; it merely reveals what was already
there. The internet was made by humans and it is used to communicate human
values such as knowledge, kindness, and sadly also hatred. The internet does
not make people hateful, it gives people who were already hateful a voice with
which to express themselves.
In the past, only the richest and most educated people were
able to reach a wide audience via the written word. Today, however, nearly
everyone has the freedom to express their innermost thoughts, no matter how
poorly researched or how flippantly expressed. In centuries gone by, the
written word took effort to produce. Since then, we have gone from scribes to
printing presses to the internet. Now, the written word has become an
effortless way to express oneself.
Hateful people have always existed. Uneducated people have
always existed. Selfish people who can’t be bothered to consider anyone else’s
point of view have always existed. The internet just gives them a voice, and
prioritizes inflammatory content. Make no mistake, this darkness has always
been a part of the human race. But now it is being capitalized on by websites
trying to maximize advertisement revenue. Every minute of time that is spent on
a website translates directly to the income of these websites, and nothing
draws attention like controversy. This is why tabloid newspapers sell so well,
why conspiracy theories get so much attention, and why the internet appears to
be filled with hatred. As much as we don’t like it, outrage sells. The internet
isn’t selling manufactured outrage, however. The outrage is real, and
authenticity also sells. Because websites benefit so much from this negativity,
they subtlety push it to viewers. People engage with posts that are
controversial, so they spread.
From the outside, it may look as though the internet is an
awful hive of anger, controversy, and pointless arguments. The reality, however,
is that a vocal minority have been enabled and encouraged to post this
negativity because people share it and that makes money. Kindness is not gone.
Happy stories don’t make the front page of newspapers as often as outrage, but
that does not mean that mankind has gone cruel and heartless.
The internet is a reflection of the human consciousness on a
grand scale, and writers who complain that the internet is killing kindness are
actually complaining that they have seen humanity as it really is. The internet
did not invent racism, bigotry, political polarization, or conspiracies. They
have always existed, but the internet makes it personal. Nobody likes to find
out that their family is racist, or believes political propaganda, or has a bad
temper. The internet puts these flaws and more in the public spotlight. Because
the internet is new, it’s easy to point an accusing finger at it. But today’s
generation is not hopeless, we’re just young. The internet is not killing
kindness, it’s merely revealing the negativity that was already there. Kind
people still exist. As cynical as I am, I have not given up on humanity’s
compassion quite yet.
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