In a world like today, it's very hard keeping our opinions to ourselves and not blurting out how "real"
(credit to J.Lo for this reference) we are and how passionate we are
about our beliefs. That's not to say that we should be neglecting the
beliefs of others around us, either. I do believe that being a person
that is open to the ideas of what others believe makes us individuals,
great individuals in fact. It's what helps mold our society into such a
diverse culture, making it an interesting and colourful world that we
live in.
However,
not everyone in the world agrees to this world of individual thinkers
and a world full of multi-cultural concepts. What's worse is that while
people continue to express their freedom of speech on their own social
media sites, this has introduced the "dark side" of our freedom on
social media. From racists to fascists, closed minded people to anti-anything groups, social media has definitely opened another door that experiment with the cultural mishap of extremism.
(http://media.salon.com/2013/02/pc_twitter-620x412.jpg) |
When
the word "extremist" is mentioned, a majority of people think of
Islamic extremism, the 9/11 attacks and suicide bombers. I don't believe
that it is necessarily a racist reaction (although I don't entirely
scratch it off the list), but it's a thought that goes straight through
to our minds because of what the media has influenced us to think. Islam
extremists act on behalf their intense conservative views of Islam, and
take the initiative to bomb and assassinate for achieving their Islamic
goals as they perceive it. This does NOT define that all people who
follow the Islamic faith are extremists or terrorists, but there have
unfortunately been classic examples to show that there are some existing
in the world today. In saying that, we must consider that there are
MANY extremists of all kinds across the world, and they are more than
happy to be representatives of such hate crimes across the board of
social media, giving them the title of being eExtremists (extremists
online).
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(Personal screenshot) |
In
such an advanced time of technology and social media, I'm sure that a
majority of us have come across a number of "pages" and "links" that
promote the severity of how much hate and prejudice continue today.
Whether it be "Death to Americans / Muslims / homosexuals" etc (all of
which I do not condone, under ANY circumstances), it's unfortunate that
we still see so much of this in the
world, even though we have
been able to create greater equality for people.
(https://encrypted-tbn3.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcR9egCV-JbrxXbbGpRVWaUR535RY1J_FS8WoYp7A9XW6aKYBDnx) |
However,
social media does also shed some light to extremist issues. Because it
is all online, it provides evidence of how certain people around the world are continuing to act in this prejudice way. They way I see it, if people have "the right" to post their opinions as extremists, the majority of the public have the right to fight against them and fight for equality in society.
I have 'Real' stuck in my head now!
ReplyDeleteI completely agree that if people have the right to post controversial thoughts, society has right to fight back against them.