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The Lyin’ King
From the day we arrive on Facebook
And blinking, step into the gloom
There’s more to see than can ever be seen
But most of it is crap
It’s the Circus of Life
And it moves us all
Into despair, not hope
Till we find the ignorance
These thoughts rushed to me as a parody of the Lion King lyrics when I saw today’s daily writing prompt. I think of how much time many people waste on Facebook and other social networking sites. Don’t get me wrong, they are great for keeping up with friends and family – even reconnecting with lost acquaintances. But, for some at least, Facebook has become a place to “discuss” politics, religion, and other weighty matters.
That’s silly.
I once saw a meme (Facebook is big on memes) that showed a pie chart of the percentage of people who “change their minds” on a belief after intensive discussion on Facebook. As you might have guessed, it looked like this (attribution in the meme):
In short, discussions of such issues do nothing to inform anyone, they merely aggravate relationships (much like in real life). The circus doesn’t stop there, however, as it is joined by a constant flow of advertising, “sponsored” posts, the same idiotic pet video that seems to be stuck on repeat mode no matter what your views on pets or idiots may be, and a variety of other ridiculous memes flash-stolen in the pandemic of plagiarism that is Facebook.
One marvel of this circus is the lack of consideration for fact. The most egregious falsehoods are shared around as if sheer volume transforms blatant lies to profound truths. I suppose this is why serial liar, cheater, misogynist, racist, bigot Donald Trump is so popular – he epitomizes the Facebook-generation’s lack of belief that postings must actually be accurate. Repeat a lie often enough and it becomes true, right? Not that truth matters.
In a way, the circus of Facebook reflects the circus of life. There are actually people in the world who are as silly, ignorant, embarrassing, angry, obnoxious, and obsessed as they appear on Facebook. In the past we could simply not hang out with them as they drifted off into social oblivion. Now, it takes an active effort to block their presence. Not enough of us make that effort.
Till we find our place
On the path unwinding
In the Circus
The Circus of Life
David J. Kent is a science traveler and the author of Lincoln: The Man Who Saved America, in Barnes and Noble stores now. His previous books include Tesla: The Wizard of Electricity (2013) and Edison: The Inventor of the Modern World (2016) and two e-books: Nikola Tesla: Renewable Energy Ahead of Its Time and Abraham Lincoln and Nikola Tesla: Connected by Fate.
Check out my Goodreads author page. While you’re at it, “Like” my Facebook author page for more updates!
Josette King said:
Excellent analysis of the circus we are in! Thank you David.
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davidjkentwriter said:
It gets a little scary at times.
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nonsmokingladybug said:
Oh good, I am not the only one who wrote about the internet and social media. I thought I was off my 10 miles 🙂
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davidjkentwriter said:
The internet has that affect on people.
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Lightness Traveling said:
Ha, ha, ha! First day back… first WP link off my email… and the first thing I read on-line is this! I thought it was just the jet-lag telling my brain it’s 4:00AM…. Maybe just need to stay off the computer! 😉
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davidjkentwriter said:
Seems you’ve been doing well staying off the computer. Nice to have you back. One of the redeeming graces of being connected.
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PsychPerspectives said:
Good post, and all very true. I have 2 posts similar to this that I’d enjoy hearing your views on
Are we bloggers, or merely collectors
https://lostfoundaround.wordpress.com/2016/08/11/are-we-bloggers-or-merely-collectors/
The extinction of uncertainty
https://lostfoundaround.wordpress.com/2016/07/23/the-extinction-of-uncertainty/
Thank you 🙂
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unauthoredtext said:
True and very well put – also quite reassuring for me as friends on Facebook rarely read or even click like for the stories I post, no matter how much work and how much of my essential self I’ve poured into them, but the moment I post a picture of my cat… well I guess that’s what the people want.
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davidjkentwriter said:
It can be frustrating, but then I think we write what we want to write and not so much what others want to read. I guess the ideal is when it’s both.
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Dalindcy said:
I agree about the political arguments on Facebook.. That’s exactly why I don’t read them. Now I just need to break the habit of reading the comments in general.
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davidjkentwriter said:
Facebook can often be more revealing than we intend. It warrants care when using.
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Swastika Das said:
Super like. This kind of post is need of the hour. Thumbs up.
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