I mean the point when the desire to just win an argument turns you into someone who goes against all your other values.
Ok, why does this article act like internet discussion is uniquely vulnerable to this?
Here’s a rule I have developed for myself: never talk about a culture-war topic with anyone who only wants to talk to you about that topic. These conversations can only be helpful if they happen as part of a relationship. If you’re going in cold on a very hard topic, you will not be able to experience each other as people, only as opinions or symbols.
-_-
So never talk about difficult things with strangers in the context of debate?
There are good parts to this article, but it about sums it up to me that this person talks about Bluesky and never, ever asks if there is an inherent problem here with the capitalist architecture of social media contributing to the problem or mentions the Fediverse/Mastodon.
I think the following is incontestable: the only way to get rid of all opinions that are different from yours is by carrying out unthinkable human rights atrocities. (And this doesn’t actually work: there are still, in fact, both Catholics and Protestants.)
We can already see how this type of thing becomes more common during an information crisis because we’re now in another one. We’re overloaded and overwhelmed by information. We don’t have the social and informational structures in place yet to manage it. My suggestion is that this enormous information wave makes us anxious and angry.
Is it really the new information age that drove the Palestinian Genocide or is the Palestinian Genocide happening despite the information age trying desperately to stop it?