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By Nebil Nizar
The Friday sermon delivered by the Imam of the Grand Mosque in Makkah last Friday slammed irresponsible social media use in Saudi Arabia. This serious misuse of the digital space is not geographically limited to West Asia alone. News feeds buzzed with updates about the transfer of an Indian Police Service officer in Kerala.
The Friday sermon delivered by the Imam of the Grand Mosque in Makkah last Friday slammed irresponsible social media use in Saudi Arabia. This serious misuse of the digital space is not geographically limited to West Asia alone. News feeds buzzed with updates about the transfer of an Indian Police Service officer in Kerala.
In an age when revolutions were tweeted, a transfer engineered
by the activists at the tip of their mouse is no big thing.
Democracy is not just a form of government in which the
government are elected by the people; it is also about plurality of ideas. As
noted political thinker, JS Mill advocated in On Liberty,
truth does not emerge by itself; it is only through a conflict of opposing
views that truth emerges.
Right to freedom of speech is recognised as a human right in
Universal Declaration of Human Rights and International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights. It is also recognised as a fundamental right in the
Constitution of India.
Governments all over the world sensed the importance of directly
communicating and thereby engaging with the people at large. In India, Shashi
Tharoor was one of the first politicians to use microblogging website Twiter to
connect with the masses. It is now used by almost every leader and the present
Prime Minister Narendra Modi has used it as a diplomacy tool many times.
Internet as a free space is also used by activists to campaign
for causes which the mainstream media is never interested to carry. The Hashtag
activism started with the Occupy Wall Street protest, initially with an aim to
coordinate twitter conversations, spread to other social media outfits as well.
Internet enables activists to communicate inexpensively and also in a timely
manner.
The real issue starts when opinions are manufactured in the
digital space. The Makkah Imam observed that there was a tendency
on social media to find fault with others and spread lies and half truths
about other people and the country. The medium can be used to spread dissatisfaction.
Many people will like/follow/share and view only those pages
or sites which are in harmony with their inflexible world view. When a
feeble-minded person sees another with the same mindset, a bond develops
between them. The situation turns worse when they decide to take on digitally
the one who disagrees with their view.
The recent passage of the Juvenile Justice Amendment Act by the
Indian Parliament stands out as a textbook example of being swayed away by the
opinion of a mob. Social media believes that by the passage of the Act, all
abuses against women in India are over.
The last Republic Day saw abuses on social media against the
vice president of India, Hamid Ansari, for not saluting during the parade. The
abuse went to the extent of calling him a traitor and even a jihadi
sympathiser. Later when the protocol was checked, the vice president, a
former member of elite Indian Foreign Service, was right and all those who
saluted, sans the president were wrong.
In a developing nation like India, millions are stopped from
meaningfully engage online due to technological illiteracy or lack of access to
technology. Then how can the opinion of a few be claimed as the opinion of
the community at large?
Social media is a double-edged sword. A party, a recent phenomenon
in Indian politics, showed us that opinions can be gathered from the common man
directly before arriving at an important decision. Every decision by the high
and mighty state should be objectively taken after weighing the pros and cons.
In a vibrant democracy, where people gave their mandate to the
government to rule through free and fair elections, we should not bow to the
pressure created by a few netizens in the name of the majority.
(Originally published at http://www.dailyo.in/politics/social-media-twitter-shashi-tharoor-narendra-modi-juvenile-justice-bill-mob-mentality-trolls-hamid-ansari/story/1/8679.html)
(Originally published at http://www.dailyo.in/politics/social-media-twitter-shashi-tharoor-narendra-modi-juvenile-justice-bill-mob-mentality-trolls-hamid-ansari/story/1/8679.html)
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