• This letter to the editor appeared in the Times Union on 1/10/13:
After reading many reports on the controversy over the upcoming gun
show in Saratoga Springs, I'd like to point out that this should be what
we call a "teachable moment" when it comes to modern communication.
Without
taking sides on the matter (both camps have some strong points as well
as some ridiculous logic), I call attention to how laughably easy it is
to get people to affix names, "likes," comments or anything else to an
online petition on virtually any topic. That is evident in the sort of
silliness that goes on every day via Twitter, Facebook, etc. Simply put:
There is absolutely no conceivable way they should be taken at
face value.
Media specialists, social scientists, etc., should be
easy to find to comment on the efficacy of such knee-jerk "petitions,"
often "signed" with unverifiable online pseudonyms and unknown
geographic origin.
Lacking that sort of perspective, I find the stories published by the Times Union
and other local media shallow journalism that is misleading, especially
to people not well-versed in the intricacies of social media.
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