Yesterday I
asked myself and colleagues around me a question – are we, as the social media
generation, desensitised from shocking and gratuitous violence? I think as a majority, we probably are. Well I
certainly am. And in my opinion that is down to the way coverage is shared via social media.
I have various forms of social media, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Instagram. Each serves its own purpose. When I learnt of the shooting of Alton Sterling, I logged into my Twitter account. With literally a few keyboard strokes, I saw video footage of two murders on my Twitter feed. It
saddened me, but I certainly wasn’t shocked and moved to a new level of
emotion that I probably should have been. And I blame that, not on movies and video games. But the sharing of REAL time news on social media.
The two separate videos were the murders of two black men by US police officers. I used the term murder as in my opinion that is what it was. No doubt about it in my mind. No other term is required or can be justified. The officers that killed Alton Sterling and Philando Castile murdered them.
The police officers seemed to be a fit of rage and hysteria in the aftermath of pulling that trigger. It was almost as if the gun in their hand and uniform on their body gave them a sense of power that they were invincible, and as soon as the sound of the bullets leaving the chamber stopped ringing in their ears, they snapped into an understanding of what would happen to them from now on.
The two separate videos were the murders of two black men by US police officers. I used the term murder as in my opinion that is what it was. No doubt about it in my mind. No other term is required or can be justified. The officers that killed Alton Sterling and Philando Castile murdered them.
The police officers seemed to be a fit of rage and hysteria in the aftermath of pulling that trigger. It was almost as if the gun in their hand and uniform on their body gave them a sense of power that they were invincible, and as soon as the sound of the bullets leaving the chamber stopped ringing in their ears, they snapped into an understanding of what would happen to them from now on.
Their lives
will be turned upside down and those of their families. The split second it
took to murder those men will impact those around them forever. But that is
nothing in comparison for those who lost someone in that action. Children will
never have their daddy back, and that is unacceptable. The US police needs to
seriously review the types of people they are hiring, as they are engaging
their firearms before engaging their brains.
This morning
I woke and the top trend on Twitter was #Dallas. When you see a place name
trending, you know something bad has happened. And it has. In what appears to
have been an organised revenge attack on police officers, resulting in eleven
officers shot, five killed, and an unconfirmed number of members of the public
have been shot at a #BlackLivesMatter protest in the city. Once again, events
have been captured on film, and shared online. In one video which has been
shared virally, we have seen the execution of one officer, who was killed doing
his job. And again I wasn’t shocked. The cold hearted execution of a police
officer doing his job should have moved me. But we have seen it before.
But
yesterday isn’t the first time that we have witnessed such atrocities, and
certainly won’t be the last. But in recent times, I have learnt about these incidents via Twitter and Facebook. In the past weeks we have seen the mass murder in
the Orlando nightclub, and although mass footage didn’t come out, individual
messages and heartbreak were shared internationally on social media.
In August
last year, videos flooded social media of the murders of news reporter Alison
Parker and cameraman Adam Ward. These videos had been filmed and released by
the killer himself. The videos were shared instantly and spread like wild fire
globally. They became viral. Millions of people saw the horrified look on Alison Parker's face as she literally stared down the barrel of a gun. Whether they wanted to or not. The image was shared and publisized around the world.
In yesterday’s
murders, the attack in Dallas, and the murder of the news team last summer, we
have witnessed someone taking human life without thought or compassion. We have
seen the last moments of someone’s life, and in some videos even seen their
last breath.
And although
truly heart-breaking when you think of the impact of the action upon the
individuals, loved ones, families, friends, co-workers etc, we as members of the
social community still share the videos on social media, with no thought of who
may see it.
Acts of
violence, murder and terror attacks are part of the world we live in, but we
have a duty to share the news responsibly. Social media gives everyone a voice,
but in my opinion we have a responsibility about how we use that voice. There
is an argument that people can share the truth on social media, the truth as it
happens, compared to a filtered and censored version we may often get from the
media news outlets.
We are a
generation who have been brought up on violent movies, violent video games and
global atrocities being shown on our screens. We are a generation who know that
gratuitous violence is just a few clicks away should we want to see it. We are
also a generation who have been brought up with modern cameras, smart phones,
body worn cameras and live streaming. When something shocking happens, you will
often see a crowd of people with their phones out filming the activity. The
ability to film what is actually happening is there to prove the actions that
are occurring, which has never been more
evident than in the murder of Philando Castille, who’s partner filmed and
broadcasted live on Facebook the aftermath of the Police officer opening fire
on him after he reached for his driving licence. In that ten minute Facebook
live video, we saw the moment he passed away and her remarkable calmness and willingness
to comply with the officer, as the officer seemed to become hysterical.
Desensitization
to a subject suggests a lower level of emotion in response to something you
have witnessed.
I would
describe myself as an emotive and passionate person, yet with all of the things
I have seen recently, with the additions of coverage of huge events over the
years such as: 7/7, 9/11, Sandy Hook, Columbine, and not to mention the
countless violent or abusive videos random Facebook friends have liked or
shared, I would certainly say that I view things with a lower level of emotion
towards them, compared to how I would have felt in days before social media. I am sure I am not alone in feeling that way.
I seem to be tweeting the same thing quite often now days : "Its a fucked up world we live in."
I seem to be tweeting the same thing quite often now days : "Its a fucked up world we live in."
My thoughts
and condolences go out to the families of all of the people who have lost their
lives in recent events. RIP.
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