The London Riots and 7 Other Things Blamed on Social Media

Posted by Miss Cellania in Blogs & Internet on August 12, 2011 at 11:54 am

When people get together and cause trouble, it’s very easy to blame the medium of communication instead of looking deeper. That’s why social networking sites get cited as the cause of so many evils. Why, don’t you know that MySpace is “worse than crack”?

Back in 2006, Ron Vietti, Senior Pastor of Valley Bible Fellowship in Bakersfield, CA, made headlines for being a vocal critic of then-popular social networking site MySpace. He argued the site — which he called both “worse than crack, cocaine or meth” and “My Waste of Space Dot Com” — was luring boys into pornography and making young girls targets of sexual predators. As David Burger reported in The Bakersfield Californian, Vietti said the site fostered bisexuality and called the Internet “the devil’s biggest scheme he has ever inserted into our lives.” He urged his congregation to go to places young people hang out (“like bars”) to convince them to delete their MySpace profiles.

I wonder what the telephone was blamed for in the 19th century. Read other stories of social-media-blaming at mental_floss. Link

 
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I Blame Hipsters

Posted by Alex in Fashion, Pictures on May 4, 2010 at 12:20 pm


I Blame Hipsters – $14.95 | More Funny T-Shirts at the NeatoShop

Hipsters. Everyone knows one (or perhaps you ARE one). It’s a well known and long established fact that every social ill can be attributed to their existence, so here’s a T-shirt that squarely calls ‘em out for it. Hipsters are troublemakers. Link

 
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Problem with Close-Talking? Blame the Brain

Posted by Queuebot in Science & Tech on September 4, 2009 at 12:40 pm

Why is it so uncomfortable to stand really close to a stranger? Sure, there are the potentially icky things. Sometimes an elevator car is so crowded that you can smell a fellow rider’s shampoo or chewing gum (or worse). But even when a stranger is perfectly groomed, it’s usually a bit revolting to be pressed against him in public. Why?

A team of scientists from Caltech put SM through a series of tests in which they asked her to indicate the position at which she became uncomfortable as another woman, a researcher, approached her. SM’s preferred personal distance was 1.1 ft. (0.34 m), about half the preferred distance (2 ft., or 0.64 m) of a group of comparison subjects. At 1 ft., you can easily discern whether someone showered after the gym — although in the lab experiment, the Caltech researchers made sure the experimenter was well-scrubbed and had just chewed gum before interacting with SM.

Link

From the Upcoming ueue, submitted by Rossy21.

 
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