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offline i_x_ten from arsemuncher on 2006-06-07 15:06 [#01915271]
Points: 10031 Status: Regular



i love charlie brooker. he is very angry and very funny,
and i saw this in the paper on friday and thought, how true;


"Last week I wrote a load of nonsense about flags and
idiocy; as well as appearing in print, it also turned up on
the Guardian's "Comment is Free" blog-o-site, where
passersby are encouraged to scrawl their own responses
beneath the original article.

Some people disagreed with the piece, some agreed; some
found it funny, some didn't. For half a nanosecond I was
tempted to join in the discussion. And then I remembered
that all internet debates, without exception, are entirely
futile. So I didn't.

There's no point debating anything online. You might as well
hurl shoes in the air to knock clouds from the sky. The
internet's perfect for all manner of things, but productive
discussion ain't one of them. It provides scant room for
debate and infinite opportunities for fruitless
point-scoring: the heady combination of perceived anonymity,
gestated responses, random heckling and a notional "live
audience" quickly conspire to create a "perfect storm" of
perpetual bickering.

Stumble in, take umbrage with someone, trade a few blows,
and within about two or three exchanges, the subject itself
goes out the window. Suddenly you're simply arguing about
arguing. Eventually, one side gets bored, comes to its
senses, or dies, and the row fizzles out: just another
needless belch in the swirling online guffstorm.

But not for long, because online quarrelling is also
addictive, in precisely the same way Tetris is addictive. It
appeals to the "lab rat" part of your brain; the annoying,
irrepressible part that adores repetitive pointlessness and
would gleefully make you pop bubblewrap till Doomsday if it
ever got its way. An unfortunate few, hooked on the futile
thrill of online debate, devote their lives to its cause.
They roam the internet, actively seeking out viewpoints they
disagree with, or squat on messageboards, whining, needling,
sneering, over-analysing each new proclamation - jo


 

offline i_x_ten from arsemuncher on 2006-06-07 15:07 [#01915273]
Points: 10031 Status: Regular



joylessly fiddling, like unhappy gorillas doomed to pick
lice from one another's fur for all eternity.

Still, it's not all moan moan moan in NetLand. There's also
the occasional puerile splutter to liven things up.

In the debate sparked by my gibberish outpouring, it wasn't
long before rival posters began speculating about the size
of their opponent's dicks. It led me to wonder - has the
world of science ever investigated a casual link between
penis size and male political leaning?

I'd theorise that, on the whole, rightwing penises are short
and stubby, hence their owners' constant fury. Lefties, on
the other hand, are spoiled for length, yet boast no girth
whatsoever - which explains their pained confusion. I flit
from one camp to the other, of course, which is why mine's
so massive it's got a full-size human knee in the middle.
And a back. A big man's back.

Anyway, if we must debate things online, we might as well
debate that. It's not like we'll ever resolve any of that
other bullshit, is it?

Click. Mine's bigger than yours. Click. No it isn't. Click.
Yes it is. Click. Refresh, repost, repeat to fade.


 

offline ecnadniarb on 2006-06-07 15:08 [#01915274]
Points: 24805 Status: Lurker | Show recordbag



blah blah blah.


 

offline Dannn_ from United Kingdom on 2006-06-07 15:25 [#01915299]
Points: 7877 Status: Lurker



i never really liked his columns, he has a tendency to say
obvious things and then labour the point.

but yeah internet arguments are pointless but so are most
arguments, i like internet arguments because i find if ive
argued or watched an argument about something on a message
board I'm better equipped to voice my opinion in real life


 

offline dog_belch from Netherlands, The on 2006-06-07 16:19 [#01915338]
Points: 15098 Status: Addict | Followup to i_x_ten: #01915271 | Show recordbag



i love i_x_ten. he is very angry and not very funny,
and i saw this on xlt and thought, how predictable;

"it's shit"

Anyway, if we must debate things online, we might as well
debate that. It's not like we'll ever resolve any of that
other bullshit, is it? Apart from the one irrefutable
truth:

i_x_ten composed "What the beat?"


 

offline i_x_ten from arsemuncher on 2006-06-07 16:23 [#01915344]
Points: 10031 Status: Regular | Followup to dog_belch: #01915338



what?


 

offline Taffmonster from dog_belch (Japan) on 2006-06-07 16:23 [#01915345]
Points: 6196 Status: Lurker | Followup to i_x_ten: #01915273



haha nice!


 

offline nacmat on 2006-06-07 16:25 [#01915348]
Points: 31271 Status: Lurker



lost it


 

offline Sclah from Freudian Slipmat on 2006-06-07 17:22 [#01915394]
Points: 3121 Status: Lurker



Too much text, I need instant gratification


 

offline qrter from the future, and it works (Netherlands, The) on 2006-06-08 15:24 [#01915987]
Points: 47414 Status: Moderator | Followup to Sclah: #01915394



tits


 

offline evolume from seattle (United States) on 2006-06-08 15:33 [#01915988]
Points: 10965 Status: Regular



no they're not, asshole


 

offline swears from junk sleep on 2006-06-08 15:51 [#01916006]
Points: 6474 Status: Lurker | Followup to Sclah: #01915394



Yeah, if you can't some something up in three or four
GCSE-bite-size bulletpoint chunks, then I'm completely
baffled. Besides, I can't handle weighty intellectual
heavyweights like Charlie Brooker.


 

offline obara from Utrecht on 2006-06-08 15:52 [#01916007]
Points: 19377 Status: Regular



hu hu hu


 


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