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Melvin's  Blog

Nshima & Curry

 


EVERYONE HAS A VOICE ON THE INTERNET

The N-word is forbidden in many places and rightly so. But
it doesn't take long to come across it online. Just Google
it and you'll get four million hits, almost as many as Mike
Tyson endured in his last fight.

Racism, it seems, is alive and well on the Internet, where
leaving hateful messages on a website is easier than burning
a cross and you don't need a white sheet to hide your
identity. This isn't your grandfather's KKK. This is your
out-of-work cousin's WWW (Wired White Whackos).

They aren't all white, of course, the people who spew their
hatred all over the Net. You can find black whackos, brown
whackos, even green whackos with pointy ears who won't rest
until they achieve green supremacy.

The Internet is all about freedom of speech. Everyone has a
voice and some people have three or four: their own and the
ones in their head.

Most news and blog sites allow readers to leave comments.
They can usually remain anonymous and say whatever's on
their mind. The "discussions" on some sites can get quite
heated, with plenty of foul language and name-calling. It's
like the British Parliament, but slightly more civilized.

Some articles and blog posts attract hundreds of comments. I
have no idea who has the time to read them all. Some folks
really need to get a life. I mean, I usually lose interest
around comment No. 243. (That's usually the point where it's
clear that all the problems in the world -- crime, global
warming, male pattern baldness -- can be blamed on one
thing: illegal immigration. If we could just close the
border, life would be so much better for everyone, except
perhaps the toupee salesmen.)

Thanks to some hard-working WWW members, CBSNews.com
recently stopped allowing readers to leave comments on
stories about presidential candidate Barack Obama. The
stories had been generating far too many racist comments,
even when Michael Richards was offline.

"It's very simple," Mike Sims, director of News and
Operations for CBSNews.com, told one of their bloggers. "We
have our Rules of Engagement. They prohibit personal
attacks, especially racist attacks. Stories about Obama have
been problematic, and we won't tolerate it."

CBSNews.com does indeed have 'Rules of Engagement,' which
state: "No libel, no slander, no lying, no swearing at all,
no words that teenagers use a lot, no words that are used by
rappers, hip-hop artists or Don Imus, no words that might
offend any group or person or member of the animal kingdom,
no ethnic slurs and/or epithets, no religious bigotry, no
bathroom humor, no bedroom humor either, no comparing anyone
to Hitler, Stalin or Ann Coulter, no references whatsoever
to Katie Couric's weight or Andy Rooney's age."

The 'Rules of Engagement' may seem strict, but you can still
get away with a lot. You can still compare someone to Osama
bin Laden or make references to Mike Wallace's age or say
something nasty about a cucumber.

CBSNews.com is aware, obviously, that it's not just racism
that thrives on the Net. It's all kinds of bigotry and
incivility. People write almost anything they want. But
isn't that what freedom of speech is all about?

Perhaps so, but I wish they'd exercise this type of freedom
of speech on websites I don't visit, websites that are
designed specially for them, such as InternetIdiots.com and
ImbecilesUnited.com

                                                        

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                                             Don't forget to visit Melvin's funny blog!

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