• NJSpradlin@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    This has been my thought for a while, since before Musk even finalized the purchase of Twitter. They mentioned wealthy foreign investors backing him near the end of the deliberations, and it immediately clued me in. The working class, or the populous at large, have been using social media to unite and protest for years. Look at Iran and the anti-hijab movement. Look at BLM and how it exploded a few years ago. The ruling class are dumbing down education across the board, and limiting what we can even read from libraries. Disrupting our ability to communicate, share and coordinate is just another step. Why is Musk shooting himself in the foot? What business decision makes sense to gut every aspect of Twitter and then prevent outside viewers from seeing tweets? He’s killing it. And Reddit’s doing the same.

    What was Twitter? An extremely popular and multicultural, border breaking venue for communication? What was Reddit but a (by and large) progressive and intellectual community sharing ideas that mattered? (On top of feel good stories or something to get your rocks off to.) Then look at Threads, where they explicitly stated they’re going to avoid politics and news? Not letting those topics be part of the discourse. It’s obvious.

    Places like this are shrinking and are absolutely under attack.

    • Maturin@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      But seriously, why aren’t we talking about this more? We’ve seen some fairly significant mass movements gain real traction on Twitter and Reddit in the past few years and, simultaneously and nearly instantly they are both quickly scrambled and made completely useless for that purpose.

      • NJSpradlin@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        You’re talking about organizations that can put down $20bn to fund Musk’s takeover of Twitter. People with that kind of money absolutely have the resources and know-how to manipulate entire markets. It would be naive to believe otherwise.

    • ferne@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Not to divert too much from your point, but Reddit was a progressive and intelligent community? Thanks for the laugh haha

      • Seasoned_Greetings@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Reddit is 1000’s of communities. It’s just as wrong to say that it isn’t progressive and intelligent as it is to insinuate it’s all one big community in the first place.

        However, it’s really not a secret that reddit’s majority (at least used to) lean left harder than any other social media. Intelligent is maybe subjective and not accurate, but they were at least more progressive than most other social media sites.