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Internet to Blame for Lack of Close Friends

Anonymous Coward writes "Duke and University of Arizona researchers are citing the Internet as one of the main contributing factors to a shrinking of social networks among Americans. People say they have fewer people they can talk to about important stuff, even if they are talking to lots more people from all over the place about unimportant stuff online."

361 comments

  1. Did they consider by idonthack · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That maybe people use the Internet because they don't have any friends?

    --
    Why is it that when you believe something it's an opinion, but when I believe something it's a manifesto?
    1. Re:Did they consider by Bastian227 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Or is it the lack of close friends is to blame for the Internet?

    2. Re:Did they consider by Kagura · · Score: 5, Funny

      ... researchers are citing the Internet as one of the main contributing factors to a shrinking of social networks among Americans.

      What are you talking about? I've got 89,402,390 people in my social network! This internet thing is great!

    3. Re:Did they consider by Kagura · · Score: 3, Funny

      Gee, thanks, Tom!

    4. Re:Did they consider by jb.hl.com · · Score: 3, Funny

      I'd like to nominate Tom as the person with the biggest real penis/internet penis discrepancy in the world. You know he deserves it.

      --
      By summer it was all gone...now shesmovedon. --
    5. Re:Did they consider by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But the Internet is important! It says right up at the top, "News for nerds. Stuff that matters." See?! See?! That's proof enough, right?

    6. Re:Did they consider by ZorinLynx · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I have plenty of close friends. Trouble is they're scattered all over the planet.

      I could never relate to most locals, really. The best friends I have are those I've met online. A few have moved nearby since and I see them often in real-life.

      I don't think the Internet is responsible for a *lack* of close friends.. Just a larger pool of potential friends where you end up meeting much better matches, even if they are physically farther away.

      However, the folks I've met on the 'net aren't any less my friends than folks I've met in person.

      -Z

    7. Re:Did they consider by iwsnet · · Score: 0

      They should count virtual friends and IM buddies.

    8. Re:Did they consider by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Contrary to what this article suggests.. when I was 12 I got into trouble for something I didn't do. There was of course no way to prove that(didn't have the money to go to trial, just barely had enough for a lawyer to get me a plea bargain) --- but anyway, I ended up getting house arrest(1 yr), probation(1 yr), and a parent to be with me anytime I left the house. Also had a court order to stay away from one of my longest running friends to this day, a close friend from Kindergarden to 7th grade when the incident happend. Needless to say when my parents were at work, I was to stay home. I also wasn't allowed to play 'violent video games' like Counter-Strike, but before the shit hit the fan I had befriended a female through the HL1 mod 'Firearms' and over the years we've become best friends. I've only met her face to face once, but she's honestly the best friend I have, and vise versa. Which is a big thing to say, because we both have many good aquaintences and more than one true friend.

      But because of my use of the internet, I have met about 5 of the closest friends I have. I don't know what the hell they're saying about a lack of close friends because of the internet.. that's bullshit. I know many people who've met their closest friends on the internet through things/places that both of them have a lot of interest in.

      Maybe social networking skills I can see deteriorating.. people not knowing how to deal with real people because they're used to typing out emotion and not 'reading' body language and tone of voice. But then again I know people who spend their time on the internet and they don't get out much, and thus don't have close friends. Which is a shame. But here I am 5 years later and I'm BACK on probation(today is my 3rd day, 2 yrs this time...) and won't be going out much because I don't want to get into any more trouble while I'm on probation and get my shit fucked up again.

      All I can do is just remind you all to take things with a grain of salt. Everybody has an agenda, everybody has their point of view, and everybody has their opinion. Just take those into consideraton when you read studies and crap like this. Cheers.

    9. Re:Did they consider by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's just because you don't have any real friend "in person". If you did you would understand the difference.

    10. Re:Did they consider by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      I also know a lot of people who've met more friends over the internet. I know one guy who likes to unicycle, and he met a whole group of people who unicycle over the net. Without the internet, me may have never found these people. I think the internet opens up a lot of possibilities for people to meet people more like themselves. People have lots of different interests, and sometimes it's hard to find people interested in the same things. They is probably why tech geeks love the internet, not because of the technology, but because they can find more tech geeks, and lets face it, there aren't a whole lot of us.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    11. Re:Did they consider by contrapunctus · · Score: 1

      i know what you mean.
      I moved to a very small town (with no one who shares intersts, I doubt anyone reads slashdot!) recently and most of my friends are scattered all over.
      I did meet most of my friends in person though and then we got scattered so maybe it's not quite the same thing.

    12. Re:Did they consider by enrgeeman · · Score: 1

      me may have never found these people.

      don't you mean, "your friend?"

      --
      sent from my slashdot browser.
    13. Re:Did they consider by pikine · · Score: 2

      No, this article is not polling online to find out that people who surf the web has no close friends. The fact is that everyone has less number of close friends, whether you use the Internet or not.

      This is actually a consequence of a myriad of reasons, one of which is closely related to the Internet: complete partial attention. We're constantly interrupted---by e-mail, IM, cellphones, blueberries, all those distractions---that we don't pay any attention to anyone at all. Because of this, people in general are not very good listeners anymore. This also contributes to the growing indifference towards other people.

      There are other reasons why we're all gradually feeling indifferent. For example, we all think we're getting smarter. Information is more readily available, we're getting better education, science is giving us better technologies, etc. However, all this only makes us more selfish and egoistic. We no longer know how to tender other people's feelings.

      In a way, your response reflected the indifference. Do you really think accusing friendless people of abusing the Internet really helps remedy the situation?

      --
      I once had a signature.
    14. Re:Did they consider by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've stated it in a rude way, but there is a grain of truth in it for some of us, I think.
      Some of us geeky, introverted types(e.g. INTP/INTJ) have different meanings of close friends and regular friends than other folks. Most people seem to have close friends they spend time with just about everyday and then more distant friends they interact with ocassionaly. We often don't have those daily, intimate type of friends, so we think of the more distant friends as our close friends; which is accurate from our perspective.

    15. Re:Did they consider by VoltageX · · Score: 2

      ZorinLynx: *exactly*. I was about to post in this thread something along the lines of what you've said. Most of the people at my school I don't want to associate with. The internet lets me pick and choose my friends more carefully.

      --
      "Anonymous could not immediately be reached for further comment." - International Business Times
    16. Re:Did they consider by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      e-mail, IM, cellphones, blueberries
      I find those especially distracting in waffles. Mmm.

      What were we talking about?
    17. Re:Did they consider by overbaud · · Score: 1

      Maybe it's because as we all keep being told we are in the middle of an obesity epidemic and when you have a fat arse its easier to sit at home and watch tv or surf the internet than it is to go out, run around, chat, have a laugh, met people and shake said arse, and the people that are doing that aren't at home on the internet. Plus on the internet its easier to convince people your a filthy rich professional model than it is when your in their face, tripping over your man boobs.

      --
      Users... the only thing keeping 1st level support from being the bottom feeders.
    18. Re:Did they consider by kitode · · Score: 1

      Really, it's a game of telephone! Information distorted at every repetition.

      The original work said that the number of intimate ties (best friends) went from 3 to 2. It didn't talk about good friends who are nevertheless not intimate friends. In fact, one of my closest friends in the world I talk with every 5 years or so, and it would be more frequently if only she were willing to use email (I had no idea she was a luddite when I befriended her at age 3).

      For example, the cited article says,

      Increased use of the Internet, along with the number of hours people are spending at work, are factors contributing to a drastic decline in the number of close friends that Americans have.
      [...]The average number of people who respondents said they discuss important matters fell from about three to two.

      OK, so there's your drastic decline: three to two. Seems like we're talking a very elite level of friendship, even though the headline was phrased as though it was a social circle. Maybe it has something to do with the integrity of extended families that adults in 1984 were thinking about vs. those that we, in 2006 are thinking about, which has nothing to do with technology at all, but with workforce mobility and the increase in the divorce rate in the 70's -- and they were bitter, awful divorces.

      And btw the "along with the number of hours people are spending at work," I believe is from another article ABOUT the research, based on a quote by Bowling Alone author, Putnam.

      Really awful journalism.

    19. Re:Did they consider by oddityfds · · Score: 1

      Hi Zorin, it's Oddie. :)

      Hmm, trying to avoid platitudes here... The article isn't completely bad, but the study it's based on does seem rather shallow. I guess each of us have to find our ways to find friends and the internet doesn't change that, it only adds some new ways and perhaps also makes some other ways more difficult.

    20. Re:Did they consider by ZorinLynx · · Score: 1

      Oh, I did. I had several friends in person growing up. All but one betrayed me in one way or another.

      This tends to do something to folks; it makes them hesitant to trust new people because of the betrayal. If this hasn't happened to you in one way or another, you simply won't understand where I'm coming from. And it's not just me because I know several people in a similar situation.

      Perhaps you've had better luck; all I know is I believe I'm better off than if I had continued trusting people without getting to know them in a long distance fashion first.

      -Z

    21. Re:Did they consider by bobcote · · Score: 1

      Don't blame the Internet.
      Blame employers who discourage workers from leaving on time thereby making getting involved in one's neighborhood impossible. You can't even form a carpool.
      Blame parents who control and schedule every waking moment in their children's lives so kids don't know how to relate to others unless they are given directions. I can picture it now, the play date morphing into children's networking groups organized by parents.

      I guess blame the lack of leisure time so we can't just hang with our friends or meet new ones.

    22. Re:Did they consider by j00r0m4nc3r · · Score: 1

      Stack Overflow.
      Infinite recursion detected.
      Abort.

  2. I've said it before... by FSWKU · · Score: 5, Funny

    ... and I'll say it again. Where can I get giant bags of cash to study the blindingly obvious?

    --
    "So after all this, you make my case for me. To end this stalemate, you must die..."
    1. Re:I've said it before... by Ash+Vince · · Score: 1

      It's called university.

      --
      I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
    2. Re:I've said it before... by cnettel · · Score: 1

      Ask your friends (that's not Ask Slashdot).

    3. Re:I've said it before... by Bobsledboy · · Score: 1

      No, that's paying bags of cash to study the blindingly obvious. ;)

    4. Re:I've said it before... by weiyuent · · Score: 1

      Where can I get giant bags of cash to study the blindingly obvious?

      Just because the problem is obvious doesn't mean that it shouldn't be examined diligently and quantified, such that the problem can be better understood in order to be addressed. Moreover, you are well aware that there are plenty of "obvious" assumptions that turned out to be wrong upon closer scrutiny.

    5. Re:I've said it before... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ... and I'll say it again. Where can I get giant bags of cash to study the blindingly obvious?

      And if the study said that the Internet was responsible for improved social networks, you'd be saying the exact same thing.

  3. Imagine a beowulf cluster of friends. by ABeowulfCluster · · Score: 5, Funny

    That would be cool. I'd settle for one or two friends though.

    1. Re:Imagine a beowulf cluster of friends. by eclectro · · Score: 4, Funny

      That would be cool. I'd settle for one or two friends though.

      You know what would even be cooler?? If one of those friends was a girl.

      --
      Take the cheese to sickbay, the doctor should see it as soon as possible - B'Elanna Torres, "Learning Curve"
    2. Re:Imagine a beowulf cluster of friends. by pilot1 · · Score: 1

      You know what would even be cooler?? If one of those friends was a girl.

      Oh come on, be realistic.

    3. Re:Imagine a beowulf cluster of friends. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But.. do they run linux?

    4. Re:Imagine a beowulf cluster of friends. by undeaf · · Score: 1

      But.. do they run linux?

      In soviet russia, linux runs your friends!

      Imagine how much less real friends people will have when that will actually be possible.

    5. Re:Imagine a beowulf cluster of friends. by SachiCALaw · · Score: 1

      I have LOTS of girl friends. Probably about 20 or so close ones, and a few more who aren't so close.

      Of course, I'm also a girl myself.

    6. Re:Imagine a beowulf cluster of friends. by Loonacy · · Score: 2, Funny

      Uh oh, you broke Slashdot Rule #4.
      Never, under ANY circumstances, admit to being female.

    7. Re:Imagine a beowulf cluster of friends. by SachiCALaw · · Score: 1

      There come times that are just too perfect an opportunity to flaunt it. :-)

    8. Re:Imagine a beowulf cluster of friends. by Loonacy · · Score: 3, Funny

      Oh, I see... ......
      Pics?

    9. Re:Imagine a beowulf cluster of friends. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      YOU forgot internet rule #1: There are no women on the internet.

    10. Re:Imagine a beowulf cluster of friends. by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 1

      Oooh! Ohh! Even cooler! What if BOTH of them were girls? And liked to make out with each other? And you could join in sometimes? Or even just watch?

      --
      You see? You see? Your stupid minds! Stupid! Stupid!
    11. Re:Imagine a beowulf cluster of friends. by SachiCALaw · · Score: 1

      Now now. THAT would violate Slashdot Rule #4. :-)
      But as a tease . . . http://idisk.mac.com/thorw/Public/IronButt.jpg

  4. Uh... okay, sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Meanwhile

    25% of America has no access to the internet at all.

    A further 30% of America lacks broadband, which often restricts how much one can rely on the internet in a protracted fashion.

    But, yeah, sure, if America is significantly lessened in people that they can talk to, feel close to, or trust in the last twenty years, let's go ahead and blame the Internet...

    1. Re:Uh... okay, sure by tomhudson · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I've got to agree ... bogus article alert time.

      People say they have fewer people they can talk to about important stuff, even if they are talking to lots more people from all over the place about unimportant stuff online."

      Maybe people are talking about important stuff more than ever, but doing it behind the anonymity or convenience of blogs?

      People who say they have dozens or hundreds of close friends in real life don't know the meaning of the term "close friends". A close friend is one you could tell anything, and their response is "how can I help?" Want an easy 20-second test of whether someone is really a close friend or just an acquaintance? Tell them you want to get a sex change and watch their reaction.

    2. Re:Uh... okay, sure by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1

      The Luddites are just looking for a way to blame all their ills on the internet so that they can slow down technological progress.

      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    3. Re:Uh... okay, sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you are suggesting lying to someone to see if they are a close friend.
      Perhaps if you are willing to lie to them you are not their close friend.

    4. Re:Uh... okay, sure by giorgiofr · · Score: 1

      And what kind of test would that be? First of all, the moment you need to test someone like that, you know he's not a true friend or you wouldn't be doubting him. Secondly, what reaction would make him pass/fail the test? "OMG WTF are you sure?" might indicate total acceptance just as well as mere disinterest ("go on, like I care"). "What the hell do you think you're doing, you freak?!" might indicate deep interest and worry just as well as mere homophobia.
      The real "test" for friendhsip is called LIFE and if anyone needs this explained, I feel sorry for him.

      --
      Global warming is a cube.
    5. Re:Uh... okay, sure by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      I was going to point out that if you had doubts about their support in such a case, it says more about how you feel than anything else, but I didn't want to obscure the point of the post, which is that there's a big difference between how real friends would react, compared to acquaintances.

    6. Re:Uh... okay, sure by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      Who said anything about lying :-)

      We all know you posted AC because, deep down, you really want to ...

      ... come on, fess up.

      Seriously, you've never lied? Bullshit. Or, when someone asks "Does this dress make me look fat?" do you answer "It's not the dress."

    7. Re:Uh... okay, sure by Tatarize · · Score: 1

      Don't naysay! I have somebody to blame now!

      --

      It is no longer uncommon to be uncommon.
    8. Re:Uh... okay, sure by scwizard · · Score: 1
      Want an easy 20-second test of whether someone is really a close friend or just an acquaintance? Tell them you want to get a sex change and watch their reaction.
      Awesome! That means I have tons of close livejournal friends.
      --
      ~= scwizard =~
    9. Re:Uh... okay, sure by Rande · · Score: 1

      It's the joys of the internet - most friends would think it out of character for me (but not outraged), some have already had that operation, and a couple are considering it.

      Without the internet, I probably wouldn't have found friends as broadminded, and I probably wouldn't be either.

    10. Re:Uh... okay, sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or, when someone asks "Does this dress make me look fat?" do you answer "It's not the dress."

      I think I'd blame it on testosterone building body fat in the wrong place and suggest two-piece outfits.

    11. Re:Uh... okay, sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      A close friend is one you could tell anything, and their response is "how can I help?"

      that's quite a definition for CloseFriend ... i guess u forgot to consider the following sample:
      Me: i wanna shoot myself
      CloseFriend: how can i help?

      may i say ooops? ... and "bogus definition alert time"?

    12. Re:Uh... okay, sure by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      If a close friend were dying of a painful, debilitating disease, with no quality of life, and no hope for the future, just more pain and degradation, why not?

  5. Well by hsmith · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I would think that most people that "rely" on the internets to make friends typically are the outcasts that don't have loads of friends. I hang out with a lot of people, but still know plenty from the internet alone.

    I don't think just knowing people by the net and never meeting them is healthy. You need human to human interaction.

  6. Ob. bash quote by slushdork · · Score: 4, Funny

    Its like if you want to get a mate now a days, one has to get a myspace.
    <H0ley> What ever happened to getting to know people and dates and crap.
    <H0ley> Screw this profile crap.
    <H0ley> Everyone is trying to profile each other.
    <H0ley> Freaking meat-markets.
    <L4m3r> Dogs leave piles of crap for each other. We have Myspace.

  7. I don't know about this... by demongeek · · Score: 1

    Look at all of the psychopathic kids who go online to "talk" about their problems with others of similar like mind. I also know of kids who are young who have pen pals from other countries that were made through school connections. These friendships have blossomed over the years, even though the program was terminated.

    Perhaps the individuals they are studying are the uncomfortable middle "class" of internet citizens, those who have not grown up as the foggies have (making real-life friends and pretty much disclaiming the Internet as a form of intimate communication), or the young'uns who are mySpacing their entire lives to people they have never even text-messaged...

    1. Re:I don't know about this... by Homology · · Score: 1
      Look at all of the psychopathic kids who go online to "talk" about their problems with others of similar like mind.

      I think that you are just talking out of your arse. A psychopath does not go online unless it is maintainh/create control, and I find it difficult to believe that any medcial proffesional would encourage such a "mailinglist". Of course, any psychopath is unlikely to participate in the first place ;-) If you want to have examples of modern day psycopaths, have a look at part of former Enron mangement.

    2. Re:I don't know about this... by demongeek · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you're right.... I am talking out of my arse: http://pn.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/37 /12/2

    3. Re:I don't know about this... by Homology · · Score: 1
      Yeah, you're right.... I am talking out of my arse: http://pn.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/content/full/37 /12/2

      That article does not even contain the word "psychopath". Did you even read it? If so, your surely did not understand it.

    4. Re:I don't know about this... by Qacker · · Score: 0
      I call BS - why wouldn't a psycopath get online? What if they wanted to do some tax fraud and wanted to read up on better ways to make it harder to detect? Or study forinsic information?

      People give psycopathic people a bad rep but I think this is just being stupid. They in fact are better evolved then most humans in many ways. And yes I am compleatly serious.

      --
      Learn lisp today!
    5. Re:I don't know about this... by bobthesloth · · Score: 1

      You sound like you're just trolling for an argument. He admitted he was wrong, now you're just being an arse.

  8. stuff that matters? by russellh · · Score: 2, Informative

    I talk about that on the internet all the time.

    --
    must... stay... awake...
    1. Re:stuff that matters? by cnettel · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that's what /. is all about. Or, to be precise, half of it.

  9. Personal experience by Mikachu · · Score: 1

    I can say from personal experience that online friends can be just as close as ones you know personally.

    Having said that, there is still a major difference between online and offline friends. You certainly can't go without offline friends and life your life on the internet. Also, it always makes your relationship closer to know the friend personally. But the internet is certainly not to blame for peoples' inability to get close to one another. It just gives another outlet.

    1. Re:Personal experience by MsGeek · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Some of my best real-life friends were people I initially met on the Internet, or before that, on BBSes. Seriously.

      --
      Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power multiplied.
    2. Re:Personal experience by jones_supa · · Score: 1

      Same here. Actually all of them are. I've been quite lonely and meeting local people IRL has been too tricky. Only problem now is that most of the people I know live in the Helsinki area so it always takes a 50km bus trip from here to join the meetings...

  10. Flipside by Chysn · · Score: 2, Interesting

    As unfortunate as that trend is, it seems to go along with another possibly related thing: folks are putting more and more personal information on their networking sites and blogs, things that they'd be embarassed to tell a "real" friend and downright insane to tell an employer. Off the internet you might not have many CLOSE friends, but on the internet everyone is your BEST friend.

    --
    --I'm so big, my sig has its own sig.
    -- See?
  11. Internet to close for lack of friends to blame by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

    I swear to gawd...

    --
    I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  12. Mod parent up... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Maybe the article just got it wrong and the paper actually makes valid points, but the assertion that comparing data from 1985 and 2004 can tell us anything about the Internet's effect on socialization is absurd. That data and those time periods can't even show a correlation, much less causation. Perhaps if they had studied data from 1985 to2004 and related it to the amount of internet access for those time periods (or better yet, actually studied differences between those with internet access and those without) then there would be a story. Otherwise, this is just an absurd claim completely unsubtantiated by any facts (much less my own personal experience).

    1. Re:Mod parent up... by The+Great+Pretender · · Score: 2

      In 1985 I had 2 close friends, and even then didn't like them much. Now I have 2 close friends and like them. The deal is that in 1985 I would hang out with my friends all the time and they would piss me off, as I would them. Now I meet up with my guys on Thursday, we do our thing and I can ignore them for the rest of the week. I just need to talk to them a couple of times in the week and typically by email. If the internet gave me that, I thank it.

      --
      A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it worth the effort.
  13. Alienation by El_Isma · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I believe that the problem is not Internet, but the increase in population. I have lived in small cities and big ones, and seen other even bigger cities, and you can really feel the difference. In small towns people are friendlier, more relaxed. For instance, you may say 'hi' to anyone you cross in the street and it won't be seen as something strange (in even smaller towns -rural areas- it's more like you must say hi, even if you don't know the other person). In bigger cities, on the other hand, you can feel the distance from other people. It's much more colder. Think Japan, loads of people all together but they try to avoid contact with each other. The "personal space" is a few centimetres around you... The bigger the city, the worse the problem is. Another thing I have seen is that people in bigger cities ignore unknown people more easly. In those cities I've heard other people talk about personal matters without minding who might hear them. In my home town that would be quite undiscrete and considered bad manners. That's my opinion, anyway :)

    1. Re:Alienation by radicalsubversiv · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I have a hard time buying this. A quick glance at population growth in the U.S. over the last hundred years reveals that we're really not growing all that fast at the moment -- in the 1950s -- which social scientists note for a very high degree of civic engagement -- population was routinely growing at almost 2% a year. But for the past ten years, it's been less than 1%. Moreover, with birth rates at historic lows, much of the population increase we're seeing is coming from immigration -- communities which by necessity are characterized by dense social networks.

      If there's a culprit to be found in population patterns and geographic movements, it's not so much in urbanization (most cities have been losing people over the last few decades) -- as in suburbanization -- a pattern of life which is characterized by atomization and long commute times, leading Robert Putnam (author of Bowling Alone) speaks of a "sprawl civic penalty".

    2. Re:Alienation by shis-ka-bob · · Score: 1

      Population increase doesn't apply much to the US over the last 25 years. Our population has been rather stable. You might want to argue that there has been an increase in urbanization. That has certainly been the case in Iowa, which is my home state. Rural communities have been shrinking and the suburbs have been growing. Personally, I think this is closer to the truth. In the burbs, you cannot walk or bicycle like I did as a child in a town of 10,000. The population density in the burbs means that schools are often a few miles away, rather than within a reasonable walking distance.

      --
      Think global, act loco
    3. Re:Alienation by ereshiere · · Score: 1
      I've lived in both a rural WalMart town of 2,000 and Manhattan, and guess which one involved close, warm, personal contact? When you can easily walk everywhere, surrounded by people from all over the world, you truly feel connected. I got out off the farm as fast as I could (and developers quickly divided farms into McMansions, anyway).

      And, btw, talking about personal matters without care for those around you is one of the truly wonderful things about living in a metropolis. Who cares if the stuffy and insular don't like hearing about your sex life? Eavesdropping is fun!

    4. Re:Alienation by nelsonal · · Score: 1

      I dunno if it's so much urban areas getting more people but there is a distinct lack of connections between those from an urban area and those who are new to the area. I can always spot fellow relocators (or tourists) on the DC metro because we are all dying to strike up a conversation with some one. Locals generally dislike talking to a complete stranger on the metro. I'm not sure why cultures are so different between big cities (and their suburbs) and smaller towns but they sure seem to be.

      --
      Degaussing scares the bad magnetism out of the monitor and fills it with good karma.
    5. Re:Alienation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you describe would be a decrease in acquaintances in big cities, not friends. I may say hello to my neighbors every day, but I'm certainly not going to tell them about the embarrasing growth on my back.

    6. Re:Alienation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Another factor to consider in this is fear. The news on TV is quite skilled at engendering a free-floating dread in the populace. Look at how kids get raised these days: kept indoors all the time, watched over like hawks, and any neighbor that so much as says hi to the kid is immediately suspected of wanting to kidnap, rape, and murder the kid. All because the TV news implies every night that it's happening everywhere!

        It used to be that parents let their kids go out and actually ROAM the neighborhood. I remember twenty-plus years ago, I'd come in for lunch, then go back outside and run around with my friends and sometimes my parents wouldn't see me until dinnertime, or even later. I look around the neighborhood where I live today, and only the latino kids get that sort of free rein anymore. I guess the Spanish channel's news is less horrifying. I know it all seems to have started about the early-to-mid 80's, with the fake scares about razors in apples on Halloween (a story pushed by crazy anti-halloween loons, who were afraid that Satan was coming for their children; a story they pushed right onto the front pages) and the rise of the aforementioned hysteria about the pedophiles in the woodwork.

        As the kids of that age have grown up, it's not surprising they've got a smaller circle of friends, and hey, that all started about the time the internet did!

        I firmly believe that the greatest problem in the world today (and in the United States most of all) is fear. It's the stark terror, deep inside, that causes people to argue that placing sensible restrictions on possible abuse of government power is going to cause crazed muslamoid islamobogeymen to kill people by the millions; it's what lies behind both sides of the Israel/Palestine conflict; it's what fuels the repressive governments in North Korea and Iran; in a thousand ways, in a thousand parts of the world, it's fear that destroys us.
        - mantar

    7. Re:Alienation by beadfulthings · · Score: 4, Insightful

      While I can agree with your points about population increases, I believe that many cities are becoming re-urbanized. Formerly working-class or poor neighborhoods are undergoing rapid gentrification. There are many reasons for this--houses can be bought cheaply, updated, and resold for a profit. People are beginning to find it's convenient to live near where they work. If your neighborhood has been re-gentrified, the crime may be all around you, but chances are it won't be on your block.

      My own city of Baltimore is a real case in point. Our neighborhood was historically made up of blue-collar workers who worked on the nearby waterfront in assorted canneries and maritime occupations. It's situated between the well-known neighborhood of Fells Point to the west, and a solidly ethnic Greek neighborhood to its east. Housing prices have skyrocketed here. Old, small rowhouses are purchased and promptly demolished in order to build the urban version of the McMansion--a house that sits on a rowhouse footprint and goes straight up, sometimes for four or five stories. (Some new homes have elevators.)

      The result is a sort of urban bedroom community. The streets, shops, corner stores, bars, and restaurants are deserted during working hours. No one is out. There are no children to speak of. It doesn't foster social networking. I don't know either of my next-door neighbors, nor do I know the people in back (whose McMansions tower over and dwarf my traditional rowhouse back garden). The best way to get to know people here is to own a dog. You walk to the dog park and can become acquainted with your fellow home-office workers and the few young mothers and retirees still left here.

      This is happening in neighborhoods all over town, including the "artists' colony" area where loft space used to be cheap but is now beyond the reach of the young artists. Re-gentrified urban neighborhoods are ghost towns by day and automobile-congested rolling parking lots by night. All the ills and isolation of the suburbs have followed the middle class folk who are moving back into town.

      --
      "Here's what's happening. You're starting to drive like your Dad..." - Red Green
    8. Re:Alienation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      reveals that we're really not growing all that fast at the moment -- in the 1950s -- which social scientists note for a very high degree of civic engagement -- population was routinely growing at almost 2% a year.

      Hrm, what major world even ended in the mid 40's causing hundreds of thousands (if not millions) of Americans to come back home after fighting overseas for years?

    9. Re:Alienation by Bent+Mind · · Score: 1

      In small towns people are friendlier, more relaxed.

      In bigger cities, on the other hand, you can feel the distance from other people. It's much more colder.

      This might still be related to what is happening with the Internet. In a small town, you have a very limited number of people to choose your friends from. In a large city, you have a lot more people to choose from. This allows you to be much more picky when it comes to your friends. With the Internet, you have most of the planet to choose from.

      I have another thought on this. In small towns, you have to be careful not to offend. After all, being rude to someone means one less friend in a very small pool. In larger populations, it doesn't matter as much. Loose one opportunity for friendship and there are a million more readably available. With the Internet's very large population pool, people really don't care how they act because if they get flamed on one social network, they can move to the next.

      One interesting twist to all of this is that the Internet adds in the ability to be anonymous, removing the need to be responsible for your actions.

      As for the Internet being responsible for a lack of friends, I wouldn't have the friends I have now if instant communication from anywhere in the world wasn't cheap and easy. My friends and I simply move around too much.

      --
      Request a Linux Shockwave player here: http://www.macromedia.com/support/email/wishform/
    10. Re:Alienation by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 1

      Homer overcame fear when he attempted to ramp bart's skateboard over a canyon, and look where it got him; it isn't as simple as one little word.

      --

      --

      WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
    11. Re:Alienation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      That is an example of a reasonable fear. It's also a very different sort of thing -- a canyon is not a human being. If Homer's afraid of falling to his death in a canyon, he's still not likely to 'protect' himself by lashing out wildly at the canyon in an attempt to harm it before it can harm Homer. Neither would the canyon be liable to respond to that lashing-out by developing a fear of Homer and striking at him in 'self-defense.'
      An unreasonable fear would be if Homer lived in daily dread of the canyon's existence, went miles out of his way to avoid seeing it, and lobbied the government to build a miles-long wall around it to protect the city. He'd be treated as a crackpot (or should). It's okay to be afraid of things, but it's bad to let fear rule your very life. It's far worse, however, if you let it rule the lives of others.

        You see, while fear is a very useful emotion on the individual level, when it becomes a collective fear shared by many people, it tends to grow rapidly out of control and harm people. I can't think of a single instance where being afraid of an entire group of people did society more good than harm. The fear of criminals makes more dangerous criminals, the fear of foreigners leads to isolationism, wars, and genocides, and fear of Communists/Capitalists nearly destroyed the human race itself during the Cuban Missile Crisis.
        The Israeli/Palestine conflict consists of two frightened sides both certain that they are the innocent victims, but if they just kill enough of the other guys, the other guys will be too afraid to hurt them anymore.
        What's the solution to all this irrational fear? Hell, I don't know. It's kind of like inflation, once you start going down that way, it's awful hard to turn around.
        - mantar

    12. Re:Alienation by arakon · · Score: 1

      That is quite possibly the most well thought-out, informative, and concise thing I've ever read on that subject of oppression and fear. I'd give you a million +mods for that but alas you AC'ed, but still great post.

      --
      "If I were bound by all laws everywhere I'm sure I would have committed a capital crime somewhere."
    13. Re:Alienation by canadian_right · · Score: 1
      In Vancouver we are also having large numbers of people move into the city, but Vancouver forces developers to build "mixed developments". This means about 10% of new housing is subsidized for low income people (social housing). This social housing is mixed in here and there with middle and high income housing - no ghettos. Zoning also encourages residential and commercial development on the same block, and same building for large buildings. Many people are seeing the city as a good place to raise families. You live in a nice condo and the local park is your back-yard.

      Realestate prices have skyrocketed in the last 5 years, a continueation of a real-estate booom fueled by Hong Kong's return to China in 1997.

      Vancouver has NO freeway running through it. Makes commutting a nightmare, but it certainly encourages people to live close to work. All new developments include bike lanes, and the city is trying to build bike lanes on existing roads. Large investments in mass transit are being made, but this is mainly to move people from suburb to suburb to city. Regular buses, bikes and cars are used for short trips. Many neighborhoods streets are a maze of dead ends to force people to use the main streets, and only use small residential streets to get home. This really cuts down on traffic in your neighborhood. Some experiments fail, for example council tried to turn a whole car lane on a major bridge into a bike line. That only lasted one day.

      My point is that a forward thinky civic government can encourage the development of a city that is people friendly. but you have to live somewhere were making a profit is not considered a noble goal, but just a requirement of staying in business.

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    14. Re:Alienation by stinerman · · Score: 1

      I think you've got something there. I lived in a pretty much rural setting all my life until I came to college. The culture shock was crazy. Going from living in a city of 7,000 (literally in the middle of nowhere) to a college with an enrollment of 17,000 does a number on your expectations.

      It has been almost 4 years now, and I still haven't adjusted. In fact, I'm a lot more paranoid than I ever used to be. Social norms are completely different, so making friends is hard to say the least. I call this condition "Small Town Syndrome". I've talked to people going from rural areas into the city, and many of them have the same problems adjusting.

    15. Re:Alienation by El_Isma · · Score: 1

      >> In a small town, you have a very limited number of people to choose your friends from.

      While that may be the case in small towns, where I live is actually considered a medium-sized town (not hundreds, but thousands of persons). It's located only 20km away from the capital and you already can feel the difference. Here, children play on the street and neighboors know each other. But I wouldn't say that I'm afraid to offend anyone. My possible-friend pool is much larger than the people-I-know pool (and by a great magnitude). Maybe if they were of similar size I'd be in the situation you describe.

    16. Re:Alienation by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 1

      Ok; decent reply. But isn't it true that widespread fear isn't necessarily bad? For instance, widespread fear of snakes caused Springfield to have an annual 'Whacking Day'. Look at how many snakes they managed to kill. By killing snakes, they managed their fear, in the sense that there was now less snakes to fear.

      --

      --

      WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
    17. Re:Alienation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Managing your fears by creating rituals is simply treating the symptoms. It is also a very good way in which to make that ritual - the expression of the fear - permanent. At best, it helps the people to manage their emotions and does not do anything for those who do not share those emotions - at worst it makes sure that subsequent generations share the behaviour without questioning the reasoning.

      One could argue that if it works for fears against, say, snakes, it could work against fears of being robbed, yet for some reason most people dislike mob rule as applied to *possibly* guilty persons. I do not doubt that it would make the people in the mob feel better - at least temporarily - but being beaten to a pulp because you looked like you were a robber is probably not too pleasant.

      Still, the majority does rule and inflict its public morality on everyone, so why not? I just doubt that it would make people feel better in the end.

  14. Stop passing the buck by Wellington+Grey · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Let's put the blame where it belongs: I have less close friends because I spend too much time on the internet. It's not like the internet's fault, it's mine for taking the easy option.

    -Grey

    1. Re:Stop passing the buck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      It's not anyone's fault. You're doing what you want to do, right? I spend a decent chunk of time on the internet because it's better than having a lot of friends - having more than a couple of friends is more effort than it's worth, IMO.

    2. Re:Stop passing the buck by electrosoccertux · · Score: 1

      I don't attempt to pass the buck. Most people bore me.

    3. Re:Stop passing the buck by Das+Modell · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I don't blame the Internet either. I'm just not really into friends. In fact, I don't even have friends on the Internet except for one guy I talk to occasionally, as unbelieveable as that sounds. I also no longer go to forums (which are breeding grounds for psychotic idiots).

    4. Re:Stop passing the buck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, you post on Slashdot, breeding ground of...

      Sorry, that was just too easy to pass up.

    5. Re:Stop passing the buck by Chmcginn · · Score: 1
      So, you post on Slashdot, breeding ground of...

      Pedantic nerds, whiny liberals, delusional libertarians, and various combinations of the three?

      --
      Have you been touched by his noodly appendage?
    6. Re:Stop passing the buck by ultranova · · Score: 1

      I also no longer go to forums (which are breeding grounds for psychotic idiots).

      So, is this an unintended brainfart, or did you just purposefully troll the entire Slashdot ?-) I'd say the latter, since posting that sentence here was in direct conflict with content of the sentence.

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    7. Re:Stop passing the buck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That other AC is a retard. If EVERYTHING bores you, then yes, you are boring. If you have something you are deeply interested in then you are not a fundamentally boring person. It doesn't have to be people. People aren't everyone's thing.
      p.s. "not fundamentally boring" is not identically equal to interesting.

    8. Re:Stop passing the buck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      god you bore me... yawn

    9. Re:Stop passing the buck by Das+Modell · · Score: 1

      I don't consider Slashdot to be a forum. I consider Slashdot to be a news site where you can post comments.

  15. I have more close friends by nahdude812 · · Score: 2, Informative

    Maybe I'm not the demographic being described by the article, but I believe I have more close friends than I would w/o the Internet. I have my real life friends, some of whom have been my friends for more than half my life, and I have close friends I met online, and only know from online. Some of these people I've never met in real life, yet I'm comfortable enough to confide in them and look to them for advice.

    I don't use MySpace, I don't participate in social networking sites, yet I've still managed to encounter other minds like mine; minds I can learn from, and minds I can teach. Having an online life doesn't preclude me from having an offline life, and indeed they supplement each other.

    Finally, the Internet has greatly facilitated maintaining offline friendships that would have dissolved for geographic reasons. These friendships have moved online, and if not for the Internet, we might write a letter once a month or so. Instead I talk to these people daily. We also game together, so on a typical Friday night, a half dozen of my real life (offline) friends and I meet up and slay Onyxia or run Molten Core together when it would be logistically infeasible for us to meet in person.

    1. Re:I have more close friends by zecg · · Score: 1

      Indeed. I have also met some wonderful people through an MMORPG.

      --
      .i lu doi ringos.star. xu do puku'aroroi dunli dopecaku leni virnu li'u
    2. Re:I have more close friends by Jesus_666 · · Score: 1

      Same here, although the friendships started online (I'm really bad at maintaining friendships with people who aren't geeks). I have a couple guys I only meet twice a year, but we are in close contact via IRC/IMs and on Fridays we meet on the IRC for a roleplaying session.

      --
      USE HOT GRITS WITH STATUE OF NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED AND PETRIFIED)
  16. Yes!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just knew that dadblasted internet would get caught -- it came around my place back in '97, held me at gunpoint and forced me to buy a connection. Nine years later, NO FRIENDS!!!
    DAMN YOU, INTERNET!
    DAMN YOU TO HELL!!!

  17. Different in Norway, perhaps by Nichotin · · Score: 1

    I live in Norway, and the vast majority of my really close friends, are people I first met on various internet communities. Since Norway is a small country, where many live within range of each other, social gatherings are common among us, in addition to the lan partys that are arranged every year where I meet even more people that I have talked online with. After a few meetings with pot and alchohol, you start meeting the same people one-to-one or in smaller and smaller groups, just to hang out, talk or do some project together.
    Probably different in bigger countries, where meeting would require a days travel, or for people who hang out at more international communities.

    1. Re:Different in Norway, perhaps by pedantic+bore · · Score: 1
      After a few meetings with pot and alchohol, you start meeting the same people one-to-one or in smaller and smaller groups...

      Yeah, in the US we call that "jail".

      Actually I'm just envious because most of the people I've met on the Internet are either looking for help with debugging some piece of code I touched ten years ago, or Brazillians looking for Orkut hookups, or both. I've never met any of these people face to face. That would be a nice change. As long as beer and pot weren't required.

      --
      Am I part of the core demographic for Swedish Fish?
    2. Re:Different in Norway, perhaps by Nichotin · · Score: 1

      I was just trying to illustrate that I do the same things on the social gatherings with online friends, as with my offline-only friends. Hence the pot and alcohol bit. To be honest, we do a lot of other stuff too, like going bowling, seeing a good movie, etc.

    3. Re:Different in Norway, perhaps by ThJ · · Score: 1

      Norway is a small country? Everyone lives nearby? I smell a spoiled Oslo-centric Norwegian who couldn't point out Tromsø on the map...

  18. Internet + reality TV = ? by pedantic+bore · · Score: 1
    (besides "profit", of course...)

    What else would you expect, given that most people access reality through a computer or TV screen? Why ask a person when you can ask a computer? Why deal with ordinary people in your neighborhood when you can risklessly gape at people who are much more beautiful or who lead more exciting or important lives, or perhaps take comfort in the fact that you can always find abundant reinforcement for your choices online?

    And here I am, typing this, while my kids are playing in the other room, inventing a much more exciting world, which I am welcome to join. Gotta go!

    --
    Am I part of the core demographic for Swedish Fish?
  19. not true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This isn't true at all! A lot of popular kids use the internet to talk to all their popular friends. The internets enables people to socialize and make more friends. It's not just for social outcassts. Many of my friends have met their boyfriends/girlfriends online. Look at myspace and facebook. These aren't just superficial friendships.

  20. I work in teh Internets .... by icepick72 · · Score: 1

    ...sit in from of the computer a lot (right now for example) ...
    No bath necessary.
    Ex-friends say it's because of how bad I smell you insensitive clod!

  21. Internet, yes, but other factors too. by aussersterne · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I find that the hollowness of American social life is not only due to the Internet, but to a growing American utilitarianism and sense of entitlement that stretches into personal relationships.

    Friends and would-be lovers alike are more and more forming and maintaining friendships on the basis of "What is this person doing for me right now?"

    If someone isn't making them a profit, or is (gasp) taking their time or effort without a mechanically measurable payoff of some kind, people are only too ready these days to "kick them to the curb" and look for friends who are profitable or represent a measurable gain of some kind, whether in prestige or job prospects or exclusive memberships or exploitable expertise/skills.

    This mentality of "everything has a price and can be calculated as a cost-benefit" has already ruled American material life for years and led to a kind of spiritual bankruptcy that leads to cults, sappy new-ageism, under/overeducation, and other strange social pathologies and now it is polluting our social lives as well.

    When everyone is busy being a self-interested climber in their relationships, is is any wonder that nobody seems to be able to find non-selfish-climber friends? When everyone is busy sensing that they are entitled to their opinion, their time, their wishes, their preferences without the need for discussion or compromise, is it any wonder that people suddenly find that no-one is willing to compromise or have patience with them?

    It gets to the point that you socialize on the Internet merely because the stakes are lower. You're less likely to get screwed or hurt or exploited and at the same time you can justify the time expenditure to others because "spending time online" appeals more to the protestant ethic of endless "useful" labor than does a phrase like "hanging out with some friends at the bar."

    People are working all the time, their social relations have now become part of work too, calculated like work, and so they are finding that relationships feel like work and are subject to all of the risks and pitfalls that occur in the workplace.

    The solutions? Stop bringing work home, set aside time to be "home," don't try to measure what other people are doing for you, only what you are doing for other people, and try not to take it personally when people "kick you to the curb" for not being productive enough or razz you for being a "slacker" and not leaving work at 8:30 PM to bring it home and pound on it with some climber friends from the office until 1:30 AM while calling it a "social life."

    --
    STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    1. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Robotron23 · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Fluffy commentary my good man; and worthy of a column in a local newspaper. However like said columns it is more a sophisticated whine - with petty vague solutions stretched in meticulous fashion to fit everybody.

      Well here's the news: "Everybody" cannot be cohengently administered or instructed to change their lives; not "everybody" can swallow their pride and simply attempt to negate this implied "greed" culture of which you speak; some people are naturally ostentatious and extroverted - others, not so much:

      "This mentality of "everything has a price and can be calculated as a cost-benefit" has already ruled American material life for years and led to a kind of spiritual bankruptcy that leads to cults, sappy new-ageism, under/overeducation, and other strange social pathologies and now it is polluting our social lives as well."

      Really? What is your philosophical alternative then - that is, assuming you had one when you typed this fuzzy diatribe? It is really so ubiquitous across society? You criticize materialism; and accuse consumerism of breeding nefarious organizations and fail to back it up with hard facts or evidence. Prose like this is lapped up by your own condemned "sappy new agers" - it is attacking but in such a morosely vague way that refuting it is hardly worth the bother.

      It is like a troll but without the subdued malice; has the same characteristics of a good troll: The sensical if somewhat fallacious criticisms; the broad assertions and lastly the botched solutions - few would doubt you meant well by this post and simply wanted to make a point; as said it'd be good in some publications. However you cannot make baseless accusations of an entire phenomena and imply causation of all the awful phenomena. I eagerly await a non-hostile, civil response which cogently argues your points beyond the tragedian confines of your current mind; find evidence and make us all believe what you say has some reality behind it.

      A closing point; people like you worsen this problem - it is through these pseudo-intelectual rants that Slashdot's cynicism has been refined to a point where it has a sophisty about it. It is more simplistically pleasing to read /. today merely due to this evolution. If persons like yourself stopped writing this then perhaps the world would be a better place? How about thinking more about the consequences of your own actions as opposed to wailing about the crying shame that our postmodern world is in those watery eyes of yours? This is not a flame; nor a troll - back in University they called this a fair rebuke.

    2. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I find that the hollowness of American social life is not only due to the Internet, but to a growing American utilitarianism and sense of entitlement that stretches into personal relationships.


      why is it that everyone who has a bold new take on American life/culture are people who live nowhere near it? or in San Francisco
    3. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You spelt intellectual incorrectly. Retard.

    4. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I find that the hollowness of American social life is not only due to the Internet, but to a growing American utilitarianism and sense of entitlement that stretches into personal relationships.

      Interesting analysis. Just curious, what part of America do you live in which provides you with such great insight?

    5. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by aussersterne · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Really? What is your philosophical alternative then


      After you descend into ad hominem, you make my point for me. You appeal to systematization by way of criticism against a post whose premise is that systematization is not always in order!

      The absolute need to elucidate a philosophical alternative to a polemic against elucidatable orders speaks to the enlightenment-centric mentality that all that is must be measurable or it simply isn't, which is precisely the state of affairs I was bemoaning in my post.

      My alternative is not philosophical, it is material, and it is not argument but rather deed: self-sacrifice in the interest of making others happier. That is my solution, and I don't appeal to logic to justify it because my polemic is precisely that logic is an inappropriate metric for feeling. I freely admit that I have no measurable justification. I make no incremental, falsifiable argument to buttress the point, because to do so is to concede from the start precisely what I seek to contradict: that all virtues or all things of merit must first be elucidated and second measured, whether measured in isolation or measured against.

      Measurement is the problem here. Yes, the enlightenment brought us from the middle ages to the era of laser eye surgery, but its methods have limits and those limits are reached at the boundary of meaning, because meaning is an undefinable abstraction that has thus far only ever been expressed and sought, but as of yet never actually defined for all our work on the subject across disciplines from the behavioral sciences through the hard sciences. There is ample empirical evidence everywhere you look for the inability of modernism and enlightenment thinking to come to terms with meaning: Al Qaeda, Columbine, Heaven's Gate, Obesity, American Idol, plastic surgery, Internet friendships, and on and on. I do not propose to attempt a measurable linkage between these and lack of meaning, either. You'll just have to deal with that, as will readers.

      To seek to apply rigor to the notion of life's "meaning" (which is, after all, fundamentally related to friendship and to work and to mortality) is to fail. Or at least, no-one has thus far succeeded in any commonly accepted way.

      So in short, I refuse to make a logical argument to support my point that logical arguments are the wrong metric to use when discussion relationships because to do so is to subvert the point to begin with. Indeed, the need to move beyond logic in relationships is the point, and I happily concede that without logic there is not currently a commonly accepted means by which to make any appeal at all, regarding feelings and friendships or anything else. But that is the nature of things: when you dismiss all that is, you must face all that as of yet isn't.

      But I reiterate my claim: cost-benefit analyses and cogent arguments are by definition constrained and framed by that selfsame worldview that I made my post in order to accuse, and beyond this, I suspect that many here would agree with me: that to apply logic and method to your relationships is to get only logic and method back from them. And that is the problem. I and many others want irrational things from friendship: people who are there for me even when I don't deserve it, people that I enjoy even though they don't add to my wealth or prestige, company that I want to keep even though it will all be meaningless when I am dead.

      I can not make arguments for any of these needs, under any system of thought or belief, or by any standard or method of measurement. But that does not by any means make them weaker. I need them, and so do others. And increasingly, we don't have them.
      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    6. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by aussersterne · · Score: 1

      I have lived in:

      San Francisco (yes, east bay)
      Chicago (south side)
      Los Angeles (northern burbs)
      Salt Lake City (downtown)
      Portland (hillsboro area)

      I have also visited over two-thirds of the 50 states, and much of that time not on the interstate system.

      I haven't yet lived in or visited New York City but will be moving there later this year. I'll let you know.

      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    7. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by aussersterne · · Score: 1

      Right now I live in Salt Lake City. In 2003 I lived in Chicago. In 2004 in the Portland area. In 2005 in Los Angeles. Next year I will be living either in Manhattan or on the Jersey shore (I am currently finding a place).

      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    8. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by aussersterne · · Score: 1

      And I can type faster than you, too, albeit with a few errors, apparently.

      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    9. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by McBainLives · · Score: 1

      Wow- that's a fairly stinging rebuke. Not that I'm complaining- the pseudo-intelligentsia of the online world needs to be beaten back every now and then ("intelligentsiya yest govno," as Lenin once put it).

      Personally, I think [meeting other people] is to blame for a lack of close friends, but I'm >50% sociopath, so my opinion is a bit biased.

      BTW- which University? (I'm thinking overseas- in the US it would be "back in college.")

      --
      I came, I saw, I left. It looked better in the brochure.
    10. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Rayonic · · Score: 1
      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW

      Interesting sig.

      You know, I think you might be slightly biased on any subject involving America.
    11. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Rayonic · · Score: 1
      back in University they called this a fair rebuke.

      Counterarguments and criticism are the same as censorship and stifling of free speech.

      At least, to a certain segment of the political spectrum.
    12. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by aussersterne · · Score: 1

      Absolutely I have a bias. And it is in my sig. Congratulations, you found it. Would you rather I was "fair and balanced?" ;-)

      P.S. Reality is also biased. People are dead or they aren't. Bullets kill. Gravity pulls things down and not up. "Down" means toward Earth and not away from it. Money spent on food is not spent on gin and vice-versa. These are the biases of our lives. Welcome to the world!

      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    13. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I and many others want irrational things from friendship: people who are there for me even when I don't deserve it, people that I enjoy even though they don't add to my wealth or prestige, company that I want to keep even though it will all be meaningless when I am dead.
      So, you want people to be there for you even when you don't deserve it. Seems a little selfish and greedy to me. And, you spend your time with people who bring you enjoyment. How very irrational! Don't kid yourself. You're no more irrational than anyone else who orders her life to maximize enjoyment and pleasure, whether through wealth, prestige, relationships, or any other thing.
    14. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Bombula · · Score: 1

      Can I be your friend?

      --
      A-Bomb
    15. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by aussersterne · · Score: 5, Insightful
      So, you want people to be there for you even when you don't deserve it.


      Yes, and I also want to be there for them when they don't deserve it. The more of us there are, the more likely that we will meet others of the same ilk and if everyone is willing to make the compromise, everyone will have real friends. That is the point of my post, absolutely.

      Yes, yes, "Cum-Ba-Ya" and all that shit.

      It's very subtle for Americans, somehow. But that's it, in a nutshell. Sounds simple, but it's really rare right now.
      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    16. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Kohath · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You're right about one thing, the Internet isn't the problem.

      Work isn't the problem either though, you're wrong about that.

      American culture is shallow:

      - Widespread prosperity shields people from the ordinary trials of life that build character and bring people together.
      - Peace deprives people of the bond of a common cause
      - Feminization weakens us by favoring consiliation and non-confrontationalism over resolve and steadfastness
      - Mass marketing eggagerates the importance of the trivial
      - Government policies have undermined the importance of families on dozens of fronts
      - Television entertainment is created by that vastly deep and meaningful Southern CA culture
      - News outlets no longer focus on telling the facts. They're now almost 100% emotion-based.
      - Sex has invaded every part of life. (i.e. "Those two guys sure are good friends, I wonder if they're gay? That old guy is being nice to those kids, I wonder if he's a child molester?") The only protection is to never be close to anyone.
      - Right and wrong have given way to "political awareness" tests. Say the right things and you're golden.

      The result is that no one cares about anything any more because it's almost universally discouraged.

      How can you make close friends without caring about them (or knowing that they won't care about you)? How can you trust people who don't understand right and wrong? How can you have a deep relationship with someone who has a 2 minute attention-span? How can you have a substantial friendship with someone who thinks that they have a right to be happy every minute of every day?

      The Internet offers an arms-length social experience. No betrayal possible. No promised substance, so no disappointment when it's missing. No loss. No obligations. No risks. No rewards either, but you were going to get those anyway. It's socialization-lite.

    17. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Robotron23 · · Score: 1

      "Or at least, no-one has thus far succeeded in any commonly accepted way."

      Can something be commonly accepted? 'Commonly accepted' would mean applying a principle or doctrine to the wider community. By mere glance of society at large we observe that unless this doctrine is applied vigorously from early age or after a life crisis (as in religion for instance) then it shan't stick. Even if it did cement itself on soceity; we would get situations like this once more - persons defend concept, before coming to a conclusion that everyone has a difficult view; and then the entire process of societal doctrine versus open ended article begins again. We also, by proxy have a large number of largely accepting followers eitherside who do little more than exercebate a difficult question with clumsy polemic and kneejerk reaction (Religious right/left) - which, at a deep level, is the source of some of our problems.

      Were we to apply life principles to the select few then a different story emerges - take philosophers for instance. Some, such as Socrates or Kant construct an entire life's philosophy and roughly adhere to it until death. Now, philosophers are far from ordinary - and have a following amongst academia and are over-intrepreted; we return to your concept of over-education, however I disagree with this phenomena as it is limited. Today, the eras of philosophy are respected and incorporated decently; rather than extrapolited in bad fashion - good philosophers and students avoid this trap. Here we could say that it is merely due to say...shortening attention spans and/or alcohol or drug consumption come time of education; but people do generally become wiser and learned from higher education.

      Clarify this; you believe passionately that life is such a randomized, rich and eclectic experience for folks such as ourselves and that (for our masses) set principles do not work? Would you agree that for a select few, a well intepreted individualistic take on life would work for them and close followers?

      Which is where I reach my point, and your point to an as yet unclear extent: "self-sacrifice in the interest of making others happier". You have basically arrived at the concept of compassion; something recognised by all of our aforementioned faith systems to some extent. In the purest sense Buddhism alludes to this principle; especially the myth texts which detail enlightenment attained when one say...cleans a rotting dog from the side of a road who thereafter becomes a Buddha incarnation and so forth. Thus, again I request definition - these "sappy new agers"; who are they? Your arguments seem distinctly Buddhist/Hindu in flavour; and yet you have condemned the 'new age' who embraced said philosophy?

      I find it faintly ironic that you make the case against logic and reason as a strictly adhered principle on a board which applies both of our "schools" in equal measure - with much passion thrown in for good measure. Thus; a sober conclusion could only be made in the eye of the beholder - to quantify Slashdot with logical principle and indeed the cost benefit principle is pragmatic. And so, your assertion that most would agree is fallacious in the sense that every time we apply logic in terms of result potential in say....work, school or even Slashdot posting we essentially go against your principles. So again clarification - you apply these Buddhistic principles in a play by ear sense? Or would you rather see your ideological stance imposed on relationship terms and kept in key fields of say...business, economics, politics and statistical survey?

      So in the end I feel it is sensical to equate your non-chalance to that of a member of an eastern faith - you see globalization and business as a conclusion foregone; but would like everyone to drop the consumption function. So in the end we arrive at the flat field of left wing politics - again I express bafflement at the fact you basically are going against the mould of modern times; but that is just pandering to the cynicism. We'd like your existance; it is seen to some extent in Star Trek or even socialist states - so again; will you define and be coaxed into any solution? Or would you opt for asceticism and mere conversation as a piecemeal solution?

    18. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by aussersterne · · Score: 3, Insightful
      American culture is shallow:

      - Widespread prosperity shields people from the ordinary trials of life that build character and bring people together
      - Peace deprives people of the bond of a common cause
      - Feminization weakens us by favoring consiliation and non-confrontationalism over resolve and steadfastness
      - Mass marketing eggagerates the importance of the trivial
      - Government policies have undermined the importance of families on dozens of fronts
      - Television entertainment is created by that vastly deep and meaningful Southern CA culture
      - News outlets no longer focus on telling the facts. They're now almost 100% emotion-based.
      - Sex has invaded every part of life. (i.e. "Those two guys sure are good friends, I wonder if they're gay? That old guy is being nice to those kids, I wonder if he's a child molester?") The only protection is to never be close to anyone.
      - Right and wrong have given way to "political awareness" tests. Say the right things and you're golden.


      Actually (and this is a much larger argument than can be made in a Slashdot post), I agree with much of what you've said. In a different place, I'd argue that "work" is a manifestation of the collection of states and failings you've mentioned.

      Just ask yourself: how many of these are tied to industry/capital? Constructions of women and the culturally feminine are the primary engines of immaterial consumption; mass-marketing supports consumption and rationalized labor; families dilute the body of individual consumption units by tying multiple units into a single one; television provides an avenue for market-making; "fair and balanced" news reporting reinforces a consumptive status quo; sex sells more than all else...

      No doubt I will be attacked on all sides for even making a post like this one without being able to spend 100 or 1000 pages to discuss it, but so far as I am concerned you are not wrong at all, and I even think that we are saying the same thing... Only to attack the problem from your direction is to need a dozen monographs to explain it, and even then to be attacked from all sides, whereas to follow the Frankfurt school methodology and simply tie it all to measure and increase is to attack a single problem: rationalization/rationality/instrumentality.

      Beneath it all lies mortality, the ultimate absurdity and the one which renders all other arguments moot. Americans are, I find, not at all attuned to such things.
      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    19. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by aussersterne · · Score: 1

      Perhaps we should both preface this argument with the concession that an internet forum like Slashdot is necessarily constrained as to length and breadth and not at all the same thing as a spoken forum or printed forum with room for more extensive replies and/or time for deliberation.

      Clarify this; you believe passionately that life is such a randomized, rich and eclectic experience for folks such as ourselves and that (for our masses) set principles do not work?

      No, not do not work. Rather, I argue that the very broad limits of the modern and/or enlightenment-centric framework are rarely, if ever acknowledged. "Work" is an compromise term in this context and were I to choose an adjective I'd choose one with much finer granularity (unfortunately, a ready alternative with similar connotation does not present itself).

      You have basically arrived at the concept of compassion; something recognised by all of our aforementioned faith systems to some extent. In the purest sense Buddhism alludes to this principle; especially the myth texts which detail enlightenment attained when one say...cleans a rotting dog from the side of a road who thereafter becomes a Buddha incarnation and so forth. Thus, again I request definition - these "sappy new agers"; who are they? Your arguments seem distinctly Buddhist/Hindu in flavour; and yet you have condemned the 'new age' who embraced said philosophy?

      Yes! Compassion. Very good. My response to the Slashdot story should simply have been that word.

      No, I never mentioned Buddhism/Hinduism in the context of "new age" at all. I suppose this is a semantic game to some extent. In the US (particularly in the west) you'll find no shortage of "Buddhists" who have never once read a Buddhist text or even had a leisure lunch with Buddhist master from any nation or tradition. Instead, their Buddhism is largely an endorsement of what they perceive to be "the other," i.e. a rejection of typical American values. Unfortunately, even as they reject them they often seem unable to move beyond them in the material sense.

      When I make reference to "new age" -isms I refer to that broad category of religions by which wealthy (in the global comparison) Americans seek to justify every last thing they do (even leveraged buyouts of collections agencies) as "spiritual moves," and who light a candle and consult the Yi Ching, for example, when they go to their mailbox to collect the mail, and who chant when they open their mobile phone bill, but who can also drop a friend like a hat simply because the friend didn't tip well enough at the bistro on Thursday and embarrassed them. I freely admit here that having lived in southern California for the last year I've likely adopted a somewhat cynical position, but for what it's worth the oft-decried urban "blue areas" form fully half the U.S. population, and furthermore I have encountered the same mentality repeatedly both in Salt Lake City and in Portland and San Francisco areas, though not at all in Chicago or the midwest.

      With regard to the last two paragraphs of your post, my position is that you apply what I've said far too broadly. As usual, it is an all-or-nothing proposition: rationality in all things or in no things is implied to be the complete set of possible states. I argue that rationality is misplaced in any discussion of spiritual health. I make no argument as to the deployment of rationality, for example, in physics problems or the construction of space elevators. Indeed, those are the sorts of things that enlightenment-era thinking has done very well.

      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    20. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by freedom_india · · Score: 1

      mod parent 5 insightful

      --
      "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
    21. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Kohath · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Just ask yourself: how many of these are tied to industry/capital? Constructions of women and the culturally feminine are the primary engines of immaterial consumption; mass-marketing supports consumption and rationalized labor; families dilute the body of individual consumption units by tying multiple units into a single one; television provides an avenue for market-making; "fair and balanced" news reporting reinforces a consumptive status quo; sex sells more than all else...

      Yeah, that's a lot of free-form brainstorming you have there. Some quick counterpoints:

      - Commerce didn't cause feminization
      - Commerce didn't cause people in government to favor handouts in place of families
      - Commerce didn't cause people to forget the difference between right and wrong
      - Commerce didn't cause peace (though it does support peace once you have it)

      Only to attack the problem from your direction is to need a dozen monographs to explain it, and even then to be attacked from all sides, whereas to follow the Frankfurt school methodology and simply tie it all to measure and increase is to attack a single problem: rationalization/rationality/instrumentality.

      So assume the conclusion "commerce is bad" and try to make vague connections to commerce from every other symptom of every other problem anyone can think of? No sale.

      Commerce is part of the problem because commerce is part of life. I even connected it a few times (prosperity, marketing, TV, etc). But commerce isn't the problem.

    22. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Robotron23 · · Score: 1

      "Yes, and I also want to be there for them when they don't deserve it. The more of us there are, the more likely that we will meet others of the same ilk and if everyone is willing to make the compromise, everyone will have real friends. That is the point of my post, absolutely.

      Yes, yes, "Cum-Ba-Ya" and all that shit.

      It's very subtle for Americans, somehow. But that's it, in a nutshell. Sounds simple, but it's really rare right now."


      Thus; we arrive at simple socialistic hedonism in its purest sense. What about people who prefer to be alone? Don't they fit into this equation? Do we all have to be smiling and friendly until we happen across our true friends? Do we dispense with all those who wish to opt out of this extroverted "Old England" utopia - no, we do not do any of these things as it is simple idealism.

      I don't know about you; but I and a fair measure of my own friends get more pleasure out of life merely by being alone, reading much - the existence of modern introversion in the intellectual sense goes against your hypothesis of friendship. At bottom my friend you are no more than a dreamer who occansionally conjures and defends his own vivid fantasies. But hey I am not knocking you - we all want the world to be better; in some peoples' eyes "better" would merely be quiet, calm and unobtrusive as opposed to socializing and economic restriction on the grand scale.

      As to subtlety: well it isn't too subtle at all. Life goes on - and we are in the unfortunate positions of being in different locales and of differing social groupings. So in the end we return to the previous point; that the world is in the eye of the beholder - as strictly speaking while being dividable we are all of different opinion regards the social situation today.

    23. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by bishiraver · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "- Sex has invaded every part of life. (i.e. "Those two guys sure are good friends, I wonder if they're gay? That old guy is being nice to those kids, I wonder if he's a child molester?") The only protection is to never be close to anyone." This is partially, I think, a reaction to close-mindedness in terms of sex. Our government has attempted at every turn to shield us from sex, while extreme violence is blatant in mass media. This creates a culture of fear around sex, when it's not something to be afraid of at all. And because of that culture of fear, people focus on the terrible aspects of it - sex crime - or the percieved notion that they will be come less empowered if gay/lesbian couples are allowed civil unions. American culture isn't plastic because it's "losing family values," it's plastic because of rampant consumerism, stagnant education, and blame-tossing. When "what did britney spears do last weekend" becomes more important than self-advancement, whether in terms of edification or education, you know something is wrong. But the main question is, what is the root cause of this lack of drive? And what can we as a society do to fix it - not what can we as a society get our government to do to fix it? Spend more time with our kids. Get them interested in education. Expose them to culture other than sesame street - take them to kids museums, and when they're old enough, take them to classical music concerts. Instill a notion of self-worth and personal enrichment in them at a young age, and they won't grow up to be glassy eyed corporate whores. Maybe. Or maybe the cycle of cultural degredation is too strong to break - maybe this is why so many people are looking at other cultures for new ideas, whether in foreign films or obscure religions.

    24. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Robotron23 · · Score: 1

      "With regard to the last two paragraphs of your post, my position is that you apply what I've said far too broadly. As usual, it is an all-or-nothing proposition: rationality in all things or in no things is implied to be the complete set of possible states. I argue that rationality is misplaced in any discussion of spiritual health. I make no argument as to the deployment of rationality, for example, in physics problems or the construction of space elevators. Indeed, those are the sorts of things that enlightenment-era thinking has done very well."

      Of course; though the word "Compassion" as a post would likely be modded OT within seconds. ;) Yes - I applied your principles broadly in the sense that compassion is a wide reaching phenomena that begs to be discussed. My reasons for rambling slightly regards faith were for demonstration purposes. The "new age" is simply too broad a definition now; rational discussion cannot last around it, hence the simple request for clarification on general principle. An interesting study which wouldn't particularly belond here would be an investigation on where these phonies tagged along in chronological terms - we could stretch back that assertion for millenia to those who stalked Socrates and other Greek philosophers in an attempt of finding "meaning" of it all.

      So who knows; in the end I'd disagree with your compassion due to its unworkable nature in a competitive world. Call it passive-aggression or conservatism or any -ism; in the end it is down to individual belief, and it is bemusing to see how cynicism plagues us both yet we perservere. Tagging on world phenomena here is fruitless, though we've had a fair discussion and compared worldview which is always fun.

    25. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by aussersterne · · Score: 1

      <bow>

      You have me smile, and I thank you.

      You have my respect, and I agree: "we've had a fair discussion and compared worldview which is always fun." All the best to you, for today and for tomorrow.

      Godspeed!

      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    26. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Robotron23 · · Score: 1

      Indeed - I have added you to the friends list; perhaps someday we will converse once more in another sociologically aligned topic or in journals. :-P

    27. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Original+Replica · · Score: 1

      Counterarguments and criticism are the same as censorship and stifling of free speech.
      I disagree. Arguement/Counter/Counter-Counter Argument is some of the best of free speech and honest communication if the participants maintain the topic and a respectful objectivity. The ability to debate well is a trait I appreciate in my friends both on and off-line.

      --
      We are all just people.
    28. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Kohath · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      The enter key assists in online communication.

      Our government has attempted at every turn to shield us from sex

      This is just ignorant. Sex-related prohibitions have existed for tens of thousands of years (and undoubtedly longer). Here's the reason why, in the simplest possible terms:

      - Sex leads to a baby.
      - Killing babies is discouraged
      - Babies are expensive to raise
      - When a baby is born outside of a marriage, the expense of raising a baby falls on a girl's father, the girl's future husband, or the girl herself.
      - Typically none of those people want that expense.
      - Therefore, sex outside of marriage is discouraged.

      No government involvement. Tens of thousands of years of history. Simple.

      Spend more time with our kids. Get them interested in education.

      Educational institutions are the ultimate in places where no one cares about anyone else. I don't think you're going to solve the problem of shallowness there.

      Expose them to culture other than sesame street - take them to kids museums, and when they're old enough, take them to classical music concerts. Instill a notion of self-worth and personal enrichment in them at a young age, and they won't grow up to be glassy eyed corporate whores. Maybe. Or maybe the cycle of cultural degredation is too strong to break - maybe this is why so many people are looking at other cultures for new ideas, whether in foreign films or obscure religions.

      Museums and classical music are no better (or worse) than violent videogames and punk rock. Reciting anti-corporate slogans has no more value than singing jingles from ads.

      Pretentiousness is an aspect of shallowness.

      The blanket disdain of those so-called "glassy eyed corporate whores" is part of the problem. They are real people (and a huge percentage of the population, I might add). Stereotyping them isn't shallow?

    29. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Ahh, but the fact that you want to 'be there when they don't deserve it' changes everything. Because then you do deserve it and the people who are there for you are correct to be there for you.

      In my mind, you're mischaracterizing a discussion about trust as a discussion about rational/irrational behavior. It seems to me that you simply want the default attitude of society to be one of trust (i.e. to give the benefit of the doubt to those who have not proven their worth or have temporarily proven their unworth). To illustrate the difference between trust and rationality, what are your answers to the following questions:

      Would you help a stranger who has stated the intention of murdering your family?

      Would you help a stranger who has stated the intention of calling his wife to pick him up?

      Both of the these cases involves a stranger who, by definition, has not proven that he deserves anything from you. But, I (and I assume most people) would take the attitude that aiding the former is irrational and aiding the latter to be rational. There's nothing remotely irrational about either of these two attitudes; it's merely a question of the degree of trust. And, in fact, aiding the second stranger has been shown to be extremely rational, even if people don't know it when they practice it. The 'trust-and-verify' strategy is one of the more powerful strategies in game theory. Many people would have learned it by experience even if they knew nothing about the theory.

      Finally, if your corner of the world really does have a shortage of people you can rely on, maybe it's time you began mixing with a different group of people?

    30. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is ridiculous. What a whiner. How does that pass for 'Insightful' ? Pathetic.

    31. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by nexarias · · Score: 1
      I just want to clear up a conceptual confusion as a philosophy major. Utilitarianism is not the exact problem here -- what is, is the GOAL that underlies the utilitarian strategy.

      That is, there are different forms of utility, the one most common being "happiness". This is of course quite understandable when happiness is one of the most basic positive states that most Westerners enjoy being in. The mindset has seeped into mainstream culture.. what's important is that you're happy, I wish you happiness, I love this person because he or she makes me feel happy.. etc.

      However, other alternative forms of utility can exist (but are exceedingly rare). For example, I wrote on combining Aristotle's Virtue ethics with Utilitarianism; you can perform cost-benefit analysis using your conception of virtue as your goal. Do X because it is more virtuous than Y, etc etc.

      So, utilitarianism is not really what is to blame. What IS, are the values underlying that strategy.. for the sort you are talking about, it is the indulgent, individualistic, self-centered sort of mongering for benefit. Coming together, this forms hedonism.

    32. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by kz45 · · Score: 1

      STOP . AMERICA . NOW

      someone who has a sig like that sure has no problem living there.

    33. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by CmdrPorno · · Score: 1

      If someone isn't making them a profit, or is (gasp) taking their time or effort without a mechanically measurable payoff of some kind, people are only too ready these days to "kick them to the curb" and look for friends who are profitable or represent a measurable gain of some kind, whether in prestige or job prospects or exclusive memberships or exploitable expertise/skills.

      Maybe I'm an idealist, but I consider the above behavior to be using someone. It's probably true that we live in an environment that provides few consequences for such behavior, but that doesn't make it right.

      --
      Sent from my iPhone
    34. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by themusicgod1 · · Score: 1

      1) what is this "character" thing of which you speak?

      2) what is this "common cause" of which you speak, and why is it worthy of keeping over peace. And if you don't believe in peace, why don't you go out on the killing feilds yourself? Why wait for the rest of us to agree with you? You are in the military, right?

      --
      GENERATION 26: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
    35. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Kohath · · Score: 1

      what is this "character" thing of which you speak?

      Vague term. My fault. In this context, I meant the willingness to forgo momentary happiness to achieve an important goal or to fulfill an obligation.

      It's a good quality to look for in a friend.

      what is this "common cause" of which you speak

      It's where a group of people all want the same thing.

      why is it worthy of keeping over peace

      It isn't. Peace is better. Prosperity is better than character-building too. I never said, nor implied anything else.

    36. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Kohath · · Score: 1

      Not that I mind, but I'm really curious why this got modded down. Anyone have any idea? Not anti-corporate enough? Failure to acknowledge the superiority of the museum and classical music crowd or bow at the altar of institutional education? People scandalized to learn that sex-taboos weren't invented by Ronald Reagan?

      Anyone?

    37. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by maxume · · Score: 1

      Americans are anything but utilitarian and rarely do cost/benefit analysis in a rational way.

      A great example is a can of soda. The monetary costs probably exceed the benefit(short term gee whiz) of drinking the soda, not to mention the other costs...

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    38. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by hawfizzle · · Score: 1

      "If someone isn't making them a profit, or is (gasp) taking their time or effort without a mechanically measurable payoff of some kind, people are only too ready these days to "kick them to the curb" and look for friends who are profitable or represent a measurable gain of some kind, whether in prestige or job prospects or exclusive memberships or exploitable expertise/skills." What is wrong in seeking aspirations that leave people world-wide in awe, regardless of what language they speak? In writing things that people seek to have translated? In writing something to this world that is more than conversational drivel? Such things demand talent, exploitability, i would go as far to say personal value. how else can a person accomplish these things without seeking out the best in his/her field? why not be goal oriented?

    39. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Stalyn · · Score: 1

      So your solution is..

      A war driven, confrontational society, consisting of mostly poor people, where women are kept in their place, sex is removed from common discussion, right and wrong have rigid definitions, and a government that have so empathy for the poor.

      I think we already tried that and it pretty much sucks. You know maybe if we spent more money on trying to educate the masses they wouldn't be such clueless fucktards. Maybe they would demand facts from their news outlets. They would elect representatives that actually represent them. They wouldn't buy into all the mindless consumerborg bullshit. And at the same we can have meaningful discussions without attacking each other and other countries. But then again that would be a more *liberal* society and that's what you really dont want, do you?

      --
      The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education. - Paul Feyerabend
    40. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Kohath · · Score: 1

      So your solution is..

      Solution? I didn't mention a solution. I was describing the problem.

      There is no solution. You can't make other people do what you want. Therefore, you can't make them be good friends. Therefore, you can't solve the problem of people not being able to have good friends.

      There are some ways to partly stop causing the problem, but there's certainly no way to solve it.

      You know maybe if we spent more money on trying to educate the masses they wouldn't be such clueless fucktards.

      Yes. Profanity and mass-condescension are sure to make things better. Also taking other people's money to enforce your worldview on the "clueless". Very progressive.

      Maybe they would demand facts from their news outlets. They would elect representatives that actually represent them. They wouldn't buy into all the mindless consumerborg bullshit.

      Do you know Jane Smiley? Her attitude can be summarized: We hate middle America so much, why won't they vote for us? I think you'd like her.

    41. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by kolyag · · Score: 1

      Indeed I found it silly that this has been modded down.

      Please mod the parent up.

      I would agree with you that the commerce is not the prime cause. I think the reproduction trends are. In old days when a bride's father being responsible for the choice of the groom, the reproduction process has been selective with the trend to strongest reproduced, as deemed by a grown up.

      Nowadays when a young, not yet capable to think rationally female chooses her bride, its often based on things that are of no relavance to reproduction, like the width of the neck, entertainment capabilities, willingness to succumb to her will unconditionally, or at best, earning capabilities, the reproduction is either erratic or selective to produces mindless, self-assured, non-stop-laughing, ass-kissing idiots prevailining in the current society.

      In places where this process took longer, like in many places in europe, the amount of idiocy and infantilism is getting higher then here.

      So long as it goes on, more americans are doomed to be born assholes. Rich assholes where they prefer salesmen, lawyers, ceos and football players and poor ones where they are not even capable to comprehend that..

    42. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Stalyn · · Score: 1

      And I thought only Democrats had no solutions.

      And by "clueless fucktards" I was talking about Red and Blue states. You are the one that presumed that "clueless fucktards" only live in Red States.

      --
      The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education. - Paul Feyerabend
    43. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Hikaru79 · · Score: 1

      The absolute need to elucidate a philosophical alternative to a polemic against elucidatable orders speaks to the enlightenment-centric mentality that all that is must be measurable or it simply isn't, which is precisely the state of affairs I was bemoaning in my post.

      Yes, exactly! It's like you took the words right out of my mouth.

    44. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Kohath · · Score: 1

      I don't care if it gets modded up. It obviously offended some people. I just want to know which part, and why. For amusement, and because I just can't figure it out.

      I don't necessarily agree with the rest of your post. In general, I think it would be better if people tried to do the right thing rather than what makes them happy for the moment. It would go a long way.

    45. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The solution...

      You want more friends, try to open up more and be more social. If you don't want friends, it's OKAY. Life isn't a check list. If you want to spend all your time on the internet, go ahead, and don't feel guilty about it.

      It's like the magazines for women where all they say is "How to lose weight", and then they give a crappy, non-working solution. Then people actually feel GUILTY about what they're eating. I simply cannot understand that. Eat what the f*ck you want!!!

      Personally, I find articles like this article to be soul sapping. It's like we should be this or that way and meet these criteria and when we're not, well something's wrong! Well, maybe nothing's wrong, some people would rather be on the internet than with friends. When socialization feels like an obligation, it isn't socialization anymore, it's a job. It shouldn't be an obligation, you should socialize if you want, and if you don't want to that's FINE!

      The biggest "social problem", other than racism (which is still alive and kicking) that I see is a lack of ENTHUSIASM (I being one of the problem-children). I think the reason for this is a lack of apparent freedom. Not as in actual freedom (perhaps that was the wrong word). But, as a "young person" soon to graduate college, I sometimes feel like my life is on rails, and that, to me, is psychologically devestating. I try to fight it, but, more often than not rips my enthusiasm to shreds. I suspect many other people, young and old, feel the same way.

      Maybe that's just a cop out, but that's the way I feel.

    46. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 1

      "sophisty"
       
      That looks like some prototypical typo from something like a column in a local newspaper. Also, nice troll.

      --

      --

      WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
    47. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought it was insightful, so I modded you up.

      (posting anonymously for that obvious reason)

    48. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by syukton · · Score: 1

      WTF, it undid all my moderations, even though I posted anonymously. :(

      --
      Reinvent the wheel only at either a lower cost, greater effectiveness, or your own personal enrichment and satisfaction.
    49. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You wouldn't happen to wear an armband with a swastika on it, would you?

    50. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by hackstraw · · Score: 1

      - Commerce didn't cause feminization
      - Commerce didn't cause people in government to favor handouts in place of families
      - Commerce didn't cause people to forget the difference between right and wrong
      - Commerce didn't cause peace (though it does support peace once you have it)


      But the thing is that females have lost their "purpose". They try so hard to be men, and frankly they suck at it.

      - Commerce didn't cause feminization

      But much of commerce is due to women. Men are simple. They (used) to like to do things, they buy "boring" things like tools, non-sensational books, and sure some like their toys like cars, and boats. But the BIG expensive house thing that nobody except for illegal aliens that want to take care of it thing is due mostly due to women. A piece of anecdotal evidence, a guy I know is building a 1.2 million dollar house and he clearly says "Its her house" meaning his wife's.

      - Commerce didn't cause people in government to favor handouts in place of families

      No, but it used to be men that did not raise children, but now that women are men now too, nobody raises children, so its put up for legislation. See the recent MySpace lawsuit (by the parents!)

      - Commerce didn't cause people to forget the difference between right and wrong

      The _love_ of money is the root of all evil. Your spam inbox should be sufficient here. All of the scam and bullshit websites that get top hits when you do a search for anything should be evidence here as well.

      - Commerce didn't cause peace (though it does support peace once you have it)

      War == money. Without the government lies that we are chronically on the verge of being attacked physically or economically, there would be no ideology for waging the chronic wars we have waged since WWII. Until WWII, we were in a depression. After WWII, the "middle class" was born (which is going away now). After WWII, we had the "Red Scare", the bad commies, Korea, domino theory, Vietnam, the "War on Drugs", the nebulous "Cold War", Iran-Contra, now the best BS war that one could imagine, the "War on Terror". Think for a second how much commerce would simply halt if we stopped "needing" these wars?

    51. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by hackstraw · · Score: 1

      rampant consumerism, stagnant education, and blame-tossing

      Classic signs of an alcoholic or addict.

    52. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by rizole · · Score: 1

      I wish I could use this post for my sig.:-(

    53. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by canadian_right · · Score: 1
      Commerce and money are not good or bad. They are tools. Only people can be good or bad, and the main thing making people good or bad is their goals and how they try to reach them.

      Wanting nice but unneccessary things very, very much, can lead to a very shallow life spent making money at the expense of time actually enjoying life. Companies have to make a profit to stay in business, but too many companies think that their only goal should be to maximize profit in the short term at the expense of all other possible goals (like long term profit). When you think making a profit is a noble goal you get Enron.

      I have a good job that lets me and my family live a comfortable life. I could work harder, do overtime, climb that corportate ladder, and earn enough to live in a house instead of an apartment, buy a new mini-van instead of a 10 year old one, take a fancy vacation every year instead of every 3 or 4 years. But what would it cost me? I wouldn't be taking 4 weeks off every August to spend time with my children and friends. I wouldn't be home for dinner on time every day. I wouldn't spend time on my hobbies (painting, writing, music, sports, model trains), I would not know my children as well as I do.

      Too many people have the idea that newer, better "things" will make them happy. It won't. Once you can meet all the requirements of living and afford a few luxuries then anything extra only gives you a thrill for a few hours or days, but then you have to go back to depending on actually having an enjoyable life for your happiness.

      I highly reccommend canceling your cable tv. You still spend too much time in front of the TV (movies, games, I get 2 channels on bunnie ears), but you are not bombarded with consumerism propoganda. The kids sure ask for less junk.

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    54. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by canadian_right · · Score: 1

      You have heard the term "fair weather friend"? That is a friend who is only there when things are good. A true friend is there to support you in good times and bad - even bad times you brought on yourself. Of course this doesn't mean helping your friend continue their bad behaviour, but it does mean being supportive during bad times and encouraging better behaviour if your friend has been bad.

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    55. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by esper · · Score: 1

      The historical case you make, while reasonably accurate, is limited to the conclusion that you reached in it: Don't have sex outside of marriage.

      The modern situation of "attempting at every turn to shield us from sex" is qualitatively different in that it goes beyond prohibitions of non-marital sex (which, ironically, is less important of a rule today than ever before in history, due to modern contraceptive technology) to the point of trying to pretend that sex doesn't even exist. Janet Jackson's "wardrobe malfunction" isn't non-marital sex and seems unlikely to induce anyone into having non-marital sex, but it has to be harshly punished because it makes the existence of sex obvious.

      But, of course, sex is still there, and always will be for the foreseeable future, so it becomes a potent tool for advertising, thanks to the allure of the forbidden, and we end up with a social norm of constantly hinting at sex while simultaneously pretending it doesn't exist, then censuring those who hint too strongly.

      moosehoney is dead on - pretending sex doesn't exist makes matters worse, not better. I found an article on google while replying to a similar discussion on slashdot a couple weeks ago that compared teen pregnancy rates in the US with four Eurpoean nations. The US and Sweden were at opposite extremes in their results: The US had the lowest rates of sexual activity among teenage girls, latest average age for first sexual intercourse, and the highest rates of teen prenancy and STDs. Swedish teens start earlier and have sex more often, yet they have only half the rate of teen STDs as the US and teen pregnancy is practically unheard of.

      I don't recall the study attempting to determine the reasons, but it seems very likely to me that it's because Swedish society is more open about sex (yes, my girlfriend happened to grow up there, so I'm not just repeating stereotypes) and they actually teach their teens about sex instead of getting embarrassed, trying to avoid the subject, or relying on "sex ed" classes which are really trying to teach morality rather than biology.

    56. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1
      In old days when a bride's father being responsible for the choice of the groom, the reproduction process has been
      A political tactic.
      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    57. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Sex has invaded every part of life. (i.e. "Those two guys sure are good friends, I wonder if they're gay? That old guy is being nice to those kids, I wonder if he's a child molester?") The only protection is to never be close to anyone.

      How true (and sad)! Once upon a time, I had a co-worker becoming a very good friend. Neither of us were married (we still aren't), so the inevitable happened: some other co-workers started thinking that we might indeed be gay. Nobody said it out aloud, but you could see them think it. After some 5 years we had to "cut back" on what was very normal friends stuff, just to avoid a false rumour from breaking the surface (actually, I personally didn't care that much, but he did). We continued to share an office for 6 more years, so it wasn't that bad. But still, I really hate the superficiality that has very slowly crept into our friendship nonetheless. I'll be leaving the company a few weeks from now, so theoretically we could renew our friendship bond free of onlooking co-working bigots, but I'm afraid that it'll slowly die instead. :-(

      Something's very wrong with society if it causes people to reduce/hide normal friendships for fear of wrongly being labeled an abnormality (be it sexual or other).

    58. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Kohath · · Score: 1

      The Janet Jackson thing was punished for the same reason we don't allow guys in trenchcoats to walk around flashing gradeschool playgrounds. You'd likely see a similar reaction if they'd slaughtered a steer on the 50-yd line for a post-game BBQ.

      It's just out-of-place in that context. The punishment was to keep them from trying it again.

      I don't think it's a good example to support your point. I also don't think comparing other (carefully chosen) cultures to the US really supports any behavioral arguments at all. Cultures are complex, with lots of different parts and different histories.

    59. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Kohath · · Score: 1

      One other thing you can maybe help me with. This fight against the prevailing societal sexual norms seems to be a popular cause. Why?

      You've mentioned wanting to prevent pregnancy and STDs. But it's a fact that you don't have to get pregnant or catch an STD if you don't want to. Every individual has that within their control, barring rape or some sort of freak accident.

      I also understand that the abolition of sexual norms benefits those who wish to behave outside of those constraints. But the number of people fighting the anti-constraint fight seems too high for this to be the primary motivation.

      Is it just a social position? "I say these things because I'm with the in crowd and that's what they want to hear"?

      Just wondering.

    60. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The absolute need to elucidate a philosophical alternative to a polemic against elucidatable orders speaks to the enlightenment-centric mentality that all that is must be measurable or it simply isn't, which is precisely the state of affairs I was bemoaning in my post.

      The absolute need to make-up-ify alternative vocabulary as bull-word against thesauratical correctness speaks to the post-modern duality that if you say nonsense fast enough people will believe it, which is precisely the state of affairs I was bemoaning in my post.

    61. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seeking to achieve a lofty goal is not the problem - but not considering the costs of reaching that goal is.

      If all actions are equally valid to perform to achieve your end, you will use the fastest way to that goal. Adding in other factors , such as what the actions cost others, will most likely reduce the impact on others of the means, and probably increasing the time needed to reach the goal.

      As with most things, there are tradeoffs.

      However, if you feel like your goal is worthy enough for any action taken to reach it, go for it. Just don't expect other people to view your goal as their goal.

    62. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by esper · · Score: 1

      Janet Jackson was just the first thing that came to mind. Any incident or law relating to "indecent exposure" would work equally well. Since you brought children into it ("flashing gradeschool playgrounds"), I'll also bring up the complete lack of evidence that growing up in a naturist/nudist setting causes any harm to children whatsoever[1]. Unfortunately, it's an almost completely unstudied area, due to the extreme cultural bias in the US against allowing children to be exposed to anything remotely sexual. The one actual study I've seen made repeated mention of the difficulty of conducting such research, both because it was hard to get data to work from and because of people assuming they must be perverts if they were even attempting to study such a thing. Their results, however, were quite clear that children who grew up in an environment where nudity was considered "normal" ended up with much better awareness and higher acceptance of their bodies.

      On the cultural comparisons, yes, there are definitely other factors, but I wasn't comparing just the US vs. Sweden. The paper I mentioned was a comparison of five developed nations; the US and Sweden were just the extremes on the four factors that I mentioned. Do a google search for "international teen pregnancy rates" and the first page of hits will confirm, repeatedly, that the US has the highest rates of teen pregnancy in the developed world. While repressive attitudes towards sex are unlikely to be the sole reason for that difference, it's clear that there's something about US culture which leads to our high teen pregnancy and STD rates and it seems to me that those attitudes should be, at the very least, a prime suspect.

      [1] Before you start bringing up cases of exposure to sex/nudity harming children in mainstream society as a counterexample, let me say that I'm aware of them and I agree that sort of thing often is harmful in mainstream society. I believe this discrepancy to be the direct result of the different attitudes in each setting. In a setting where the adults consider nudity/sex to be a normal, natural, healthy thing, children absorb those attitudes and don't make a big deal about it. In a setting where nudity/sex is treated as shameful, dirty, and something to be covered up as quickly as possible, then children learn that, too, and feel like they've done something wrong if they see too much exposed flesh. I believe it is this feeling of "doing something wrong", caused by mainstream society's repressive stance towards sexuality, which is harmful to children, not exposure to nudity/sex itself.

    63. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by esper · · Score: 1

      I can't speak for anyone else, but it's a combination of two factors for me:

      1) One of my strongest core beliefs, perhaps even the strongest, is that people should have the freedom to do anything they wish, so long as it doesn't cause harm to anyone else without their consent. (I also believe there are limits on how much harm is reasonable even with consent, but I can't identify where those limits are beyond the "I know it when I see it" level.) The body of laws which has been built up in the US to protect and enforce the "traditional" sexual norms runs counter to that belief. I generally choose to live within those "traditional" norms, as I assume you do. (My two major exceptions to them are that I believe nudity to be harmless and that I am comfortable having sex within a mutually monogamous relationship without requiring marriage as a prerequisite.) But others choose differently and I don't see how we have any right to impose those norms on anyone else.

      2) As I've mentioned in my two earlier posts in this subthread, I believe that the dominant cultural attitudes towards sexuality are not merely unjustified, but actually harmful. The tension between biological drives, societal censure of anything overtly sexual, and the ubiquity of sexually-themed material (ads, fashion, etc.) that just barely falls within cultural tolerances seems to set up unnecessary conflicts for many people. The drive for morally-correct (aka "abstinence-only") sexual education drives up teen pregnancy and STD rates by depriving the students of the actual information that they need to know about sex, including pregnancy/STD protection. (I've also read reports of abstinence-only programs contributing to STD rates by giving the impression that, as long as you don't "go all the way", you can't get STDs, which then leads to other creative, but unsafe, acts becoming more common.) And, worst of all, the damage caused to children who are exposed to nudity and then feel (or are even explicitly told) that they have to pretend it never happened because it's "bad" and "dirty", or even the children who aren't exposed to it, but still receive that same training and grow up ashamed of their bodies.

      With all that said, I have absolutely no problems with teaching the "traditional" sexual norms as a good idea and promoting them for social or moral/religious reasons. But many who embrace them have gone on to attempt to enforce them, both through laws and by developing a repressive atmosphere which tries to make sex and anything related to it just go away. These attempts are what I am against.

    64. Re:Internet, yes, but other factors too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Look, I would just be happy to have a friend that isn't always needing money or prone to drama.

      Why do I never want to answer the door? Nine out of ten times it is someone that wants to sell me something.

      Why stay home instead of hanging out with friends? When hanging out, there usually is a monetary price to pay. Not to mention that while I am out drinking beer and getting fat, I could be at home eating a nutritious meal and working out.

      Friends are both a blessing and a hardship. Ugh.

  22. Or the blindingly obviously false? by Mateo_LeFou · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Plenty of corp's, PACs, and other orgs will shell out for "studies" and "papers" that say whatever they need said in order to entice investors/policymakers toward their ends. It's a whole industry in its own right.

    --
    My turnips listen for the soft cry of your love
  23. I 100% Agree by Psx29 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I use the internet as a crutch for my non-existant social life. And after all these years it's finally wearing me down.

    1. Re:I 100% Agree by wonkobeeblebrox · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think it is more that the internet removes barriers and allows you to be more who you really are. E.G: if you are naturally really social, then the internet allows you to really be more social by allowing you interact with lots of people; whereas, if you are really anti-social, it also allows you to interact with really few quantities of people, and thus allows you to be more anti-social.

      That being said, I still think there is an inverse relationship between the quantity of conversation and the quality of it.

  24. Take up drinking by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nobody drinks alone. Go out to the local and raise a glass of Guinness. (I'm a stout fellow.)

    You'll have more fun and you'll live longer! (as long as you limit your drinks to one)
    http://www2.potsdam.edu/hansondj/HealthIssues/1106 591095.html

  25. Technology..... by ZoneGray · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Technoligy in general seems to contrubute to the breakup of traditional social structures. Air travel changed a lot of things in the 50's & 60's, allowing people to relocate about the country.... before then, most people just lived in the city where they were born, and relationships ran long and deep.

    Now, phones, TV, the Internet... they all direct our communication and our association away from older models. Musicians who used to hang out at the same nightclub now link to each other on MySpace. It's great that they can do it, but there was something better about the old way.

    The one redeeming quality of socialism (if socialists would recognize it), is that it promotes a notion of community as opposed to the depersonalization and fragmentation of our relationships that advancing technology (fueled by capitalism and freedom) promotes. As old concepts like neighborhoods, towns, churches decline in influence, people feel the need for stronger communal associations. Government at various levels can fulfil some of that need, however poorly.

    I believe the increasing size of the US gov't (as a percentage of GDP) over time is a reflection of the very same needs. The blessing of the US is that this is happening at a relatively slow and controlled pace over a period of decades. I love freedom and technology, but... well, here I am on the Internet instead of arguing with some friends at a lunch counter.

    1. Re:Technology..... by aussersterne · · Score: 1
      The one redeeming quality of socialism (if socialists would recognize it), is that it promotes a notion of community as opposed to the depersonalization and fragmentation of our relationships


      If you consult The German Ideology and other non-Das-Kapital works by Marx, you'll find that this is the philosophical underpinning of fundamental socialism and communism--the belief that no matter what other consequences socialism/communism do or don't bring, they're more likely to lead to meaningful relationships, meaningful labor, and thus meaningful living, than other systems of political-economics.

      People dismiss statements like "comrades in suffering are comrades indeed" but it's true to some point and many in the modern world are discovering it: you can be alone with your hummer, your mansion, your jewels, your swimming pool, and your twelve degrees, but you're still alone, and many would trade all of it just to have a real friend or two and a reason to wake up tomorrow. We'll all die. You can't take it with you. If you're busy being alone to earn it, you're never getting those years back.
      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
  26. Re:First post? Hello? by NosTROLLdamus · · Score: 0, Funny
    Hey man! What's up?

    Yeah, I've been feeling kinda shitty lately, really unmotivated. I slept in to 12:30 today, because I really didnt' have anything to do. Some of my friends called a little while earlier, but they didn't leave a number, and I don't really feel like tracking them down.

    I'd probably feel out of place anyway, I've been feeling like that more and more, It just seems like everyone else is so busy, and no matter how hard I try I accomplish nothing, plus there's that whole "issue" with...

    Yeah, you guessed it. Isn't that fucked up? He could go to jail, you know, and the wierdest thing is that no on talks about it, it just sits there staring us right in the face.

    Yeah, I haven't even signed up for classes yet either... I have on year left on a fucking liberal arts degree, I mean, I'm sure I could transfer the credits over and get a four year degree, but in what? Every job I get makes me want to bash my fucking brains out... Maybe something part time so I can spend it doing the things I like, IF I EVER GET FUCKING MOTIVATED ENOUGHT TO DO THEM. I dunno, I just don't want to be one of those guys who comes home and stares at the tv for a few hours, goes to bed, and repeats the ordeal everday. Lame.

    Well, I guess I better eat. Maybe I'll get to those shirt designs today... I should probably get on that. Catch you later, eck011219.

  27. More mobile population by AuMatar · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think it has more to do with the mobility of the population than the internet. How many more people these days are moving multiple times in their career, away from friends and family? I know I have twice in the past decade. Distance breaks up friendships, even in these days of the internet.

    --
    I still have more fans than freaks. WTF is wrong with you people?
    1. Re:More mobile population by radicalsubversiv · · Score: 1
      I hate to continue being the naysayer on this thread, but this almost certainly isn't true, because -- contrary to popular belief -- Americans today aren't any more mobile than they used to be.

      From Bowling Alone, Robert Putnam's well-researched work on the "collapse of American community:

      ... for people as for plants, frequent repotting disrupts root systems. It takes time for a mobile individual to put down new roots. As a result, residential stability is strongly associated with civic engagement. Recent arrivals in any community are ... less likely to have supportive networks of friends and neighbors. ...
      Could rising mobility thus be the central villain of our mystery? The answer is unequivocal: No. Residential mobility can be entirely exonerated from any responsibility for our fading civic engagement, because mobility has not increased at all over the last fifty years. In fact, census reocrds show that both long-distance and short-distance mobility have slightly declined over the last five decades. (pg204-205)

    2. Re:More mobile population by Kenshin · · Score: 1

      Seriously.

      Right after high school, almost all my friends immediately moved far out of town to go to college. Out friendships all sorta dissolved after that. (Of course, they were mostly spoiled kids whose parents could afford to send them far away.) I was stuck in my youth-unfriendly town mostly by myself.

      --

      Does it make you happy you're so strange?

    3. Re:More mobile population by CommanderData · · Score: 1

      I agree with your thoughts. A close friend of mine had to move away a number of years ago because his company closed their factory in New England and move the equipment to Mexico (They even had to train their replacements. I hear that the Mexico plant has since closed and moved to China, so they get the last laugh). Anyway, he was told he could stay with the company if he accepted a job at a plant in the south, which he took. We used to chat online regularly, and on the phone some. I even went down there to be the best man when he met a nice southern girl and got married. Even with all this, distance and time still cause people to grow apart. We havent spoken since last year. Maybe I'll try to look him up and see how things are going...

      --
      Urge to post... fading... fading... RISING!... fading... fading... gone.
  28. Makes sense...for some... by EMacAonghusa · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It makes sense I think. For many people the internet & it's social communities offer a release. There's just so many more people you can meet online and communicate with. Freindships are formed quickly as it's easy, through various online social groups, to find others with very similar interests to yourself ... which may not always be possible depending on where you live. I think this is the key, personally. On the other hand, it's not a black and white thing and it really depends on the type of person you are. I've met tons of ppl online and i've met many of those personally and we've become strong friends. But I still have my real life friends, those same people who've been these for me for 15-20 years.

  29. I have plenty of friends! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    H4ck3r214, ODDRAGE, Vader001, ILoveSoy, MagicGRAPE, and Centurion just to name a few!

  30. I wonder if Ray Bradbury was right.. by S.P.B.Wylie · · Score: 1

    My question is, what would be the Internet version of firemen? ( reference)

    --
    I give bread to the poor, they call me a saint.
    I ask why the poor have no bread, they call me a communist.
    1. Re:I wonder if Ray Bradbury was right.. by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1

      The firemen that start server fires.

      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    2. Re:I wonder if Ray Bradbury was right.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The firemen that start server fires.


      I really doubt Slashdotters will appreciate being equated to the firemen in Bradbury's Fahrenheit 451!
  31. Hokum! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The article is pure hokum! I have 4,294 friends, as evidenced by myspace.com

  32. I'm lonely! I need friends! by Bob+Cat+-+NYMPHS · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Please, I'm desperate! Click on that thingy by this comment so my life will become fulfilling! NO NOT THAT ONE!!!! ARGGGHHH!

  33. No contest by anicca · · Score: 1

    What is more stimulating? Erudite scholars pushing the envelopes, posting thoughtful informative content on a wide range of interesting subjects... or who the new cast member on Friends is and who they screwed? Likely the people who have no friends just have IQs that dwarf those around them making inteligent conversation impossible.

    --
    A people that values its privileges above its principles soon loses both. Dwight D. Eisenhower
    1. Re:No contest by fyngyrz · · Score: 1
      Likely the people who have no friends just have IQs that dwarf those around them making inteligent conversation impossible.

      Perhaps not *the* factor, but certainly *a* factor.

      I live in a small town in Montana. Aside from my significant other and one "local" fellow we are friends with, issues suitable for discussion with the citizens here aren't exactly technically involved or philosophically intriguing. In a town of about 5,000, the "meat" social life supports about 20 bars and 20 churches. The Internet looks mighty good in comparison to either. That, and a collection of cats, who seem to be generally smarter than my neighbors as well.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
    2. Re:No contest by Kohath · · Score: 1

      That, and a collection of cats, who seem to be generally smarter than my neighbors as well.

      Your neighbors are probably better off without your company. Just a guess.

    3. Re:No contest by fyngyrz · · Score: 1

      No question about it at all. They have no interest in atheism, artificial intelligence, image processing, geology, programming and markup languages, microcontroller design, science fiction, ham radio, or animal rights. Not a one of them speaks Chinese and the only ones that speak Korean do so because they learned it, or are learning it, in my martial arts school.

      From the other side of the coin, I have no interest in the high school football team, hunting and fishing, drinking and drugging, worshipping mythological constructs, or which tractor is really the best tractor. Worst of all, I don't watch television, and that pretty much cuts the last strand of the rope, right there. When they start to talk about who's winning or surviving on some reality show, I just quietly take my leave.

      I stay out of their way, and I make sure that they don't know how aggravating it would be to try to "be my buddy." It's definitely best for everyone. The Internet serves for me as a window on a considerably wider world. My appreciation, as you might imagine, is considerable.

      --
      I've fallen off your lawn, and I can't get up.
  34. Mabey the internet isn't to blame by S.P.B.Wylie · · Score: 1

    Mabey it is long work hours: sited from http://www.braunconsulting.com/bcg/newsletters/win t2000.html In a report last year by the International Labor Organization it was shown that U.S. workers averaged nearly 2,000 hours of work every year. (40 hours per week x 52 weeks = 2,080 hours.) This compares to other workforces in other countries working fewer hours than we do. For example, on average U.S. workers spend 70 hours more per year on the job than their Japanese counterparts, and nearly 350 hours per year more than Europeans. This equates to nearly 10 more weeks of work per year. People work to hard and work too long. People seem to know that life isn't about work, yet them work longer and longer. We have to come to the realization that wealth can be better mesured though friendships than who has a bigger car.

    --
    I give bread to the poor, they call me a saint.
    I ask why the poor have no bread, they call me a communist.
  35. I live here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny
    1. Re:I live here... by CokeBear · · Score: 1

      I think this guy might live nearby...

      --
      Reality has a liberal bias
    2. Re:I live here... by Kenshin · · Score: 1

      Have a tea-party with stuffed animals, and use ventriloquism to give them voices?

      --

      Does it make you happy you're so strange?

    3. Re:I live here... by ColaMan · · Score: 1

      Hell, I'm only 2700km east of you. I'll drop in next week sometime.

      --

      You are in a twisty maze of processor lines, all alike.
      There is a lot of hype here.
  36. As opposed to face to face by gelfling · · Score: 1

    Yo
    Yo
    You chillin?
    Chillin
    Straight chillin
    Yo
    Xbox?
    Nah
    Straight

  37. NONSENSE!! by Jerry · · Score: 1

    I increased the number of people I call friends immeasurably because of the Internet. I may never meet them face to face, but we communicate directly and via forums almost on a daily basis.

    And, thanks to the Internet, I keep closer contact with family members living else where. Also, thanks to the Internet, I have reestablished connnections with folks whom I haven't heard from in more than 30 years,or longer.

    If anything, the Internet has brought the world closer together and we are all finding out that there is more that unites us than divides us.

    --

    Running with Linux for over 20 years!

  38. I disagree by RyoShin · · Score: 1

    I've been a regular internet user since... oh, probably 1998 or so. Back then it was just using chat rooms at Yahoo! and working on a website on Fortunecity. Now-a-days I'm more heavily into it, participating on multiple forums covering a range of issues as well as working on my own websites (as well as others.)

    However, I believe I have a rather large social network. The only thing is that it's all online. I am a rather shy person in real life, and somewhat afraid of meeting new people, so I only have two or so actual friends. However, the anonymity offered by the internet gives me an extra layer of protection- if I fuck up somewhere, I just need to leave and come back with a new handle and e-mail address, and no one is the wiser. It allows me to completely start over if I feel the need.

    Not that I've had to do so. Through my many stints on various sites, some gone, some still here, I have amassed quite a few online friends that I can talk to, some about important things. I would say that the Internet is a massive benefit to my social network growth.

    Now, I may be the exception rather than the rule. I know a lot of people who prefer face-to-face communication over mail or IM. If all that's happening is discussion, I really don't see the difference. In fact, if all that's happening is discussion, I much prefer IM over face-to-face chat or even a phone call- you don't have to repeat yourself, you can "talk" while someone else is talking and not get in the way, and if you have to do something for a few minutes, you can simply scroll through the chat window to see what you were talking about when you get back (assuming you have some short-term memory problems, like I do.)

    Regardless, while Average Joe may be intimidated by these elctro-ma-whos-its, those like myself, who are withdrawn, or those who are picked on in school are given new social life thanks to the internet, which can be a saving grace. If I hadn't had the internet to fall back on during my years of being bullied in school, I probably would have snapped.

  39. NO. MODERN WAY OF CORPORATE LIVING by unity100 · · Score: 1

    with all its 'career' concerns, and in addition, the general 'do-well materially' understanding of times are to blame.

    My closest friend, for over 16+ years now, lives a 15 minutes walk to me. Yet, we do not see each other.

    He goes to work, goes back home. Goes to work, goes back home. This is the way with most friends nowadays.

    The internet, on the contrary, have awarded me many close friends that i could not hope to find via normal means - intellectuality, humor, manners, philosopy merged in one pot.

  40. Many factors by debrain · · Score: 1

    I have close friends on every continent except Antarctica, and their long-distance friendship persists only because we can communicate over the internet.

    I believe that the lack of close friendships in Western societies could be related to the internet, that the internet permits us to meet our most basic and fundamental psychological needs online. Once these basic needs are met, we lose our incentive to overcome the challenges to find and foster more rich and fruitful personal relationships. Why go out, when all you need is at your fingertips?

    The point about entitlement here is quite relevant too, I believe. The substitute of money for happiness in consumer society takes away from the perceived benefit of friendship.

    Of course, there are surely many more factors to consider, but these probably do contribute.

  41. And before that we blamed TV. by porkchop_d_clown · · Score: 2

    What was the name of that book? Bowling Alone?

  42. What do you mean "Shrinking Social Network"? by neomage86 · · Score: 0, Redundant

    Facebook says I have over 300 friends!

    1. Re:What do you mean "Shrinking Social Network"? by Wellington+Grey · · Score: 1

      Just like the Daily Show guy.

      -Grey

  43. More complicated than that. by cvd6262 · · Score: 1

    I heard about the study earlier in the week, and I realized a) I don't need close friends (as they define it) and b) I do have "meaningful" discussions online about "important" matters.

    On point A, I know there are others (my wife being one of them) who crave human interaction with like-minded people, and require vicinity as part of their definition. For those people, I hope this study opens avenues to help them compensate for this need in our ever-closing world.

    On point B, I think those who will suffer the most - as our "connected" world makes us more and more disconnected from those around us - are those who do not know how to (or can't for other reasons) leverage the technology to remain connected and to find friends.

    --

    I'd rather have someone respond than be modded up.

  44. Changing definitions by Spazmania · · Score: 2, Insightful

    one reason that the survey might have turned up such a shift in social networks is that many respondents might have interpreted the questions differently in 2004 than they did in 1985.

    Sure. In 1985, a close friend was anyone who shared my hobbies and was on a first-name basis with me. There weren't many to pick from so I had to work at maintaining a friendship with all of them.

    Thanks to cheap telepresence I'm now in touch with plenty of people who share my interests. I can reserve close friend status for the very few people I'd trust with my life.

    --
    Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
  45. Two by mobby_6kl · · Score: 4, Funny

    Two chicks at the same time, man.

    1. Re:Two by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny
      Two chicks at the same time, man.
      I'd settle for two chicks in the same year, man.
    2. Re:Two by laplace_man · · Score: 1

      Are you sure they are realy chicks ?

    3. Re:Two by Original+Replica · · Score: 2, Funny

      Two chicks at the same time, man.
      That would quickly turn into a Beowolf cluster-fuck. (first one way then the other)

      --
      We are all just people.
    4. Re:Two by Emetophobe · · Score: 1
      I'd settle for two chicks in the same year, man.
      I'd settle for two chicks in the same life time.
    5. Re:Two by Guppy06 · · Score: 1

      Spoken like a man who has never been stuck in the middle of a chick conversation.

    6. Re:Two by b00stA · · Score: 1

      Haha, great.
      I watched Office Space again just today :)

      --
      Stop making that big face!
    7. Re:Two by Doug97 · · Score: 1

      A Beowulf cluster of chicks? I like your thinking ...

  46. Close friends on the internet? by SamSim · · Score: 1

    Fun fact: it's possible to have close friends on the internet. Better, it's possible to talk about important things to people on the internet. In fact, it's often easier. Anonymity can help you to open up. Finding a crowd of people with similar interests/issues can help too, and that's more likely to happen online.

    1. Re:Close friends on the internet? by S.P.B.Wylie · · Score: 1

      Anonymity takes away some from the experience. Part of the "close friend" thing is the ability to open yourself up to ridicule and being hurt and to not be ridiculed or hurt. Anonymity puts up a wall, and that wall makes close friendships harder, no matter what you talk about.

      --
      I give bread to the poor, they call me a saint.
      I ask why the poor have no bread, they call me a communist.
  47. spurious logic by mgabrys_sf · · Score: 1

    By that token, I could blame people getting married for causing friendships to decline.

  48. it's a vicious circle by fukknutt · · Score: 1

    see, the reason people are developing more "friends", or acquaintances online is because due to events and circumstances in their lives they no longer find sufficient merit to attempt them in "real life" because the internet gives us a safety zone so to speak,...one that protects us to some degree from those who would wish to persecute, prosecute or otherwise harm us in some way shape or form for how we stand on issues...and yet it is absolutely neccessary that the internet is a two bladed sword in that it has given us this very avenue to still feel included in the human race and its' affairs when in all reality our freedoms are stripped from us everyday and why you ask because people are scared to death to talk to each other in real time for fear of getting their heads bit off. It's not hard to figure out. How many innocent people get beaten down in their own homes by crooks (sometimes they wear uniforms and badges and carry guns) because their neighbors are unaware of what may be happening, and are unwilling to "call the bluff" and "draw down" for the sake of someone in need of help? People are murdered in their homes or drug off to jail everyday to pay for crimes they didn't commit because the state takes advantage of the "fear and loathing" that runs/ruins our lives? I've been closely watching what's been happening for the last 25 years in america. After about the first 10 to 12 I gave up and quit trying to convince people, to "open their eyes". Nowadays it's rare that I even care enough to bother anymore. Like now for instance, regardless of how you may perceive this message, it's really my way of saying "I told you so".

    1. Re:it's a vicious circle by S.P.B.Wylie · · Score: 1

      I totally agree. It has been to long since someone told us "the is nothing to fear but fear itself." And they aren't listening to me either.

      --
      I give bread to the poor, they call me a saint.
      I ask why the poor have no bread, they call me a communist.
  49. Looking for a penpal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    29 yo male, seeking for a penpal from any part of the world. Not many friends. Hobbies: photography, scottich whiskey, computers. No family, no life.

  50. Keeping in touch with distant friends by Infonaut · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Some people use the Internet to find new acquaintances or make new friends. Some people use the Internet to maintain relationships with existing friends. Doubtless many people do both.

    I find myself in the second category. While I occasionally make acquaintances via the Internet, my primary mechanism for forming friendships is still meatspace. The Internet is tremendously helpful to me in maintaining relationships with friends who no longer live where I live. I can communicate with friends from my years on the East Coast, friends from my time in the military, college, and even back to high school.

    The quality of that communication is up to the parties involved, but the mechanism is there. It is simply easier for me to send an email than it ever was to write a letter. A group of about eight or ten friends, spread all over the country, communicate via a small discussion group.

    I think back to the early 1990s. I was geographically isolated for three years, far from anything or anyone familiar. The friends with whom I communicated most often were those who had email addresses, and there were many times when those email conversations boosted my spirits and helped me feel connected.

    My feeling is that the Internet makes a wide array of communication possible - everything from the shallow smack-talking of game boards and in-game messaging to deep philosophical conversation and truly meaningful sharing of thoughts and feelings. As others in this discussion have suggested, how you use that technology is your own choice.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
  51. Not the Internet by Javagator · · Score: 1

    The reason people have fewer close friends is because we have become much more mobile. People use to live in one town, at the same house and work at the same job most of their lives. Now people move to places where they know no one, change jobs before they make close friends, etc. So much movement and change in the people you encounter in day to day life makes it harder to make close friends.

  52. Underlying cause by wwwillem · · Score: 1

    So there are two observations: people have an increasing number of on-line buddies and a decreasing number of off-line real friends. But who can be sure that the former is causing the latter? Statistics is full of this mistake.

    OK, lets throw in a third phenomenon, people are more mobile over larger distances. Who is still living in the same city, country or even continent he grew up? Living far away from your old friends and relatives definitely stimulates the use of on-line communication. And each time building a new circle of off-line friends is a tough thing to do.

    I'm not saying that people becoming more global is what causes the shift from off-line to on-line friends, but it's just an example to show that assuming a direct cause between two observations is often way too simple.

    --
    Browsers shouldn't have a back button!! It's all about going forward...
  53. The Net can be used for local connections too by cheesebikini · · Score: 2, Interesting

    2 important points to note:

    1) Internet tech doesn't necessarily discourage local, face-to-face friendships. Right -now- the Web isn't used for local connection but I think that's just because of the way it's -framed-, just a momentary lack of vision by the people/firms building it. And I think that's a temporary anomaly that's disappearing as wi-fi and locative tech takes hold.

    Remember the net evolved from a set of LANs, and even as recently as the 80s, the folks who inhabited the dial-up BBS world were very locally-focused (you dialed BBS's in/near your town most often because those phone calls were cheapest) and many of these people got to know the other local BBSers through face-to-face get togethers. These "GTs" were an important part of BBS culture. More recent examples -- Google the study "Neighboring in Netville" to learn fascinating things that happened when researchers wired 1 out of every 3 homes in a typical suburban housing development outside Toronto w/ very simple terminals attached to a basic message forum system tied to a proprietary LAN. The people who moved in weren't techies, but nonetheless after a year this neighborhood was measurably more cohesive and local connections were much stronger than in neighboring unwired subdivisions that otherwise were almost identical in physical structure and demographics. In short: in the wired subdivision a lot more people knew their neighbors and other folks nearby, and the community as a whole was much more politically active in tracking and responding to issues that affected the good of the neighborhood. All because networked communication tech was -framed- as something that connects you to people nearby -- not just as something that connects you to the placeless Web, not -just- something that's for finding people on the other side of the planet who share precisely the same interests that you do.

    2) Back to this "Internet to blame" study, note an important point the researchers themselves make: that the wording of the survey questions might have strongly affected the results and their interpretation. (i.e., 2004 respondents might have thought "discussing" doesn't include e-mail/IM.)

  54. A lonely man in a lonely city by Magnifico · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Add to the Internet:

    1. Your car
    2. Your cell phone
    3. Your cable television
    4. Your DVDs and home theater
    5. Your iPod and headphones

    These all contribute to not talking to people, not mingling, and not making new friends. Why make a new friend on the streetcar when you're yapping to a friend on your Bluetooth cell phone in your car? Why go out to a theatre when you can see it in private on DVD or cable? Why make listen to that attractive woman trying to hit on you when you're rocking out with your iPod?

    The more private, the more personal devices and tools we have, the more solitary our lives are becoming We don't want to share an experience anymore. We don't want to do things for the common good or the benefit of society at large. The Internet is just one facet of an overall trend. Our lifestyle in the early 21st century promotes this focus inwards and our selfishness.

    1. Re:A lonely man in a lonely city by tmortn · · Score: 1

      Which is why these tools need to become more social. Or more social tools need to be invented. We all cry foul about potential breaches of privacy and yet all this privacy is part of what isolates us. We default to shutting everyone out and it gets to be habitual.

      We need more social elements to our technology. The internet makes it easier to meet someone on the otherside of the world than it does the girl/boy next door. It continually amazes me that location based net communities have not become a stronger force than they are. I guess part of it is due to the low density of users... at least here in the US. And I mean heavy social users. My Space and the like are starting to change that as you are seeing school social structures finally incorporating online methods as well. My guess is the gen or three after the myspace crowd gets old will find a far more tightly nit world than the one we live in.... because they will have embraced the new technology not just as something anoynmous but as something personal as well. The internet can provide you with both. That is the thing that is truly scaring parents and teachers etc.... its not like kids are saying anything new on myspace. Its just that now there is something for parents and teachers to see.

      It often takes new generations to take the new technology of the older generationa and carry it forward... especially when it is highly socially disruptive. Older people are canalized by the values they had growing up... while kids are actually in the process of forming their systems and will actively seek out that which will distinguish them from their elders... and technology is a prime target for such difference.

      --
      I don't ask you to be me. I only ask you not expect me to be you.
    2. Re:A lonely man in a lonely city by payndz · · Score: 1
      Why make listen to that attractive woman trying to hit on you when you're rocking out with your iPod?

      Attractive women never tried to hit on me even before I got an iPod. So I'm really no worse off.

      --
      You must think in Russian.
    3. Re:A lonely man in a lonely city by Kamineko · · Score: 1
      Yeah... gotta hate that home theatre.


      Getting all my friends round watching a DVD, room full of people jeering at the anti-piracy ads: 'What... you BOUGHT it? Why didn't ya just ask X to burn it?' Watching a way cool movie, having a couple of drinks. Movie's over... pull out some more tricks with your home entertainment goodies. Sounds like a plan to me.


      Maybe you're just introverted?

    4. Re:A lonely man in a lonely city by QuantumG · · Score: 1

      You make that sound like a bad thing.

      I've always been this kind of guy.. so now it's gone mainstream? Great!

      --
      How we know is more important than what we know.
  55. It's how you use it by virgil_disgr4ce · · Score: 1

    As some have already pointed out, it's important to realize that for some (myself included), MySpace has enabled them to expand an existing friend group and keep in touch with people that would otherwise have remained only acquaintances. One of the crucial components of meeting people (especially for dating purposes) is seeing someone often enough to turn "hellos" into actual conversations. Add in the ability to organize events and informally (or semi-formally) invite lots of people you don't really know--it adds up to being able to meet people you wouldn't have otherwise thought appropriate to just call up, or that you're not sure if you have common ground with. "Social networking sites" are simply the www-based expansion of an already extant device--"social networking." People have been networking socially forever. We now have an additional tool in how we network. Some people are born good at it, some will never be, and many may learn how to do it by good old fasioned work and practice. I learned how to be social this way, and I didn't need MySpace to do it. But now that I've come this far, MySpace turns out to be a great and useful addition to my repetoire.

  56. Not just the internet by Bombula · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I don't think it's fair to blame just the internet. There are a lot of forces in modern society that are disolving traditional social networks. I'd say most of them have their basis in technology though. I'm an anthropologist, and while it isn't my area of expertise my (somewhat informed) intuition is that the explanation here is that technology along with infrastructure and support systems have reduced the dependency that individuals used to have on one another for survival.

    Taking an extreme example, it is now quite possible to live in a room by yourself and never really talk to anyone, never go anywhere, never really interact with people at all - assuming you order your food in. But even to a lesser extreme things like Wal Mart and supermarkets provide the means for people to survive without being dependent on any other individual person. Whether you're buying dinner or a new car, you're interaction is going to be with someone whom you could just as easily never see again. Instead, we're just dependent on 'the system'.

    Looking outside of developed countries, there hundreds of examples of societies and cultures where there isn't a supermarket on every corner, in which case you really have to build relationships and get along with people, whether it's with Mr Baker or Mr Farmer or whatever, in order to survive. And in those places, I can tell you from plenty of field experience, people often genuinely have many more close friends and are much closer to their extended families than we are in the west. In such cultures, people genuinely feel connected to others - not just the people they are very close to, but their neighbors, their communities, their tribes, and their fellow citizens in general. It's probably an important thing to bear in mind, especially since we seem to be dropping bombs on a lot of these sorts of folks these days.

    From an evolutionary perspective, situations of social interdependency are a more 'natural' state. I'm not sure if they are 'better' in every way, but they are probably healthier in a strict psychological sense.

    --
    A-Bomb
    1. Re:Not just the internet by Bombula · · Score: 1

      I should also add the more commonly discussed points that internet relationships differ from 'real' ones in many ways. Most important among these differences are the factors that reduce (or eliminate entirely) the consequences of deleterious behavior. So, for just on example, the anonymity the web offers means we can say and do what we like to others and disregard the consequences. And even if we lose what friendships we may have made, we have instant access to millions of other people online so we can always make new friends. This latter point is even possible in 'real' life, in big cities, but it is absolutely impossible in small communities (such as those in which we evolved). Ostracization means very little online or in a city like Los Angeles, but if you got exiled from your tribe as a hunter-gather, you were likely to become a lion's breakfast in pretty short order.

      --
      A-Bomb
    2. Re:Not just the internet by Stalyn · · Score: 1

      Honestly, I think we socialize more than ever. Yet the social relationships we build are less meaningful. You are right when you claim the reason for less meaningful relationships is because we don't need other people like in the past. We can be self-sufficient without ever really knowing or caring about anyone. This of course leads to empathy towards others and in turn makes the situation worse.

      There is a breaking point. Because we are all connected in some social stratum and what others do does affect your life. It will become apparent one day most likely when the result of our actions has become beyond repair.

      --
      The best education consists in immunizing people against systematic attempts at education. - Paul Feyerabend
  57. My thoughts by AriaStar · · Score: 2, Interesting

    With increased time online and increased time at work, people are making more friends online, and it seems rarely every meeting them in person. While I have made my closest in-person friendships due to the internet, and am very close with some people I've met online, but haven't yet met in person (this summer I have plans to meet three of them with whom I am especially close), I've also seen in-person people very dear to me become unable to handle in-person relationships and friendships as they are much more comfortable dealing with people online, their primary mode of contact.

    Internet contact gives them more control as to how much contact, when, the ability to hide faults about themselves that they may not like, therefore not letting others get to know the real person, while others are doing the same, etc., and puts them at a disadvantage for connecting with people within a close proximity on an intimate level or at a real friendship level as they don't have as much control and don't know how to deal with humans being flawed and how to deal with conflicts and such that people tend to try very hard to avoid with online friends. These three things alone indicate a lack of trust in online friends, and a lack of trust of people online can become a general lack of trust in people at all.

    It hurts to fall in love with someone, only to have that person, when he moves cross country and to a place a couple miles from you, decide he can't handle the closeness, and then it's over. It also hurts when you meet someone in person you met online as a friend, and any illusions are shattered, and that friendship ends.

    I count myself excrutiatingly lucky to have so many people, both in person (most whom I met first online or through someone I met online) and online, with whom I can confide about important matters, but it's taken work to accomplish this circle I have now, and it's takena lot of trial and error, and the determination to not hide flaws to put forward only a good foot forward. Truth be told, no one does or says the right thing all the time, and we all have our insecurities. The question is whether or not we are secure enough to let our imperfections through rather than to mask them. This tendency to hide becomes habit that carries over into in-person friendships and relationships.

    This is not to say that all online contact is bad. True, it is easier to keep in touch with friends who have moved away, and we may not always want to peel our butts from our chairs at work to go talk to our bosses, who may not be available at that time, and those little note papers of yesteryear are easily misplaced, when a simple e-mail will due and won't get lost. It can be easier and quicker sometimes to get in touch with your doctor. And sometimes it's easier to make local friends with 10+hr. workdays.

    But it's also true that too much internet use has led to a population of recluses and a loss of personal social skills.

  58. This isn't hard to figure out ... by ScrewMaster · · Score: 1

    All of us have complicated lives nowadays, between work and home life and all the things in between. There are only so many hours in a week, and if we choose to fritter them away in a chat room instead of spending them developing solid relationships, well ... what else would you expect to happen? Friendships take time and energy to build and maintain, pure and simple, and nothing will change that. I spent a lot of time on IRC at one point, but then I realized that it was taking away from more important activities so I stopped it. Maybe some of those people involved in the aforementioned "shrinking social networks" might want to think about what they truly value in life, and whether that online time might be better invested elsewhere.

    --
    The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
  59. Oh, and amusingly, or perhaps sadly... by AriaStar · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ...an ex-fiancé and I used to both spend so much time online that we could be in the same room and would IM rather than vocally speak to each other. Our housemate found this to be funny, though slightly disturbing, and, in the end, we had such a breakdown in real communication that we broke up (as if you couldn't tell by the "ex").

  60. I've travelled the world... by aslate · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Through the internet i've met a total of 39 people from a forum i frequent. We've met up several times in Europe and there've been other meets in the US and Australia.

    I flew to the US for a week long holiday, with the first weekend spent in NY meeting up with a group of 13 Americans, i travelled with 3 other Brits. We toured 6 states and 3 capitals in a week and it was one of the best holidays i've had. Although i'm only 17 (Started posting at 13) i've grown up with these people. Granted, i went on holiday with a 21, 24 and 34 year old and the next closest to my age was 20 that we met, but i'm great friends with all of these people and we regularly meet.

    If it weren't for the internet i wouldn't be mates with a 34 year old drummer from York. Although i was 13 when i joined, people thought i was 18, we talked to each other because we were interesting and liked the same topics, not because we met in a bar drunk and liked the face sitting opposite us.

    Is it an unusual way to meet people, probably. Is it a flawed way of meeting people? So far, absolutely not.

    1. Re:I've travelled the world... by superguido7 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      One case does not disprove anything, especially considering how unusual your case is in that you seem to have had the funds to travel the world.

    2. Re:I've travelled the world... by aslate · · Score: 1

      I have a job in retail and i don't start Uni till later this year, why not splash out on a trip to the US to meet a load of mates? I'm living at home for now (Not unusual when you're 17) and work for the ability to travel.

      At the current exchange rate it was very cheap (£800 for the week, £400 of which was flights). I've not flown to Aussie or elsewhere, but there's currently plans for one of these in Prague.

  61. end the age of aquarius return the age of victoria by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No more touchy feely hugs and holding your heart on your sleave?!?! Wow this internet thing gets better and better the more i hear about it.

    stendec@gmail.com

  62. Yeah, that's the ticket by SeXy_Red · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's the internet's fault that I don't have any friends, not my complete lack of social skills!

    --

    This sig was generated by a barrel of trained kittens for SeXy_Red (550409).

  63. Re:Mod parent up...about one point by Monkeyboy4 · · Score: 1

    But the number of close friends dropped 30% - from "about three to two"(from TFA). We all lost almost one whole friend due to the internet !!!

  64. Friends networks? by fbg111 · · Score: 1, Funny

    "main contributing factors to a shrinking of social networks among Americans."

    What are they talking about, I have over 9000 friends on MySpace alone! Shrinking social networks my arse...

    --
    Flying is easy, just throw yourself at the ground and miss. -Douglas Adams
  65. Useless by John+Nowak · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I wouldn't be surprised if most people reported themselves to have less of such friends even without the internet. It's entirely possible that this is how humans, who once used to be in high school or college, see themselves after they hit 30. Or after they hit 50. Or after they his 70.

  66. Re:Close Friends? by Ash+Vince · · Score: 2, Funny

    Lack of close friends due to the internet? Bullshit, I have no friends because I keep offending anyone who comes close.

    --
    I dont read /. to RTFA, I read /. to offend people in ignorance.
  67. Re:Uh... okay, sure and furthermore by callingalloldhippies · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Sorry! Don't think much of their methods. Did they take in to consideration that since the 2nd world war the national population have physically moved from 'the country 'towns' where your 'friends' came from generations old neighbors and relatives. Once Americans began moving to where the post war economy and commerce was, strangers were their neighbors and their relatives might be half a continent away. As those populations of strangers grew in closer and closer proximity to each other and further and further away from their past relationships, IMHO most people found experience drove the trust factor of neighbors down and frankly without the INFAMOUS INTERNET INFLUENCE, long distance communication with old friends, neighbors and relatives became less and less rewarding or efficient.

    I sincerely believe that the Internet has added access and accessibility to more and more meaningful relationships. After all in small town America, you kind of had to stay friendly with most since you were probably distantly related and 'you can't choose your relatives'. You can, and DO choose your Internet relationships based on shared interests.

    Plus, now all your old family, small town friends and relatives have almost instant access to one another via computer. Kind of looks to me like they got it totally backwards.

    --
    "Never try to teach a pig to sing. It simply wastes your time and truely annoys the pig"
  68. Real Friends for IRC by livingdeadline · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Dunno about normal persons, but I was never able to get close friends until I got broadband and started to IRC with people I had daily contact with at school. Screen + irssi has for me become a great and natural way of keeping in touch with people, but usually it's really hard to explain to social and or non-technical folks that internet isn't only a toy, but a new and efficiant way of dealing with real life matters. Of course, some people probably rely on teh intarwebs as a faked social network rather than a way of communicating with people they've met IRL. I'm sure that more or less random smalltalk is nice and all, but it doesn't even serve the same purpose, living a life with the people around you isn't relevant online. Besides, to really know people with whom you communicate only online is extremely difficult, and the sad thing is that even some young people find hard to believe that "this chat thing" is not only for flirting or getting help with homework. MSN/AOLers need to be converted to IRC users and there should be at least one channel for every high school. Or something. Really.

  69. Finally I know the cause by AK+Marc · · Score: 4, Funny

    I'm glad to know I don't have any friends because of the Internet.

    All these years, I thought it was because I was an asshole.

  70. RE: population increase...from immigration by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Could it be so simple? http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/programmes/happiness_fo rmula/5012478.stm
    This could explain the variance between urban and rural, as well as the timescale of this social change.

  71. Rubbish by mattwarden · · Score: 2, Funny

    I have 739 facebook friends, so I don't know what the hell these guys are talking about.

  72. What do you mean? by Naomi_the_butterfly · · Score: 2, Funny

    What do you mean, I lack friends? Just look at my MySpace friends list!

  73. Unimportat stuff? by alshithead · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Slashdot is perfect example of IMPORTANT stuff that gets discussed online. I have a lot of respect for most of the Slashdot community. We discuss politics, science, technology, and life in general with some very thoughtful and insightful comments.

    Of course, Slashdot is a minority example of what's on the web but hey, porn is important too.

    --
    I reserve the right to think for myself. Others' opinions are optional. Puppy on lap = typos...not illiteracy.
  74. not valid everywhere... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I can tell you right now that for my entire life I've lived in communities in which telling my friends I wanted a sex change wouldn't raise an eyebrow. Now, telling my friends I had been born again...Christianity caused a number of my nearest and dearest to run in the other direction faster than I thought possible.

    I snapped out of it, but I never really trusted them again.

    1. Re:not valid everywhere... by tomhudson · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well, if you tell them you want a sex change, you're probably not going to try to convert them to going down the same road ...

      I think that's what offends a lot of people about born-again fundamentalist evangelicals - the lack of respect for other people's beliefs. The evangelicals don't see it - they believe its God's command.

  75. LotR? by ClamIAm · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Tolkien often said that the ring was symbolic of "the machine". There's a passage in the book that talks about how anyone who wears it will have their life extended, but it will be a shallow one. This article makes it sound like he was right on.

  76. Enough intellectual babble by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We have an entire generation or more who spent years growing up in front of a television and now they sit in front of a computer monitor. Essentially trading one cathode ray tube companion for another only this one, when connected to the internet, can respond to them. Perhaps we should consider this an improvement?

    Frankly people have become more isolated and less social since the advent of television. Socialization was entertainment for previous generations, conversation and other aspects of it were often considered and practiced as artforms. Television and the internet are simply easy forms of on demand entertainment, turned off or on at will. The internet just has a wider range of channels to search before declaring that nothing is on.

    This is all of course an over simplification and doesn't include other things like the advent of air conditioning and the disappearance of porches from homes. Nor many other factors.

    When I was still just a boy, televisions were still rare to non-existant in my rural working class and farming community. Boys wandered the community with their pocket knives in their pockets either on foot or on bicycles often stopped to visit with a businessman, farmer or retiree sitting on their porch. People made time to talk and you learned things. In those days Saturdays almost always included some form of the following: barn dances, barbecues, fish fries, rodeo, domino tournament, ice cream social and so on. People spent a good bit of their time outside of their house then. Then people started gathering to watch television at the neighbor or relatives house that had one. As the years went on more and more people got televisions and air conditioning. These days if you drop in on someone your disturbing their watching of x show or playing their MMORPG. If I drove back to that same community now and walked around it the only living person I might see is the police officer checking to see if I am wanted for anything because I look supicious for walking around.

    This is the view from an old dumb southern hick but I honestly doubt things were that much different for you yankee city dwellers nor the southern gentry that are of an age to recall the spread of television and air conditioning. And yes I'm that old, though "that" might not be as old as you think. Now pardon me while I scratch my butt and try to figure out what y'all were rambling on about with all that high falluting talk.:P

  77. A more civil place by Original+Replica · · Score: 1

    The GP interaction between Robotron23 and Aussersterne is a great example of why many people have better friends via the internet, that same heated discussion in a bar or party would likely not have gone on for so long or been so civil. I am always pleased when I see /.ers disagree with respect and understanding, I wish it were a more common human practice.

    --
    We are all just people.
    1. Re:A more civil place by Kohath · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but in a bar, there would have been beer.

      It was a really long (-winded) discussion that ended with poorly summarized conclusions:

      Good friends are compassionate and generous without expecting an equal measure in return. These people are increasingly hard to find. And not because of the Internet.

      It's a good conclusion, but it was a long (thirst-inducing) way to go. I'm not sure how this conclusion relates to the original advice to leave the office a little earlier, but nevermind.

      More to the point though, it's clear that everyone wants compassionate, generous, low-maintenance friends. Who wouldn't? Being one of these people doesn't lead to finding these people though. So the rule is that no one gets to be happy. Just stop blaming the Internet.

      If that's not an argument in favor of a beer, then I've never heard one.

  78. simple math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    N. of real friends + N. of virtual friends = Const.

  79. Totally off-topic.... by Chmcginn · · Score: 1

    Is that actually your place, and if not, how long did it take you to find it?

    --
    Have you been touched by his noodly appendage?
  80. it's just laziness by SuzieQueue123 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Think back to a time before Google. When you watched a movie and thought the actor looked familiar, but didn't know who it was. You called a friend, told them to tune in, and they told you who it was. Usually this would prompt a conversation and maybe some plans to hang out. Now, the instinct is to look it up online. No social interaction necessary. Instant gratification.

    Enter MySpace. Now if you want to know what your friends are doing, you just look at your event invites. If you don't want to go, there's no need to make excuses over the phone. Just say you forgot to look. You don't have the benefit of that friend pulling your leg telling you it just might be fun. It's easy to miss out on things this way. But it's SO much less of a hassle, right?

    The flow of information has gone from push to pull. You can now look up only what you want to see and ignore everything else. Even searches about heated topics like war, religion, etc - the result of your search depends on how you perform it. People aren't often challenged by new and opposing information. They have enough online friends that share their opinions. When you talk to people in the real world about the same subjects, you are getting a somewhat random mix of opinions. You risk having to defend your view and even having to change it. Online friends are easier to deal with because you've pre-screened them based on their interests.

    Look at radio. It used to be that we were given a set of songs that were repeated over and over until we liked them or tuned out. The only way to hear new music was to go - gasp - OUT to a bar or club. Now we can download just the songs we want, or check Pandora for recommendations.

    My point is that people are lazy. It's natural to look for the path of least resistance. Often times, the internet is that path. The internet only got as popular as it did because of this. It's not a chicken-egg thing. People created the internet. We only have ourselves to blame for the isolation. We asked for it.

    Is it really such a bad thing? We look back fondly on a time before the internet. We think that time was wonderful because it no longer exists. We remember study groups at the library and honestly think they are better than independent research online. But we forget how interaction with others often slows down our individual progress. You're only as strong as the weakest link. If the collective knowledge of your own pool of friends is all you had, would you know as much as you know now? Or is it that we are starting to believe that knowledge isn't all it's cracked up to be? What can you do with it when you are all alone?

    Maybe it is better for people to help each other, to strengthen the weakest link instead of tossing him overboard as dead weight. Sure, that's better for society. But not for the individual. What we are seeing now is the struggle between the two. At the moment the individual is the one who is winning out, and that is why Americans are perceived as shallow and selfish.

    1. Re:it's just laziness by couchslug · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Shrinking social networks? Not for me! I'm 47 and feel zero nostalgia for pre-internet days. I found them suffocating. Thanks to computers, I keep in touch with my friends worldwide that I would otherwise forget to write to. I can meet someone when I travel or deploy, then keep in touch for many years.

      --
      "This post is an artistic work of fiction and falsehood. Only a fool would take anything posted here as fact."
    2. Re:it's just laziness by rs79 · · Score: 1

      7 paragraphs saying how lazy we all are?

      Would you have written 7 paragraphs on this in the pre-internet era?

      --
      Need Mercedes parts ?
    3. Re:it's just laziness by Elemenope · · Score: 1

      It would have been two paragraphs; same information, more concise package. It is ironic that computers encourage verbosity in writing as much as laziness in interaction. It is, I suppose, a different sort of laziness: it takes much more effort to convey information efficiently. I personally think the phenomenon is due to a few factors, including the ease of editing, coupled with a lack of real-space confinment for the writing, and also the relative increase in typing speed that relates typing more closely, speedwise, to thought and speech rather than the more plodding pace of hand-writing. Think about it: on AIM or other 'chat' software, the 'writing' is practically in real time, a tempo of delivery for which writing was never designed.

      --
      All the techniques ever used to make men moral have been themselves thoroughly immoral... (Nietzsche)
    4. Re:it's just laziness by siriuskase · · Score: 1

      Writers Cramp, when I type everything, I don't get writers cramp. I can type all day and maybe get a backache but no writers cramp.

      Back in the old days, I like to type for that very reason, but if I made a mistake, I had to retype it or put x's over my mistake if it was casual writing, but a lot of that and I figured even my friends would think I was stupid.

      Now, I can type accurately most of the time and fix mistakes quite quickly, so I can go on all day and all night if I like, this box gives me plenty of room. And if I screw up, I doubt the /. community will come and kill me or do anything to my reputation that I didn't deserve.

      --
      If you must moderate, please moderate as irrelevent, not something bad, because I'm sure someone will find this interest
    5. Re:it's just laziness by MrCopilot · · Score: 1
      We look back fondly on a time before the internet. We think that time was wonderful because it no longer exists.

      Maybe you remember it fondly,but I look at it as the dim ages. With little cloisters of knowledge that you had to seek far and wide to get .01% of the information now readily available to anyone who can read and type.

      --
      OSGGFG - Open Source Gamers Guide to Free Games
    6. Re:it's just laziness by Azari · · Score: 1
      When you watched a movie and thought the actor looked familiar, but didn't know who it was. You called a friend, told them to tune in, and they told you who it was. Usually this would prompt a conversation and maybe some plans to hang out.

      Really. In the old days I'd watch a movie, think I saw someone that looked familiar, and since I didn't want to ring up a friend to bother them about the failings of my memory, it'd nag the back of my mind for ages.

      Now I look it up on IMDB, go trawling through what else they've acted in, and often find something else to hire out next time I'm out. This is usually accompanied by IMing friends something along the lines of "did you know [random actor in mainstream movie] also did the voice for [character x] in [video game y]?", usually leading to, gosh, a conversation and occasionally plans to hang out.

    7. Re:it's just laziness by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 4, Interesting

      While I'm not sure about the merits of being peer-pressured into doing something you don't want to do, I think you're definitely off the mark on the push/pull dilemma. If anything we are more constantly bombarded with data we either don't agree with or find outright offensive to our values, a good amount of it is such utter bullshit that I would argue no one would even sat it in a face to face environment. With close friends you have a sort of pre-selected group of people who think alike, they may disagree, but never about anything 'important'. With any given search of something on the internet you're going to get every random opinion that may exist (along with 10% obligatory porn). Gradually, as with anything else, you learn to filter out sources of opinions that bother you, in the end I think it's a wash.

      I'm not sure why Americans in particular are shallow and selfish as the internet is catching on comparatively slow here. If the article premise is true, and the internet is tearing apart human social fabrics, then you'd think Koreans or Chinese would be the most shallow and selfish. Not something I've personally experienced

      To be slightly polemic (and borrowed slightly from Asimov), if you extropolate technological advancement to the end state, where anything can be had, what would you consider to be utopia? Some people envision the perpetual party state, having fun with friends and living closely with their peers, bound together by social laws and manners. Others might envision complete self-sufficiency, the anti-society, with no undesired external contacts and absolute freedom. I'm not sure that anything is wrong with either end state, we could site pro's and con's to either one, I personally favor the latter.

    8. Re:it's just laziness by dias_flac · · Score: 1

      Interesting comment...

      --
      "Oh, yes, you did, Brett...yes, you did!"
    9. Re:it's just laziness by coolGuyZak · · Score: 1
      a good amount of it is such utter bullshit that I would argue no one would even sat it in a face to face environment.
      The irony of finding this on slashdot... ;)
    10. Re:it's just laziness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I lived in South Korea for 3 years (2000-2003) and Japan (2003-present) and both Koreans and Japanese are extremely shallow people. The average 30-year old person has no clue about what is going on outside their respective country, and know little if any of the politics going on within it.

      The reason I went to South Korea was because I thought Americans were too materialistic. I was shocked to find Koreans much, much more materialistic. Same for Japanese.

  81. roughly 1500 people were sampled by HiThere · · Score: 1

    Did they sample the same people in both years? Then the ages were very different.

    Otherwise that means about 750/year for two years. This would not have passed me in a stat class as an undergrad. I would have been told to increase my sample size. I also don't know just what the questions were, since they are ambiguous as to the reason (possibly the internet, possibly working longer hours. They don't eliminate that it might be something they haven't mentioned...like less disposable income, more dangerous streets, whatever...I'm just spinning, you can't find out by guessing, you need to ask.

    But the headline doesn't even reflect the results of the study, poor as it was (unless it was the reporting that was poor).

    --

    I think we've pushed this "anyone can grow up to be president" thing too far.
  82. Conservative drivel by vga_init · · Score: 4, Insightful

    - Widespread prosperity shields people from the ordinary trials of life that build character and bring people together.

    I've met a lot of people, including people who live or have grown up outside of the United States. Enduring adversity does not appear to have any appreciable impact on their character. On the other hand, it has more to do with personal values and the way they were raised. I've noticed that in general people who have suffered more "trials of life" actually are more poorly adjusted and have more personal problems and flaws in their character.

    - Peace deprives people of the bond of a common cause

    Why don't you just wear a sign on your forehead that says "Bush 4 Life"? Peace deprives people of having to die, maybe, but it never hurt anyone's ability to bond socially.

    - Feminization weakens us by favoring consiliation and non-confrontationalism over resolve and steadfastness

    Looking back at the very recent cold war, I'd say these "weak" values managed to save us from destroying civilization. Favoring consiliation and non-confrontationalism has nothing to do with feminizim or the female sex; you're assigning your own conservative cultural values to other people. Maybe you are taking this for granted, but it's a gross error. That aside, the worst people I have ever known were those with "resolve" and "steadfastness." Intelligent people naturally favor more clever solutions than simply using power to force their own "rightness."

    Open up a dictionary right now and look up the word "conciliation." You spew all this crap about creating bonds and bringing people together, and then you outright denounce conciliation as a weak feminine value? Go figure.

    - Government policies have undermined the importance of families on dozens of fronts

    You're not specific enough--examples please.

    - Right and wrong have given way to "political awareness" tests. Say the right things and you're golden.

    You always have to please authority--that's life. Of course, you loath having to pay lip service to a culture that is not your own, and you have a strong urge to devalue you it and attack it, citing "political correctness" as some sort of liberal conspiracy, making yourself look like the brave little guy sticking it to the man. Spare me.

    1. Re:Conservative drivel by Kohath · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Lots of non sequiturs here. I'll ignore them.

      Enduring adversity does not appear to have any appreciable impact on their character.

      You probably have a different definition of character that I do. I'm not taliking about political beliefs. I don't confuse the two.

      Ordinary trials of life, like temporary difficulty paying for necessities, lead to people learning how to take care of themselves in tough situations. It leads to an understanding of the value of help from family and friends. And it leads people to value something besides their immediate whimsical happiness. That's what I mean by character in this context.

      And in this context, someone with character would be more likely to be a good friend.

      Peace deprives people of having to die, maybe, but it never hurt anyone's ability to bond socially.

      Are you saying that war doesn't lead to people sharing a common cause? Because it obviously does. And having things in common helps people to bond socially. It's silly to argue. And I don't understand why you'd want to.

      That aside, the worst people I have ever known were those with "resolve" and "steadfastness."

      So don't make friends with them then?

      But if you make friends with shallow, flighty, lightweights then they'll abandon or betray you at their whim. It doesn't seem wise.

      Of course, you loath having to pay lip service to a culture that is not your own, and you have a strong urge to devalue you it and attack it, citing "political correctness" as some sort of liberal conspiracy, making yourself look like the brave little guy sticking it to the man. Spare me.

      I think you miss the point. The loss of right and wrong is the problem. Someone who doesn't know right from wrong can't be a trustworthy friend.

      I know you have a big political axe to grind, but it's off topic.

    2. Re:Conservative drivel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Are you saying that war doesn't lead to people sharing a common cause? Because it obviously does. And having things in common helps people to bond socially.

      Having known more than my share of holocaust survivors, Vietnam vets, and their descendants in my life, I can assure you that you wouldn't know the effects of war if they raped your sister in the ass before setting her on fire.

    3. Re:Conservative drivel by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1
      Are you saying that war doesn't lead to people sharing a common cause? Because it obviously does.
      The only thing remotely similar to a common cause I see during war is the anti-war movement. NEXT.
      But if you make friends with shallow, flighty, lightweights then they'll abandon or betray you at their whim. It doesn't seem wise.
      And if you make friends with people who consider "resolve", "steadfastness", and "consistency" the key traits they'll stand by you when you orchestrate the Holocaust. I'd rather have those people betrayed.
      The loss of right and wrong is the problem.
      No, the problem is the constructed systems of 'right and wrong' designed to keep the good passive and the bad active.
      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
    4. Re:Conservative drivel by Kohath · · Score: 1

      The only thing remotely similar to a common cause I see during war is the anti-war movement.

      Indeed. You agree with me then. A war leads individuals in the anti-war movement to have a common cause. Individuals who support a war also have a common cause with each other. Soldiers who fight together, on either side, have a common cause. I'm sure some lasting friendships will develop among people because of what they share.

      The rest of your post seems to be missing the point. The point is to identify factors that lead to close friendships and to point out what stands in the way.

      Congradulations on saying words that lead to you being congradulated though.

  83. redundant turds by llamaxing · · Score: 1

    With all these jokes about Mypsace and Facebook, I think I have missed some really valuble insight on the topic at hand. Good job, Redundants.

  84. the wrong viewpoint by arkaino · · Score: 1

    It's not due to lack of friends that someone spends much time on the internet, niether they lack friends because they spend much time on the internet.

    It's just about people's interests.

    You manage to find more people interested in the same things you are on the inet than in real life, just that.

    cheers

  85. Maybe not usual, but... by IANAAC · · Score: 1
    Add to the Internet: 1. Your car 2. Your cell phone 3. Your cable television 4. Your DVDs and home theater 5. Your iPod and headphones

    My situation may be abnormal, but...

    1. I rarely drive, since I live in a big city with good public transportation.
    2. Said public transportation is underground for most of my trip, whic prevents me from using my cell phone.
    3. That has declined drastically because of the internet.
    4. Because people generally don't know how to behave in theaters, yes, definitely, I watch movies at home.
    5. Much prefer a book on the train. Many times, someone will see what I'm reading and that will start a conversation.

  86. Obligatory profit... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    1. Wait for social skills to be destroyed by Internet

    2. Create http://www.frappr.com/ and release it to all the myspace kiddies.

    3. Partner with cab companies, delivery places, and arms dealers.

    4. Profit!

  87. Because of the internet I have plenty of friends! by JoeCommodore · · Score: 3, Funny
    Why just today a bunch of friends wrote - there was Tim, Sinjin and Elrond letting me know about my problem with the gym & weight loss, and don't forget Mike who told me how to increase my love muscle!

    I getmail from all the gals too, such as Sonjia and Marci, who both saw my stats on a dataing site (funny I never signed up for any dating sites...) but they REALLY want to meet me!

    That guy who wrote the article must just be a loser. ;-D

    --
    "Enjoy what you're doing! If it becomes drudgery, you're doing it wrong!" - Jim Butterfield
  88. "face-to-face" meetings are highly overrated by RKBA · · Score: 1

    "New technology links people over greater distances, but cuts into face-to-face meeting time, the researchers said."

    Personally I think "face-to-face" meetings are highly overrated. It's much easier to "walk away" from someone on the net than it is in real life.

  89. Re:Stop passing the buck QWZX by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most people bore me.

    If most people bore you, that indicates that YOU are boring, not them.

  90. How About a Real Study by McLuhanesque · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Like the one published at the beginning of the year by the Pew Internet and American Life Project.
    The Strength of Internet Ties, authored by Jeffrey Boase, John Horrigan, Barry Wellman, and Lee Rainie found "The internet and email aid users in maintaining their social networks and provide pathways to help when people face big decisions" The press release that publicized the report says, "One major payoff comes when people use the internet to press their social networks into action as they face major challenges. People not only socialize online, but they also incorporate the internet into their quest for information and advice as they seek help and make decisions. ... One major benefit comes when people want to mobilize their networks as they face problems or significant decisions. The Pew Internet Project survey finds that internet users are more likely than non-users to have been helped by those in their networks as they faced important events in their life. "Internet use provides online Americans a path to resources, such as access to people who may have the right information to help deal with family health crises or find a new job," says John Horrigan, Associate Director for Research at the Pew Internet Project."

    The Duke/Arizona study is flawed in its analysis, as it interprets correlation as indicating causality, a common mistake among quantitative researchers.

  91. it's the people stupid! by obnoxiousbastard · · Score: 1

    Again we have a troll for a journalist that seeks to blame human behavior on technology!!!

    There was no anti-social activity or behavior prior to the internet!? Dumbass!

    --
    Is that a SCSI connector or are you just glad to see me?
  92. Friends? by linebackn · · Score: 1

    What are these "friends" of which you speak?

    They sound most interesting, where can I find one of those?

  93. Lets play a game! by frickendevil · · Score: 1

    Since we have started, lets continue our game of "point the finger", i blame videogames for violence, even the violence pre-dating videogames! Whose next?

  94. Got to be simpified anwer by thomasa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think the decline of social clubs and organizations has been going in for many
    decades. I would blame, not the Internet but Television, The Interstate highway
    system, and Subburbs. I think they are way our of date in their study. There
    used to be tons of social networks, organizations and support groups in society.
    Now days no on belongs to them. E.g., the Jaycees, The Odd fellows, The Daughters
    of the American Revolution, other civic organizations, etc. If I were dictator
    of this country, I would ban Television.

    Quote from Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_capital
    Social capital "refers to the collective value of all 'social networks' and the inclinations that arise from these networks to do things for each other," according to Robert Putnam, author of Bowling Alone and the concept's leading exponent (though not its originator). According to Putnam and his followers, social capital is a key component to building and maintaining democracy. Putnam says that social capital is declining in the United States. This is seen in lower levels of trust in government and lower levels of civic participation. Putnam also says that television and urban sprawl have had a significant role in making America far less connected.
    Unquote

    1. Re:Got to be simpified anwer by kyoko21 · · Score: 1

      Bowling Alone is a good book. Definitely worth a read.

  95. aw by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wish I had someone to share this article with... :(

  96. or by gfody · · Score: 4, Funny

    Girlfriends are to blame. For some reason they hate all your friends and you have to stop hanging out with them or you get no sex.

    --

    bite my glorious golden ass.
    1. Re:or by SonicSpike · · Score: 1

      Girlfriend?

      You must be new here...

      --
      Libertas in infinitum
  97. Nowhere Man by painQuin · · Score: 1

    He's a real nowhere man, sitting in his nowhere land, making all his nowhere plans for nobody

    and

    All the lonely people, where do they all come from?

    --
    A guilty conscience means at least you've got one.
  98. My lack of friends by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1

    are due to other factors. Like moving out of state for college or a new job. Getting married and not having time to spend with friends, which happened to me and many of my other friends. Losing a job, and my friends at the job only wanted to be my friends and dropped communication with me after I left the job or got terminated. There are others, like friends who borrowed money from me, and then stopped communicating with me after they refused to pay it back. Friends that got into drugs and other illicit things that I am not into, and they shut me out. After I graduated from college and had a good paying job, a lot of my friends that struggle with low paying jobs shut me out. I had friends who committed suicide as well. I also got really sick with physical and mental illnesses and a lot of friends turned on me after that happened and it ended up ruining my career when employers discriminated against me because of my illnesses.

    Oh yeah I got Internet friends, but they are not the same as friends that I know in real life.

    I am a loner by nature and I can get by without any friends. I see it now as having less people that can stab me in the back now, based on former experiences.

    --
    Remember, Slashdot does not have a -1 disagree moderation, and no, troll, flamebait, and overrated are not substitutes.
  99. Shrinking of Social Networks? by __aajwxe560 · · Score: 2, Informative

    I just wrote my a paper for an interpersonal communications class on this very subject and finished it about literally 4 hours ago, so how odd this comes up on Slashdot. To summarize why I disagree with the assessment from my simple minded point of view:

    In-Person relationships are based on a whole stage process that psychology has spent many, many years developing and refining. It is actually a fairly interesting model, and does seem applicable in many situations. The methods of how we communicate and open up to each other now with Instant Messanger, Slashdot message boards, BBS's, FidoNet, or whatever completely takes a lot of these concepts and throws them out the window. This is of great confusion to some by-the-book psychologists, and therefore, I cannot tell you how many articles I had to parse over in terms of "Whats Better: In-Person Relationships or Cyberspace Relationships." For example, http://www.rider.edu/users/suler/psycyber/showdown .html

    The author contrasts online versus in-person relationships and cyberspace relationships and which type might be better. He specifically poses the questions, "Is it true that real relationships ...are superior ... or relationships in cyberspace better?" I really don't see much value in generalizing both and making such vast assumptions about how either works or which is "better" than the other, though I can appreciate the author's efforts at trying to present a well thought article contrasting the two.

    The author only hints at one such reason why I feel the generalization isn't necessarily fair - "some people may not have the opportunity to develop good relationships in person." If someone is homebound, due to physical limitations or even mental impairment, a potential relationship in cyberspace may be that individuals only avenue or gaining some form of positive communication with the outside world. This contrasts to them living a depressed life as a hermit, and contemplating such things as suicide. I am absolutely confident that even simple online communication has given people a feeling of participating in the real world and prevented suicides.

    Additionally, cyberspace allows us to discuss things that we may not normally feel comfortable discussing in person. I had a friend who was vastly overweight and joined several online chat groups to learn more about gastric bypass, developed many close relationships with people in different online groups, learned much about the procedure and its effects on your personal life, and recently underwent the surgery. I am confident that he would not have simply walked into a support meeting initially searching for information on this, as it just was not in his nature. Near strangers online confided in him very personal information about how this surgery affected their lives, and I don't believe these barriers would have been anywhere near as easily climbed in person.

    I was a groomsman in a wedding a couple of years ago for my friend Aaron, and his wife Tiffanie. He was an office manager living in New Hampshire, and she was finishing a communications degree and lived in Montana (she was also a former Miss Teen Montana). He is a great guy, and most girls regard him as pretty decent looking, though he is very shy and had an extremely difficult time working out relationships with women. He met Tiffanie online in a Yahoo chat forum years ago, and they built a relationship from that point. They learned about each other, started to share secrets and personal information, and truly learned about each others values. This then transpired into phone conversations, and eventually they flew back and forth to meet each other, converting into an in-person relationship. They have been married several years now, and I can honestly say that they are the happiest couple I know.

    I think a better argument is to recognize online chatting for what it is, an

  100. Why stop at two? by mattmacf · · Score: 1

    Women are like Voltron, the more you can hook up, the better it gets.

    (My apologies to RvB. The joke had to be made)

    --
    I only mod funny =D
  101. Yes... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have to agree with you here; yet another manifestation of the spreading influence of late capitalism and its doctrine and practices.

  102. Pew Internet Study Shows Just the Opposite by tom6a · · Score: 2, Interesting

    According to a January Pew/Internet Study, online activity enhances social contact rather than promoting isolation. According to the report, email and the Internet supplements rather than replaces offline communication. 'The larger, the more far-flung, and the more diverse a person's network, the more important email is,' reports Jeffrey Boase, co-author of the study. For example, people who e-mail their friends and family at least once a week are 25% more likely to have phone contact. Internet users, on average, have 37 close friends instead of an average of 30 for non-Internet users. In addition to enhancing social networks, the researchers also discovered that 45% of people turn to their online network to help make major life decisions such as dealing with a major illness, choosing a school, making investment decisions, changing jobs or finding a new place to live. Blog Post: http://www.omninerd.com/news/news.php?nid=509 Study: http://www.pewinternet.org/PPF/r/172/report_displa y.asp

  103. About sex taboos by moosehooey · · Score: 1

    If this is true, why is teenage pregnancy dramatically in places such as Europe which aren't as puritanical? Good sex education reduces these problems, it doesn't increase them.

    1. Re:About sex taboos by Kohath · · Score: 1

      If this is true, why is teenage pregnancy dramatically in places such as Europe which aren't as puritanical? Good sex education reduces these problems, it doesn't increase them.

      Pregnancy at all ages is down in Europe. Europe is heading for some serious demographic changes due to low birth rates. Cultures differ in more ways that their perceived level of puritanism.

  104. Yep. by JasonTik · · Score: 1

    This is true of me.

    Good. Now that we know this is the problem, lets fix it.

    I am going to work to fix it for myself. Your turn.

  105. Decline of the Church, Sprawl/Suburbanization, etc by superguido7 · · Score: 1

    Well, the Internet, while it definitely is a contributor to the growing disconnectedness of our society, is not the only reason for it. The Internet does to the isolation in the sense that many things that once involved human contact now can be done with no human contact. It also contributes in the sense that online friends (which, in my experience are often times of a shallow nature) keep people from going and finding people who live around them that could interact with on a regular basis. Yes, internet friends are good, but most of the time they're spread out all over the country (or world) and human interaction is truly missing something when it is only the written word involved.

    But there's more than that. There are other technologies that, while very convenient, keep us more and more from interacting with the people around us rather than just sticking to what we know. Many people would rather listen to music they know they like or a friend they already know rather than start up a conversation with a total stranger on a subway. And speaking of subways, thanks to the growing suburbanization of the United States mass transit is very rare indeed, and commute times seem to be growing longer and longer. That means more time spent alone and less time and energy to be social with other people once the day is over. Plus, the missed opportunity for interaction with other people that mass transit can provide. Not that riding on a bus with a place full of strangers cannot be an isolating experience, but the single-driver commute eliminates any possibility of any genuine human interaction happening.

    Also, I think that for many people there is no longer a "third place"--a place other than work or home to interact with people that acts as something of a center of the community. I think that this place in many parts used to be (and in some cases still is) the church. I know many people less honest than myself who pretend to be Christians just so they can meet people at church. For those of us who live in religious places, it can be difficult to find a place that acts as a community center as well as a church does. And in many places where the church is no longer a vital part of the community, nothing has replaced as a centerpiece of the community. Instead, people are scattered forth to the various and sundry things that take their interest, few of which involve other people.

    That's what I think, at least. I'm no expert, but it sounds right to me.

  106. Cool by Digital+Vomit · · Score: 1

    I can print out this article and show it to all the jerkasses who think my attitude is the reason I don't have close friends. Suck on that, biatches!

    --
    Modern copyright is theft of culture from everyone and it retards the progress of the useful arts and sciences.
  107. lack of commons and corporate motives by drDugan · · Score: 3, Insightful

    There is one word that is VERY important in this discussion, and I don't see it much on these pages:

    CORPORATIONS

    So in most cases, nobody makes any money when people can connect and help each other feel good and solve each other's problems. Now, if they are connecting and buying coffee, or they are coming togther and buying entertainment, or they are coming together and buying a meal -- then somebody's making a buck. Or maybe they are coming together in a college classroom, or a dance class, or meeting at the mall. there is a buck there too. Let's not even start with bars.

    The one thing I see more and more is the wholesale cash-for-connection thing in the US that is not in other parts of the world. Basically you have to pay to have any place where you can meet *new* people and socialize.

    The other affect corporations have is that they keep most people SO busy working to survive, there is little time or energy left to have many friends. This may be toward a demographic older than most /. readers - but I know in my life, the more the work-a-day world takes my time, there is less time for friends. This also is almost uniquely American.

    Finally, the rise in corporate power has further stratified society along money lines. In the US we have more financial difference between the top and bottom since the early 1900s. There is virtually no middle class anymore. What this leads to is a reluctance of peopel to reach out to others, for fear of crossing the (now huge) social chasm created by wealth disparity.

    I think the rise in power of corporations is largely to blame for destroying the social networks of people - as much or more than the "Internet". Basically, the Internet to me is near-free, near-instant, widely available communication. By ITSELF - more communication will help people connect to more people in more meaningful ways than ever possible before. We have only seen the first 2-5% of what is possible because of the Internet. Instant communication will break down all barriers eventually and lead to abundance.

  108. social crisis ahead by kailash+badu · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Internet not only cut us off from the people we really need to meet up, it also got also to get along with people we should really care about. We break away from our parents, friends, and spouse and chat with someone whom we have never met in real life. we feel safer because we don't have to assume any responsibility there, talk whatever you can , whenever you can, and when you grow out of the relationship, just walk away scot free. So personal relationship are really weak and flimsy these days. Every one seems to be chasing instant gratification. I see a social crisis ahead of us, when we will identify hollowness of instant gratification. There would be too little people who really care about us.

  109. Re: population increase...from immigration by Breakfast+Pants · · Score: 1

    It isn't as simple as that article paints it. Download netlogo and look for one of the simulations in the social section. You can watch the effects of logo 'turtles' only being comfortable if they are around at least some minimum threshold of turtles of the same color as them. The result is always that the turtles will arrange themselves in such a way that those minimum thresholds are passed throughout almost every point in the distribution.

    --

    --

    WHO ATE MY BREAKFAST PANTS?
  110. I don't think that's it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I, for one, really find very little of redeeming value on the Internet. Every single web site I visit for entertainment (yes, including Slashdot) is a site I was tuned into by a friend from the physical world. I've an account on the third-largest forum in the Internet where I'm a moderator, and I know many of the other moderators and the owner from offline. I've a profile on every major social networking site, not all of them terribly current, because certain of my physical friends dogmatically used one and only one, and I wanted to network with them. I've a forum that I visit, for coworkers at my employer only. Then I visit the sundry cnn, banking, etc. which are less for entertainment than for information.

    I'd say I have few close friends in spite of the Internet, not because of it. I'm almost pathologically discerning about who I'll devote any time to conversing with, am a judgemental elitist asshole to people who fall into the categories "dirt poor", "stupid" and "ugly" and am at an okay place with that. I choose to have few friends, but the ones I do have, I know they've got my back through anything, and I've got theirs. And that, to me, is the most important thing.

  111. Define Irony.... by renjipanicker · · Score: 1

    The researchers posted their findings on the Internet, instead of discussing it with their friends.

  112. 39 people? by roman_mir · · Score: 1

    Make it 3 more and then we can ask you what is the question to the Universe and Everything.

  113. Close Friends? Or Friends in General ... by Rie+Beam · · Score: 1

    I think the reason we have fewer friends online is because there's more to becoming friends than just working with them, knowing them, or even living near them: you have to respect them mentally, something almost completely overlooked in the physical world. It's the difference between having a lot of friends and having a few close friends ... every ally you have online is usually a close friend, or at least someone you have a genuine interest in talking to.

    There are exceptions to the rule -- take MySpace, for example. In lowering the classification of a friend from mental relationship to point-and-click buddy, you get into a strange game of numbers. There's no close chance in Hell someone has a close relationship with the hundreds of people on their Friends list and, odds are, they probably haven't even met a fourth. In lowering the bar you've made more friends, but cheapened the definition.

    No offense to those who live to surround themselves, but I'd rather have one good relationship than a thousand distant bodies floating around some club ... but hey, everyone is different. It's really a matter of what you get out of friends; the more friends you have, the less they mean to you and the less you mean to them.

  114. Mars by umbrellasd · · Score: 2, Interesting
    On Mars we absolutely hate this kind of thinking. We like pull technology. We like the ability to choose what we listen to, and we prefer that people not push their idea of reality on us "for our own good", but if they try to that is OK because we will just walk away. The pushers will mistakenly identify that as isolationism, but this is a mistake: such people are not lazy and they are not isolated.

    On Mars, people seek what is new and different. Martians enjoy exploring both sides of an argument, and they are not intent on isolating themselves from anything that is not them. Well, some Martians are--but, that is how they wish it. On Mars, people are allowed to be isolated, if they want, but other Martians don't judge them or spend time trying to educate them about the error of their ways. It's each Martian's responsibility to identify and mend the error of their own ways, if there are any. As a consequence, Martians are about as unlazy as you could imagine, because they know their own progress in life is entirely up to them.

    Martians are very kind and understanding people; they aren't shallow or selfish. They just insist on being who they are, and they don't accept the judgement of others about how they live their life. That doesn't mean that Martians have no respect or understanding for the importance of community. What it means is that they understand the value of accepting what is different, perhaps more than people that spend their time labeling others with words like "lazy", "shallow", and "selfish". Martians know that what might seem lazy to you, may just be work that you are failing to see.

    1. Re:Mars by dias_flac · · Score: 1

      ...Which is why Mars is now uninhabited. ;)

      --
      "Oh, yes, you did, Brett...yes, you did!"
  115. Uhhhh by rob1980 · · Score: 2, Funny

    The number of people who say they have no one to talk to about important matters has more than doubled, according to a new study by sociologists at Duke University and the University of Arizona.

    That's horseshit. If I need to talk about important matters with someone, I'll just message someone in my guild.

  116. Heh by kripkenstein · · Score: 1

    The Slashdot tags for this article are "obvious, fud".

    How can the content be both obvious and FUD? The terms "obvious" and "uncertainty, doubt" generally don't go so well together...

    1. Re:Heh by Best+ID+Ever! · · Score: 1

      Well one of the researchers (I think from Duke) was on NPR yesterday and she said that they didn't find the internet was a major factor in shrinking social circles, so that could account for the FUD part. The biggest factor seemed to be the increased amount of time spent at work.

    2. Re:Heh by SageMusings · · Score: 1

      The Internet is a factor in me having no friends. That's because I spend 12-14 hours-a-day coding shit for the Internet. Who has time for friends when you only have time to come home, pat the kids on the head, and go to sleep?

      The real reason for our dwindling social circles is the fast pace of society and the unrealistic demands of our jobs. For many of us it's "be a hermit or be unemployed".

      --
      -- Posted from my parent's basement
  117. Misreading of the report? by flibbidyfloo · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I believe this may be a misreading of the report. I heard the authors today being interviewed on NPR and the interviewer specifically asked them if the internet had anything to do with the decline. It sounded to me like they were saying that they didn't find a specific correlation between internet use and the reported drop. They cited numerous other causes, like greater geographic distribution (suburbs, etc), and greater racial diversity. I think the study was only in the US, also.

  118. Re:Two Futa by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    even better! 2 chicks with 2 sets of equipment!

  119. caqt%#@#$^ by A-Z0-9$_.+!*'(),-,+p · · Score: 1

    I do not believe in this cock-n-bull!!

    1. Re:caqt%#@#$^ by GnarlyNome · · Score: 1

      It ain't the internet it's Sports Bars
      [I don't wanna drink in front of 32 Televisions all tuned to ESPN

      --
      Diplomacy is the art of saying "Nice doggie" until you can find a rock. Will Rogers
  120. The actual paper! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I can't believe no one has posted this yet.... but here is the link to the actual paper. http://www.asanet.org/galleries/default-file/June0 6ASRFeature.pdf

  121. Fear by umbrellasd · · Score: 0, Troll
    I agree that fear is the problem. The reason we have so much fear is that our populations are increasing heedlessly beyond the carrying capacity of the planet and the average temperatures are rising similarly causing famine, drought, flooding, the rise of infectious diseases, increasingly violent weather patterns, and so on. All because we globally are popping out additional people as fast as possible. And I mean that globally; I know darn well what the birth rates are in the U.S. We went from 4 billion to 9 billion in a few decades, after a span of 4000 years in the millions range. And we industrialized and started spewing toxins into the atmosphere: globally. People should be afraid, and people are afraid. Because we are squeezing ourselves and our planet tighter and tighter and rats don't stop to talk to each other when they are fleeing from a flood. Why are people so isolated? Because they're in a perpetual state of panic and the only thing that gives momentary release is a refuge in the very things that have created the problem: namely hiding (isolation), fucking (more population), and consuming (energy, non-renewable resources). All we do is gobble all the dwindling resources up, and produce greater numbers of ourselves to do more of the same.

    I know this sounds really grim, but in the next 30 years it will sound horrifying because we'll be living the consequences in stark reality. I don't even feel an ounce of doubt about it, because the population numbers just don't lie. Population is going up exponentially and with it goes pollution and consumption of natural resources. The cycle will break, a lot of people will die, and life will change dramatically for what's left. What scares me is not knowing how to survive it. How will it come? Sweeping deathtolls from a disease? Radical political reform that lands you in a police state where most freedoms are curtailed because the general population is too foolish to curb self-destructive behaviors? Mass starvation due to a rapid and severe reduction in the amount of arable land? Where do you go? Where will be safe? What if money becomes valueless? What's your currency? What skills do you have that you can trade for food? What land will be livable? How many millions (billions?) will be competing?

    There's a real possibility that the arctic cap will melt. I'm not saying it's going to happen, just that there's a significant probability. Well, OK. What do you do when there's a significant probability that 100 million people are quite suddenly going to be in desparate need of a place to live with adequate supply of food, water, and energy? How stressful and miserable is that going to be? How much crime will result? Will people start killing each other?

    Those are the things I fear. I watched Katrina with a terrible feeling. Imagine that kind of displacement happening on a global scale...and it's not even that unlikely. 9 billion people. Suppose it's 15 billion in 30 years. Damn right we should be fearful. Fearful that we aren't dramatically changing the way we do things right now. Right now, because we see that it just cannot continue. Do you realize that we don't even discuss carrying capacity of land as a basic part of education anymore? We don't! Our children and even 99% of adults in the U.S., a supposedly very well educated nation have no clue. "Oh, let the public utilities and the grocery stores worry about having enough supply to meet demand." That's really disturbing. Because it means people can't even make educated choices about something as basic as procreation. I think we should all be required to draw sustenance from growing on an area of land. There was a time when we each had a direct responsibility for ensuring adequate food, water, and shelter for our familys as a function of what we could directly obtain from the Earth, but now we've lost sight of that. It's all imaginary monetary units. We don't know the real consequences. Most of us don't even pay attenti

    1. Re:Fear by esper · · Score: 1

      Let me see if I've got this straight. You're saying that people are obsessively paranoid that their kids would be abducted, raped, and killed if they were out of sight for three seconds... because of global warming?

      I really don't see the connection there. mantar's AC post about media reporting on such incidents, with its tendency to overstate and sensationalize them, seems a much more likely cause.

      Your environmental concerns are most likely well-founded, but claiming that they're the sole (or even primary) cause of the entire modern culture of fear is quite a stretch.

  122. Liberal Drivel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "citing political correctness as some sort of liberal conspiracy"

    which it is...

    1. Re:Liberal Drivel by WilliamSChips · · Score: 1

      Proof, please? Oh wait, proof is a liberal conspiracy too, isn't it?

      --
      Please, for the good of Humanity, vote Obama.
  123. But therein lies the rub by hey! · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I could never relate to most locals, really. The best friends I have are those I've met online. A few have moved nearby since and I see them often in real-life.

    Therein lies the rub.

    Leaving aside all the things that friends do for you that require physical presence (e.g. visit you in the hospital after the car accident, feed your pet iguana while you're on vacation), it means that more than ever, birds of a feather flock together.

    Friendship used to be 50% affinity and 50% propinquity. People used to have some friends who were mostly affinity (my friends I see at the monthly meeting of the the local chapter of the Christian Republican Golfers )and some friends mostly by propinquity (my next door neighbor, who's a lesbian Democrat labor activist and used her trusty swiss army knife to get my broken down car started when I was running late for the big job interview).

    Being friends with people who you couldn't relate to beforehand broadens your mind in the way that mere access to the wealth of information the Internet provides can't. It's all too easy to be like a person in a exotic foreign bazaar who heads right to the McDonald's for a Big Mac. Pretty soon your circle of friends contracts until you and your asscoiates in the Virtual Jihadist club reinforce each other in a very peculiar and narrow minded world view. You no longer have people who have both conservative Christian Republicans for friends and liberal gay Democrats. We stick to our golf buddies or fellow lesbian separatists.

    --
    Post may contain irony: discontinue use if experiencing mood swings, nausea or elevated blood pressure.
    1. Re:But therein lies the rub by Nutrimentia · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Being friends with people who you couldn't relate to beforehand broadens your mind in the way that mere access to the wealth of information the Internet provides can't. It's all too easy to be like a person in a exotic foreign bazaar who heads right to the McDonald's for a Big Mac. Pretty soon your circle of friends contracts until you and your asscoiates in the Virtual Jihadist club reinforce each other in a very peculiar and narrow minded world view.

      This is an excellent point that continually is missed by most everyone. Not only has increased use of the internet for socializatoin lead to a decrease in the quality of friendships, it's made it more difficult to access to wider viewpoints. Most of the comments thus far on this story miss the point that it isn't contact with others that is under analysis, it's the quality of the relationship. For those of you shrugging off this news with the attitude that you've got more and better friends thanks to the internet, ask yourself how many of those friends you can talk about serious problems with. How many of them provide the emotional support that we depend on in extreme situations? I'm not at all surprised that the article reports that families are becoming the only contact of this caliber.

      But above and beyond that, the internet, in all of its glory, its very susceptible to becoming an unintentional and unrecognized echo chamber. It's all too easy to spend time on sites that have information that conforms and confirms our cherished beliefs and attitudes. People have to make an effort to read about a variety of viewpoints, but that doesn't happen as much as it ideally would. There are associated risks of these echoes building up and more and more issues become polarized as a result as well.

      I'm not saying that the internet is bad or that we need to find a way to "fix" this problem. But I do think that these trends are real and have real effects on the meatspace society we inhabit as well. For the most part, it is just going to result in a change, neither really better or worse, just different. But it may have a measurable, or at least significant, impact on people, either as communities or on an individual level, be it the fraying of civic ties or simply not having anyone to turn to in times of crisis and need.

    2. Re:But therein lies the rub by feder · · Score: 3, Informative

      This point is actually far from "missed by most everyone". The phenomenon is called exclusivism and is often discussed in research dealing with virtual communities.

    3. Re:But therein lies the rub by Nutrimentia · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I fell victim to hyperbole in my haste to post. "Missed by many" would have been a better way to put it. Or maybe "missed by many would would benefit from being aware." Or maybe even "missed by everyone that isn't missing it", for logical consistency.

    4. Re:But therein lies the rub by Kjella · · Score: 2

      But above and beyond that, the internet, in all of its glory, its very susceptible to becoming an unintentional and unrecognized echo chamber.

      I agree perfectly. Also, Microsoft has never released a product worth using, Linux is the best thing slnce sliced bread, and SCO, RIAA and Sony are worse than raping puppies and drowning children - or was that the other way around?

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    5. Re:But therein lies the rub by tehcyder · · Score: 1
      a person in a exotic foreign bazaar who heads right to the McDonald's for a Big Mac
      I think you mis-spelled "American Tourist."
      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  124. work,work, and more work by wilec · · Score: 1

    For me it is work hours, not much time left for non family relationships, not that much for family either. Of course I am here on /., I guess one could say that proves the point of the article. But the Internet is a social medium that does not require I travel which I have little time or energy for after work, not to mention the upswing in fuel expenses. Since I live in a rural area travel is required for most any non family, non internet social contact. Also the area I currently live in seems to have a high proportion of dumb asses, so there is not that many social relationships that I would want to cultivate anyway.

    Matthew

  125. A very sharp observation. (n/t) by Elemenope · · Score: 1

    n/t

    --
    All the techniques ever used to make men moral have been themselves thoroughly immoral... (Nietzsche)
  126. Geek vengeance! by Chas · · Score: 1

    Why should we be the only ones with extremely small social circles!

    --


    Chas - The one, the only.
    THANK GOD!!!
  127. Oblig South Park Quote by Lazbien · · Score: 1

    Stan: Maybe instead of complaining about corporations being selfish, we should look at ourselves. I mean, is there anything more selfish than doing nothing but getting high and listening to music all day long?

    so... s/getting high and listening to music all day long/maintaining our Myspace and posting on Slashdot/

  128. I was right there with you guys..... by Mistshadow2k4 · · Score: 1

    ... Until recently. I got involved in an animal care charity and found out that my neighbor across the street was involved in it as well. Since then she and I have been hanging out together daily. Hell, she even gives me beer. You can't beat that. And I barely knew her before then. I still spend time on the internet but I've needed to prioritize it, so most of my online time is spent at DeviantArt. My neighbor friend is off to visit relatives today, which is why I'm at slashdot.

    Go do something. Get involved with something you care about. Charities always need help. You'll both be making yourself useful and meeting people. I know this sounds like some kind of social awareness advert, but it's simply the truth.

    --
    I dream of a better world... one in which chickens can cross roads without their motives being questioned.
  129. Not according to an NPR interview by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    NPR interviewed an author of this study the other day, and they asked if the internet was to blame. The author said no. Said they didn't really address causes, but internet usage didn't correlate well at all. Socioeconomic status correlated pretty well...the lower, the worse off people were.

  130. In Soviet Russia... by SonicSpike · · Score: 1

    ...network befriends you!

    --
    Libertas in infinitum
  131. Which is why I love the Boy Scouts by SonicSpike · · Score: 1

    Yes, I am a 24 year old Eagle Scout. If it were not for Scouts I would've spent a good portion of my teenage years in my room on my computer. Scouting forced me to get out beyond my little world and interact with other people in person and also interact with nature.

    In fact, after I graduated from college last year I spent 2 months working as a water ski instructor at a BSA camp in Florida. It was great. A lot of the adult leaders were very interesting people. I met doctors, attorneys, 20 million dollar hedge fund managers, industrial engineers, pro musicians, archeticts, a Cuban exile who graduated from Harvard, etc. Not to mention that I was an adult among a mostly youth staff, and I had a single week at a time to take boys who had never been on skis before, and get them doing slalom runs by the end of the week.

    Although I am not currently involved in Scouting, I will be again one day when (if) I ever have a son of age. I am thinking of joining a college/adult church group to get some female interaction. I do agree that the computer can be a detriment to social networking, but on the other hand, in some respects it can be a boost.

    --
    Libertas in infinitum
  132. What about this guy? by coolGuyZak · · Score: 1
  133. Habitable by umbrellasd · · Score: 1

    Damnit. If I had anyone to talk to about these things before I posted, I would have seen that obvious hole in my argument!

  134. Girlfriends by pele_smk · · Score: 1

    Research from the room of pelesmk concludes that a lack of girlfriends for young IT staff can be associated to the use of computers for extended periods of time.

    1. Re:Girlfriends by spx · · Score: 1

      Which is why most end up trying to find a female mate in the same level of their geekness.

    2. Re:Girlfriends by The+MESMERIC · · Score: 1

      Never had a problem with that ...

      Until Microsoft decided to close MSN Chat down.

      Damn!!

  135. lack of a social life by Tekoneiric · · Score: 1

    and here I was thinking it was the fact that I'm one of the in between people. I'm not religious, don't go to clubs, and work the over night shift...

    --
    *It's not what you can do for the Dark Side but what the Dark Side can do for you!*
  136. Re: the other way around.... by Nutrimentia · · Score: 1

    Linux is the worst thing since raping puppies and drowning children?

  137. What cute. A neofacist. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    So we need war and to kill each other (putting aside our "feminine" skills as you describe them) in order to better our society?

    Who are you? The son of Stalin?

    We had plenty of people that found that peace was not an incentive good enough to unify people and they went on rampage (you really don't want me to enumerate them, do you?) Most of the leaders on those circumstances used their resolve and steadfastness and got a pile of corpses as just reward to their selfless endeavours.

    To what purpose?

    To kill thousends or millions of innocent people.

    Give me our current shallow and purposeless world anytime. No amount of purposefulness is worth living the horrors we lived in the XXth century (and that others re living today, thanks to our taxes).

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:What cute. A neofacist. by Kohath · · Score: 1

      So we need war and to kill each other... [rest of your nonsense deleted]

      Who said that? Certainly not me. Not anyone else either. Pay attention and get a clue.

  138. Poor sod. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    To believe that bonding to kill other humans beings is worthy of praise just about says all what we need to know about you.

    Pathetic.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.