We do not feel interpellated by the dual failure of hypercapital-
ism and the Third World because our societies see themselves as an
ephemeral but solid reticular environment made up of social ties
whose profusion compensates for their fragility. In this way, the In-
ternet would have made the sociological utopia of communism a
reality: a delicate balance between individual freedom and commu-
nal kindness—or at leastwhateversurrogate Facebook and Google+
can provide. Seventeenth-century philosophers used the metaphor
of a clock to describe the natural world and human subjectivity.
Today, social scientists use the metaphor of the Web to explain all
kinds of relationships, whether they are mediated by digital tech-
nology or not: immigration, labor, sex, culture, family . . .
@livinghell If you mean to say how great the internet is, how it could connect, why not say that?
@livinghell I, too, have missed to add info like "songtexts without context", but my blunder was a bit more inflammatory, theoretically. If anyone had payed attention to it ^^
@admitsWrongIfProven Oh i think i only read your second post lol. yeah.
@livinghell We need to get off social and get together, kill some nazis. Until that happens i just love all weird people.
@admitsWrongIfProven Yeah, this is a quotation from a book call Sociophobia. The point is supposed to ironic. it is against technoutopianism.