By Jonathan Kay
Friday, November 04, 2022
These
last few days have had me thinking a lot about a particularly sharp bit of
second-season dialogue from that underrated NBC comedy, Superstore. The
main characters are taking turns reading scathing Yelp reviews of their workplace (which is
basically a fictionalized version of Walmart). “Yeah, 99 percent of the
Internet is just people tearing other people down,” laments Jonah Simms (Ben Feldman),
the show’s highly progressive and intellectually self-satisfied straight man.
“It’s actually why I’m considering leaving social media.”
“Just do it,
already,” responds the hilariously bitchy Mateo Liwanag (Nico Santos). “You
don’t get points for talking about it.” (Their co-worker
Cheyenne then adds, “My friend Corona sells her pee on the Internet”—which will
strike you either as an outstanding bonus joke, or a grotesque non sequitur
depending on whether you’ve seen the show or not.)
Since
Elon Musk marched into Twitter headquarters last week, some
version of this Jonah-Mateo exchange has played out on thousands of threads,
often according to the same pattern. In Act One, some worthy personality
will tweet earnestly about how awful it is to
remain on a Musk-sullied online platform, while also suggesting, vaguely, that
the associated psychic pain may lead this esteemed figure to delete his or her
account altogether. In Act Two, followers beg their disconsolate
alpha to remain on Twitter so that they may continue combining forces against
the evil Muskovians. Then in Act Three, the pity party gets crashed by
Mateo-esque smart-alecks, who unleash a fusillade of mean-girl memes into the
replies. A popular one these days is: “This isn’t an airport. You don’t have to
announce your departures.”
Such
vignettes capture the core dysfunctionality of Twitter: Everyone thinks the
place would be great, if only we could be rid of all those other guys.
For doctrinaire progressives, the preferred means for doing so has always been
top-down censorship (or, if you prefer, “community standards”). But that dream
has now been crushed: Even if Musk doesn’t eliminate content moderation
altogether, he’s never going to give the Jonah Simms crowd anything near the
bubble-wrapped social-media experience they want. That’s why these goodbye-cruel-Twitter
threads have such a glum, self-pitying quality to them. It’s one thing to put
up with dissenting opinions. It’s another thing to know that you’ll always have
to put up with them.
Since I
can remember, the most popular subject on Twitter has been the terribleness of
Twitter. And wrapped up in this endless kvetching is often the wistful conceit
that things were once different—that there was some golden era when Twitter was
cheery and uplifting. But as someone who’s been using the service regularly for
more than a decade, I can attest that such a period never existed.
Yes,
things got more agitated in recent years because of the proliferation of bots,
fake accounts, Donald Trump, the cult-like nature of the Great Awokening, and
the mentally and emotionally destabilizing effects of COVID lockdowns. But even
in Twitter’s early days, the experience was always tense. There are hundreds of
millions of people on Twitter who don’t know you, and don’t care about your
feelings. And no matter how careful you are about saying the right thing,
there’s always a chance that some of them will think that what you have to say
is stupid (or, worse, insensitive). Even if they never come for you, it’s always
in the back of your mind that they could. And this isn’t a problem
that Musk, or anyone else, can solve with a set of technical fixes.
I don’t
think it’s a coincidence that my friends who complain loudest about Twitter
usually can’t really articulate why they’re on the platform at
all—beyond the fact that their peers are on Twitter, and that gaining a lot of
followers is seen as a marker of status. So they just kind of mope around on
the site in an aimless way, absent-mindedly tweeting or retweeting odds and
ends that seem to accord with their worldview (or, more precisely, the
worldview that they imagine is expected of them). In this way, they end up
experiencing all the usual anxieties that attend Twitter usage, but without
ever getting a level of attention or stature that accords with their intellect
and real-life accomplishments.
Naturally,
they conclude that the fault must lie with the platform itself. And many then
spend much of their time curating block lists, hoping that this will solve the
problem. In some cases, these lists can be useful crutches as a means to
self-protect from truly abusive individuals. But in general, when you block
someone, you’re sending the message to others (and to yourself) that third
parties have the power to get under your skin and affect your self-esteem
(which is why I don’t block anyone on Twitter). If that’s the
case, it’s a sign you might not be a good fit for Twitter in the first place.
By
contrast, the people I know who get the most satisfaction out of Twitter
generally are capable of explaining what it is about the experience that they
find professionally useful. Their utilitarian understanding of the medium lets
them manage online life in a compartmentalized, arm’s-length way. They don’t
make the mistake of blurring the Twitter experience (or the platform’s
associated status hierarchies) with the business of navigating real human
existence. And their self-esteem doesn’t soar or plunge based on how they’re
treated by Twitter on any given day.
One
trick here is to make sure you never take Twitter too seriously. The people who
always seem the most joyless and angry tend to be those high priests who
present themselves on Twitter as guardians of sacred truths, while expecting
their followers to play the role of obedient parishioners. Since nothing is
sacred on Twitter, their sermons predictably attract mockery and criticism.
That mockery and criticism, in turn, becomes the priest’s dominant subject of
complaint, thereby setting off more cycles of pontification, derision, and
self-pity. No wonder they’re always so “exhausted.”
In my
case, Twitter is mostly for telling jokes and satirizing sanctimonious
blowhards. I also use it to get the word out about a whole grab bag of
subjects—food, sports, canine hair care—that I don’t have much opportunity to
write about in my day-to-day journalism. I’ve always been a ham at heart, and I
love doing Twitter shtick precisely because the format—especially the
quote-tweet—mimics the timeless comic cadence of straight-man setup followed by
punch line. Since satire is a fun and effective way of communicating my ideas
about the world, Twitter serves my functional needs well. But no matter how
many likes and retweets I get, I remember that I’m essentially just a hack
looking for a laugh, not a sage dispensing ancient wisdom.
For
others (and me, occasionally), Twitter is about selling products, promoting
articles, books, and podcasts, raising awareness about pet causes, venting
about the local sports team, and a hundred other tasks besides. But the same
principle applies in all these cases: At its best, Twitter is an online tool to
help you achieve some defined goal in the offline world. It doesn’t have any
value in and of itself, and the electronic baubles we win from strangers on
Twitter can’t be redeemed for the love and respect of the friends and family
whose opinions should actually matter to us.
If
Twitter helps you achieve concrete goals, that’s great. But if it doesn’t,
well, learning that fact can be useful, too—since it lets you know that maybe
now’s a good time to log off for good.
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