Kentish Gazette Canterbury & District

Social media’s mixed blessing

- Ed Mcconnell emcconnell@thekmgroup.co.uk

Social media. It’s a (sometimes) wonderful thing. As I write this, I’m acutely aware that I’m more in touch with the world than ever before.

While there’s a lot to be said for this ever-increasing interconne­ctivity, it can also be a depressing concept.

Knowing what everyone thinks about pretty much everything can be overwhelmi­ng. It’s often frustratin­g when you don’t agree and hard to look past the fact that the outspoken few are often the minority.

If comments on Mailonline were a reliable barometer of public opinion we’d be living in the Third Reich. But we’re not. Far from, it in fact.

This often dangerous response is most notable in the wake of tragedies.

Whether it be people apportioni­ng blame for fatal crashes minutes after they have happened or instinctiv­ely pointing fingers at a religion in the wake of cold-blooded murders, the venomous rumour mill seems to be gathering pace.

When a frenzied knife attack claimed the lives of Mia AyliffeChu­ng and Thomas Jackson last week, reports rapidly started circulatin­g about the killer’s motive.

In such situations it’s more important than ever to stop for a moment and avoid jumping to conclusion­s. As any academic will tell you, Facebook is not a reliable source.

Miss Ayliffe-chung’s family have now taken the decision to have a passage from the Qur’an read at her funeral in an effort to counter the misreprese­ntation of her death.

It’s an important step to take, but it shouldn’t be up to them. We need to all start realising we should be balancing social media’s undoubted benefits with a dash of responsibi­lity for what we write.

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