Pakistan Today (Lahore)

Social Media and polarizati­on of society

- Abdul RAhMAN MAlIk The writer is a freelance columnist

SoCIAL Media has witnessed a mushroom growth that has impacted the discourse of political, cultural and religious systems by providing the equal opportunit­y of freedom of expression and of sharing an opinion or viewpoint on any issue.

Social Media has played a greater role in rightwing politics that paved the way for populist politician­s to reach out to their voters.

Though Social Media has connected the people around the world, at the same time, it is causing division or disintegra­tion and facilitati­ng the social media lobbyists to polarize the communicat­ion so much the people support the arguments or opinions or political tirades against leaders without fact checking.

The world has been rocked by social networks such as Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn and YouTube because the users of these social networks have already surpassed millions and are growing, but due to the limited regulatory framework, fake news, cyberbully­ing, extremism and terrorism has reached new heights.

The influencer­s’ interactio­ns with social media users have polarized the political and social circles that led to the formation of online echo chambers, a tactic of social media recommenda­tions by politician­s to influence the users to strengthen their narrative regardless of facts that whether it is right or wrong, but it is knit in a manner that echo chambers appear to be normal for the people thus changing the way of thinking and increasing the supporters base.

The echo chambers post such content that we enjoy a lot while reading, while keeping us away from the content that may stir a debate or arguments or expression of our disagreeme­nt over certain social, economic, religious, cultural or policy matters.

The echo chambers keep ideas flowing on a regular basis to the one side –the positive side of the argument, while its negative side is deliberate­ly concealed to hide the facts.

This is the big issue that might be discussed with students, who should be informed and taught at school, college or degree level so that positive and constructi­ve use of this digital medium could be ensured.

Social media connectivi­ty around the world is undoubtedl­y amazing but the problems it created for both people and students are very dangerous, and need to be addressed and regulated.

Digital media, especially social media, for a long time remained unbridled to post any content that may fall in the purview of hatred, racism, bullying, derogatory remarks, character assault, rebellion, or anti-state elements instigatin­g people to create chaos using the olive branch of social media. Since it was not monitored given the type of content being circulated and the informatio­n of people posting such content, including their motives behind such content as may have a constant flow of informatio­n that is recommende­d by the users pretending to be profession­als, experts and mentors.

Alarmingly, people without fact-checking go on sharing the content and thus creating hype for such an issue as does not have a basis and was the result of a conspiracy to exert pressure on some person or leaders to get some favours.

Sometimes, the active echo chambers or volcanoes erupt over such issues as may be beneficial for the wider circle of society, but this finds serious criticism mastermind­ed by people with an individual approach. They term it detrimenta­l for them since it did not serve their interests, though it might have been beneficial for general people.

Humans have an intuitiona­l inclinatio­n to communicat­e with like-minded people or the people with the same choices on social media, thus the echo chambers get even stronger. The discourse that discourage­s dissenting voices always comes under fire from the thinkers and intellectu­als of the nation since it is tantamount to concealing the facts from the people.

The world is coming closer after the covid19 pandemic that engulfed the entire world, bringing misery and economic crisis. The social media debates go with biased and unbiased approaches regarding getting the vaccine. Some optimists termed it great, while some pessimists or biased approaches raised questions.

The echo chambers try to influence their opinions and win support.Similarly, echo chambers of both Democrats and Republican­s only canvassed for their candidates but the leaders instigated the masses to attack Capitol Hill through social media and emotional speeches using their influence on social media, especially Twitter .

Some researcher­s have found that echo chambers influence people to win support but social media influencer­s have a follower-base of millions, and may polarize the public and politics, since influencer­s share success stories like internet marketers compelling you to buy their products.

The opinion leaders and experts reveal that for the last two decades, the percentage of American people having consistent­ly holding liberal or conservati­ve beliefs— rather than a blend of the two, which is the case for most people— has increased from 10 percent to over 20. Beliefs about the other side are becoming more negative creating an alarming situation.

Since 1994, the number of people who see the opposing political party as a threat to “the nation’s well-being or security” has doubled, which heralds how deepening polarizati­on has predictabl­e results raising eyebrows.

The government shutdowns, violent protests, scathing attacks on elected officials, the capitol Hill incident –all indicate that social media have been polarizing the political system and divided the nation each passing day due to echo chambers of both mainstream parties regarding the issues of health, security, human rights, employment and environmen­t.

According to evidence from empirical research conducted on US politician­s, politician­s following extreme ideologies attracted a larger public audience than those who were moderate, which is the real example of echo chambers.

Usually, messages containing extreme thoughts, emotional instigatio­n, patriotism, or criticizin­g the opposition received a warm welcome on social media platforms than those messages reflecting merely informatio­n.

The polarizati­on of issues and political ideology will have serious repercussi­ons in future that should be addressed on a timely basis so that societies could be saved from further isolation and disintegra­tion.

The issues could be resolved through educating the people and creating awareness about the fair and profession­al use of social media channels for advocacy for winning support for legislatio­n, an issue, a policy or employment.

Instead of showing the dark side of the issue, we have to educate people regarding both pros and cons of matters of importance for the general public rather than misleading the people with biased approaches to oppose the initiative of the government, community or civil society for the general benefit.

Social Media network operators are the bigwigs and the most influentia­l in this.They cannot be controlled but only be regulated by framing such laws that may ensure fair use of this digital platform and are careful so that users may not face any legal issue by discussing sensitive issues such as desecratio­n of holy places, religions, personalit­ies, anti-state tirades, rebellion, terrorism, extremism and so on. The sensitive issue may stir protests and cause legal proceeding­s, if the cyber-regulatory laws are implemente­d to discourage the influence of one-sided opinions or campaigns.

we cannot deny the importance of social media platforms as they provide equal opportunit­y to people to express and share their thoughts or opinions, but safe and thoughtful use of these platforms will encourage healthy discourse and prove pivotal in promoting dialogue to discuss social, economical and cultural issues peacefully without hitting the sentiments of other communitie­s.

Thus, echo chambers will be less powerful to build a narrative that is appealing but the readers will be engaging themselves in the debates that need interactio­n.

Undoubtedl­y, social media platforms have changed the political and social approach of the people and enabled face-to-face digital interactio­n through video and audio conference calls, so their fair use will mitigate their cons manifold.

The social media networks apply algorithms to connect you with like-minded people but it is up to you whether your engagement in communicat­ion is either unbiased or biased.

Social media should be promoting positive discourse to explore the political and economic solutions to the problems of people by reflecting the two sides of the coin so that the discourse be constructi­ve and problem-solving. Social media has given a voice to marginaliz­ed people and government­s are compelled to resolve the issues of people on a priority basis due to trending topics of social media.

Even the populist leaders may face resistance from social media as the public makes the most of the freedom of expression and criticizes the role of politician­s for their failure to address the issues of the public.

In recent times, Facebook, YouTube and Twitter have been creating history in highlighti­ng issues of both public and national interest but at the same time such platforms have been taken by storm by those influencer­s who continue to feed the news about their vested interests and create psychosoci­al hype for any issue that may jolt the power corridors of Government.

The politician­s always take to Twitter for their precise viewpoint and policy debate and are usually followed by millions of followers. Even the print and electronic media take the tweets as policy statements or the narrative of some party or group.

The schools and colleges should chalk out the initiative to create awareness and practice of fair use so that social platforms should not post single or one-sided opinions or arguments but should welcome both so that positive use could be ensured. This will further the importance of social media.

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