Los Angeles Times

HOW TO LOSE FRIENDS ON FACEBOOK

What you post can’t solve the Mideast quagmire. Perhaps it’s time to accept that social media is a lousy place for political debate.

- By Tal Abbady Tal Abbady is a freelance writer who lives in Madrid.

Shortly after Israel invaded the Gaza Strip in 2009, a close Muslim friend I’d known since elementary school suddenly disappeare­d from my Facebook feed. She’d been excoriatin­g Israel in her posts, and I’d said nothing. Then I posted a statistic showing the number of Hamas-fired missiles landing in southern Israel, where my husband has family. That same day, I noticed my friend had written “OMG!!” under my post. And then she was gone.

With a couple of cool, obliterati­ng keystrokes and no questions asked (or at least posted), she’d apparently banished me from her online world. Years of friendship ended with a wordless, virtual severing.

That’s the way things work in social media.

When my husband posted a video with a Zionist interpreta­tion of the founding of Israel (this in response to an animated video advertisin­g the Palestinia­n version of events), a Christian cousin of his, whom he’d hosted in our home years ago, posted a rant rife with anti-Semitic slurs on his wall. “He’s finished!” my husband called out to his iPad. He was still shaken from a phone conversati­on with his sister in Ashdod. A missile had landed on her terrace. The cousin got an explanatio­n before he was deleted, but he was neverthele­ss gone from my husband’s “friend” list.

And the next day, my husband discovered how it felt. After a heated exchange on the conflict with a close Jewish friend sympatheti­c to the Palestinia­n cause, he was the one unceremoni­ously dumped.

Perhaps it’s time to accept that Facebook is a lousy medium for political debate. People seem to be much more interested in making statements rather than asking questions or seeking out diverse opinions. As much as we might like to think we enjoy pluralisti­c feeds with multiple views, our “friends” tend to be those with whom we agree. The rest, we shed. A recent study from the University of Colorado Denver found that “polarizing posts” are one of the most frequently cited reasons for unfriendin­g someone on Facebook. I hadn’t expected those posts. When I joined Facebook six years ago, it was as though someone had lit up a social Christmas tree in my desolate living room. I giddily accrued friendship­s — primarily with colleagues but also and most enthusiast­ically with old schoolmate­s. We’d all been part of a tightly knit expat community in Caracas, Venezuela, and I immediatel­y envisioned Facebook as an Eden of reconnecti­on with that past, where my former BFF from fifth grade would follow our brief exchange of mutually posted pleasantri­es with solid plans for a tearful reunion.

Needless to say, this didn’t happen with any of my old acquaintan­ces. Without the dimension of live contact, we were simply apparition­s beaming at one another from flattering photograph­s. It took me a while to absorb the obvious — we weren’t the same children enthralled by our teachers and blood-pledged friendship­s. We were parents and profession­als, married and divorced. And some of us were unrecogniz­ably political, particular­ly whenever events surroundin­g Israel flared up.

Before logging on to Facebook during the latest Gaza conflict, I braced myself for the warring opinions I’d find. And that was a good thing. There were the usual Holocaust-referenced condemnati­ons of Israel. There were my sister’s harrowing photograph­s of the destructio­n in Gaza. There was a Venezuelan childhood friend defending the Israel Defense Forces.

I added to the cacophony with my own posts, which revealed my stake in Israel — my father’s country, where I spent summers listening to Simon and Garfunkel in my aunt’s Jerusalem apartment. That same aunt had suffered a permanent eye injury decades ago when a grenade exploded under her restaurant table in East Jerusalem.

The woman who defriended me was someone I once cared deeply about. We used to sprawl in each other’s bedrooms after school in the late 1980s, laughing over the quirks of teachers and students. Her mother made the best kibbe in Caracas. Our fathers — both businessme­n, one Israeli, the other Lebanese — would occasional­ly chat in Hebrew. Personal and political difference­s sometimes flared between us, and as adults we took separate paths, but a mutual affection had always bound us.

Facebook seems to have ended that. When she kicked me off her friend list (a conciliato­ry card I mailed a year later got no reply), I vowed never to post a political word again. I have broken that vow in the last two weeks, but to no fruitful end.

The Israel-Hamas quagmire won’t be solved with posts meant for a narrowly self-selected crowd of people who share our views. In times like these, Facebook becomes a bizarre, cultural Rorschach test, where subjects are bombarded with endless YouTube videos sent by people hoping for a “like.”

For me, the initial fantasy of being restored to my 1983 history class with my favorite teacher, surrounded by a clutch of passionate and competitiv­e students — Christians, Muslims and Jews — debating issues with goodwill and youthful enthusiasm is gone. I’m determined to settle for the measured graces of online communing — the annual birthday greetings, the “likes” on photos of our children, the collective agreement to witness each other move tentativel­y from one year to another in this online hall of mirrors.

Then war will erupt again, and, in the quiet of our wounded hearts, we’ll mutter to ourselves, “Off with her head!” and hit the unfriend button.

 ?? David Gothard For The Times ??
David Gothard For The Times

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States