Most people-certainly most parents-today are well aware of the social and psychological dangers associated with the electronic media age, and in particular with smartphones and messaging apps, social media sites and apps like Facebook, Snapchat, Instagram, online chatrooms, and the various forms of communications technology and social media that occupy so much of the time of America’s youth. But will these changes, on balance, be good for us?
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What’s next? Certainly, more will come, and the changes wrought will be innovative, considerable, and exciting.
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The full reach and effect of electronic communications in making the world a smaller place are only beginning to be comprehended in our time. Depending on your location and access, you may also be able to tune into the BBC (UK), TRT (Turkey), RT (Russia), DW (Germany), IRIB (Iran), CGTN (China), i24NEWS (Israel), Al Jazeera (Qatar), ZEE (India), AfricaNEWS, France 24, and other international news broadcasting systems. Today, one can watch CBS, ABC, NBC, CNN, FOX, or MSNBC to catch up with the daily political news. What the telegraph, telephone, and radio first did to revolutionize communications and shrink the world in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, the television and Internet did in geometric proportions in the next 100 years. What they mean, of course, is that it is easier to get places, easier to communicate, and things once distant and foreign have become familiar, whether because one has traveled to far-away lands, or because he is acquainted with another country and its culture through television or the Internet. It is common to hear someone say today that the world has become a smaller place. The verdict is still out, however, about whether the warp speed communications of our time will prove more beneficial than not, particularly in respect to politics.
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Resistance to totalitarian regimes has been substantially aided by electronic media, as in the case of Radio Free Europe during the Cold War, and the current battle against human rights violations in China, despite governmental attempts to squash its critics. The improvements in communications technology have been tremendously beneficial on many fronts, including for people whose family or friends live at a distance for those engaged in international trade and for communications between nations, particularly in tense, dangerous times. Others claim that, though it would seem to break the laws of physics, some “workarounds” hold “the tantalizing promise of allowing for faster-than-light, or ‘superluminal’ communication.” At present, however, light can only travel 50 times between New York and London in a second-which, nonetheless, is a whole lot faster than the six to 14 weeks it took for a letter to cross the Atlantic in the late eighteenth century! Is it possible for communications to exceed the speed of light? Some physicists take exception to Operations Officer Kim’s announcement, arguing that communications will never be faster than 186,000 miles per second. Officer Kim’s report to Captain Janeway of the Star Trek Voyager, “We’re being hailed on a subspace frequency,” has become a Trekkie catchphrase, indicating faster than speed of light communications and spawning a good amount of controversy. KIM: It looks like a Kazon signal, Captain.
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Seems like it's coming from an unmanned buoy, coordinates one four zero mark three one seven. JANEWAY: Are there ships in the vicinity? KIM: Captain, we’re being hailed on a subspace frequency.
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Deliberative Republicanism, Political Communication, & the Sovereignty of Public Opinion