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I know I go all over the map here, but I ask that you try to follow my multi-track trains of thought, and help me understand a few things about human nature that have eluded me.
For starters:
Are people always drawn more to the negative than the positive?
It should come as no great surprise to anyone that people are drawn to the sensational as opposed to the substantial. "Sensational" means O.J. and BenLo (or J-Fleck, or whatever they're called) and porn and ogrish.com and games in which one blows up things and people. "Substantial" means rational thought about concepts higher than oneself and one's basest nature.
The Web demonstrates this more clearly than a thousand different white papers ever could. The Web, no longer a microcosm that reflects society (rather, it has become society), shows us in no uncertain terms that the vast majority of minds out there want the cheap thrill over all else. (Too sweeping a generalization? I don't think so. Watch Google Zeitgeist for a year or two, and you'll reach the same conclusion.)
For the sake of simplicity, let's divide all political Web sites and message boards into LW and RW. Without going into a long analysis here, my conclusion is that RW sites are simply more successful (the criteria for "success" being primarily activity + visibility).
That's no surprise; there are probably more freepers in the world than lefties, and they appear to be much angrier, and thus more likely to spew online in greater volume, and with greater frequency.
The surprise for me comes when you take RW sites out of the equation altogether, and concentrate on LW sites. Think of all the sites you know that could conceivably be pigeonholed as LW. Without naming the hundreds that come to my mind, my conclusion is this: The more a LW resembles a RW site in terms of aggression and hostility -- that is, internally -- in the attitude of the Webmaster toward his/her visitors, and in the interaction between participants of a message board -- the more "successful" the site (the more activity + visibility).
The more "civilized" an atmosphere a site attempts to create, and the stricter its rules about participants conducting themselves with mutual respect, the less "successful" the site. To wit: FR is bigger than DU, has more money, and garners more attention in the press and in search engines than DU.
Why?
As I watch the proliferation of LW sites that appear much closer in spirit to RW sites (while still maintaining that they are LW), I wonder: Is human nature drawn so much toward the negative end of the spectrum that the line between LW and RW sites will blur to the point that we cannot tell a LW site from a RW site at first glance?
No, no, no -- this isn't some thinly-veiled way of saying DU is getting more hostile or anything like that. While DU goes through cycles of inundation by freepers (e.g., watch the influx of disruptors every time a major event on either side occurs), DU itself is perfectly consistent in its demand that everyone play nicely with one another.
Of course it gets more difficult to enforce the rules of conduct as the membership grows (and especially during those cicada-like freeper invasions), but that's not what I'm talking about. If DU were to relax the rules in order to suit the growing number of members aching for a more RW-flavored free-for-all atmosphere, then DU would indeed fit the model of de-evolution I'm talking about here. But it doesn't.
So don't think about DU when you consider my question of whether LW sites are becoming more like RW sites. Think of all the other LW sites and message boards you visit and in which you actively engage (and admit it: you do) -- the ones that do fit the model of de-evolution.
Obviously, this idea didn't just pop into my head one day. My interaction with LW sites is limited almost solely to DU and to a couple of sites/boards I myself own and operate. However, I lurk from time to time on a great many other self-proclaimed LW sites -- which do not look, function, or feel LW... or liberal, or progressive, or even civilized -- at all. Depending on where I land for the first time on a given LW site, I sometimes wonder if I accidentally stumbled through a backdoor of a FreeRepublic offshoot, so thick is the hostility and mutual disrespect.
Which brings me right back to my original question: Are people always drawn more to the negative than the positive?
Is peacefulness and respect just plain boring next to the oportunity to attack other people -- people who are, preumably, on one's own side? Is it an adrenalin thing?
Why do we eat our own?
Would we be as likely to turn on one another if we were not lulled into the false sense of security afforded by the assumption that we are really "anonymous" on the Web?
Or would it happen anyway, in real life -- like cabin fever?
Is it impossible for groups of human beings to interact without trampling one another in the rush to establish a pecking order?
And is this the way we can expect everything -- not just the Web -- to devolve? To the point that a stated (but not practiced) ideology becomes the only difference between Left and Right... on the Net, or anywhere else?
One last thing: Bear in mind that I'm not talking about hostility directed outward at a group's perceived enemies. I'm talking about interaction among a presumably closed group of participants.
I'd be most interested in everyone's thoughts.
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