Oh please. Lee Siegel goes to a baseball game and is dismayed to note that some people near his seat are loud and obscene, others are rooting for the visiting team, and others aren't even paying attention. He'd prefer everyone (except himself and those of whom he approves) stay home and watch it on tv, where the announcers can tell them what's happening and what's important.
No one is forcing him to sit at the computer. My experience online has included meeting and communicating with strangers from literally all over the world who share my interests, learning things I would never have otherwise learned, laughing like a maniac at people who are (even) funnier than I am, having immediate access to the answer to literally any question that arises in my work and play, and much, much more.
This, I would bet, is the experience of everyone else reading this review and this comment. But Siegel's mileage may vary. If he wants to play Margaret Dumont to the Net's Groucho, he's welcome to it.
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When I read that, the following recent article came to mind:
- Has the unbridled spread of commercialism and technology transformed... [MORE]
C. Ikehara
Mar 4, 2008 21:57
Is there a more worn-out phrase? Perhaps "X is a necessary book" might be. After the first couple of paragraphs,... [MORE]
Dan Mayes
Feb 23, 2008 03:26
1. "The fault I find with our journalism is that it forces us to take an interest in some fresh... [MORE]
Mike Boehm
Feb 21, 2008 04:14
Similar thoughts abounded with the advent of the printing press and the Gutenberg bible. I wonder if Mr. Siegel drafted... [MORE]
Michael Makowsky
Feb 20, 2008 14:15
Thanks for a thoughtful review. Over 20 years ago Neil Postman also raised questions over the impact of mass media... [MORE]
Chuck Lanigan
Feb 19, 2008 16:46
Thanks, Chuck Lanigan, for the reminder, I used to teach Postman's book (AMUSING...) and found students would feel attacked personally... [MORE]
George T.Karnezis
Mar 4, 2008 14:45
The internet is no obstruction to democracy as it is a mirror to what democracy is essentially or at bottom:... [MORE]
SL
Feb 19, 2008 11:45
An exceedingly large amount of bloggers are people who WERE trained as journalists. They blog rather than write for a... [MORE]
Kristen O
Feb 19, 2008 01:45
It's unfortunate that Wikipedia gets picked on so much - it's a paradise of truth and light, compared to most... [MORE]
Paul Perry
Feb 18, 2008 23:52
i relish the fact that i'm reading this anti-technology review on a laptop in bed in between refreshing my facebook... [MORE]
massrepublican
Feb 18, 2008 23:44
This book sounds like something we need much more of ie: critical examination of a modern phenomenon that is too... [MORE]
id hamilton
Feb 18, 2008 23:20
Oh please. Lee Siegel goes to a baseball game and is dismayed to note that some people near his seat...
Ellis Weiner
Feb 18, 2008 20:47
The advice to those who overeat should be the same to those who spend inordinate time on the Internet: .... [MORE]
Harvee
Feb 18, 2008 14:53
Ms. Rosen tells us that Siegel makes three points: the Internet, under the guise of promoting democracy, actually leads to... [MORE]
Stephen Kennamer
Feb 18, 2008 13:38
A few more minusses
1)The Internet has enabled easier Terrorist connection and action
2) Hate- groups thrive on the Internet. And they... [MORE]