I've been online since before the net was public. Long before AOL, when it was mostly libraries and just a few colleges.
I remember when the net was "empty" and people could only be found in pockets of communities that were built around commonalities and curiosity. When if there were more than 10 people on at one time in the same online space, it was a real party. 🎉🤣
I've been a participant, a moderator, and an OP when that stood for operator, not original poster 🤣
1/
But even in the early IRC days when "channels" were introduced and those pockets of people grew from 5 people, to 10 people, to 50 people ... there were mods and OPs who set the tone for those communities.
When the first "channels" became a thing ... so did the beginning of weaponizing communities against individuals or other communities.
This kind of thing became pretty standard as the net grew and BBSes gave way to online forums and forums gave way to social networks ...
2/
You can't control individual people's actions perse, but I do believe that people with a tremendous amount of influence are responsible for the energy they put out into their communities and how that energy may give rise to fanaticism and intolerance.
If you put out rage, anger, and inflexibility, you will attract like souls who thrive on that energy and use it to justify their actions.
You create pockets of toxicity that only breeds more toxicity and people who spread it.
3/
I've watched this play out over the years in many ways LONG before organized social media networks existed ... when pockets of people would gather around a common theme or idea and one person was responsible for shaping, moderating, encouraging, and controlling that channel or community.
When the community you are in charge of, that you are the "figurehead" of, becomes a cesspool of fanatics who act negatively in your name or are inspired by the energy you put out ... that IS on you.
4/
@thewebrecluse great summation, but what exactly is "anti-blackness".
@SECRET_ASIAN_MAN anti-racism work is a general term for social work involving trying to educate and teach people to unlearn habits and evolve past the grooming that leads to racism.
anti-Blackness work is working to remove the negative attitudes, irrational fear, and continued negative programing specifically towards Black / African American people.
hope that helps.
@SECRET_ASIAN_MAN
https://www.bu.edu/antiracism-center/files/2022/06/Anti-Black.pdf