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posted by chromas on Tuesday March 26 2019, @12:34PM   Printer-friendly
from the too-busy-shitposting-to-go-outside dept.

Human Contact Is Now a Luxury Good:

Screens used to be for the elite. Now avoiding them is a status symbol.

[...] Life for anyone but the very rich — the physical experience of learning, living and dying — is increasingly mediated by screens.

Not only are screens themselves cheap to make, but they also make things cheaper. Any place that can fit a screen in (classrooms, hospitals, airports, restaurants) can cut costs. And any activity that can happen on a screen becomes cheaper. The texture of life, the tactile experience, is becoming smooth glass.

The rich do not live like this. The rich have grown afraid of screens. They want their children to play with blocks, and tech-free private schools are booming. Humans are more expensive, and rich people are willing and able to pay for them. Conspicuous human interaction — living without a phone for a day, quitting social networks and not answering email — has become a status symbol.

All of this has led to a curious new reality: Human contact is becoming a luxury good.

As more screens appear in the lives of the poor, screens are disappearing from the lives of the rich. The richer you are, the more you spend to be offscreen.

I remember when the tag line for AT&T was Reach out and touch someone and it was portrayed as a good thing.


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  • (Score: 2) by JoeMerchant on Tuesday March 26 2019, @08:25PM

    by JoeMerchant (3937) on Tuesday March 26 2019, @08:25PM (#820282)

    That's a lovely bunch of wishes, put those in one hand....

    Core curriculum, standardized tests, etc. all BEG to be unified into a single server of all educational material and put on repeat-play for the 180 days of the year that the schools are legally obligated to keep your kids off the streets for 6 hours per day. Education for the betterment of the students? I'll go with the 80/20 rule above on that: 80% of the time it's anything but - there are probably 1/5 people in the educational system who both really care, and really do something about it, the rest are there for the paycheck - even if 4/5 of the 4/5 have their "heart in the right place" they almost never do anything to make a real difference in any student's life, much less all of the ones they have responsibility for.

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