JackiePeyton
Ex-Bluelighter
Everything in moderation
I believe the internet exacerbates certain types of mental illnesses and creates others. I've questioned for a long time whether the good outweighed the bad.
The Bad
•Social media: "picture-perfect" people making others feel inadequate, people recording/posting moments instead of being in them, and conversely looking at their screens instead of their surroundings.
•Porn: when a group of mental health professionals are trying to figure out how many hours a day of porn is healthy/unhealthy to watch, it's not a good sign. Porn frequently contributes to the inability of some individuals to enjoy sex with another person and can be addictive. Add types of porn such as child porn and snuff porn and it's pathological.
•Gambling sites: self-explanatory
•Games/gaming: They are literally created and enhanced to be addictive. They are.
•Drug availability: the medical system is far from perfect, but people who know little more than that they like certain drugs and people who want to make money off addiction aren't a great combination.
Silk Road was an attempt to "change all that" and it didn't- it became a source for guns, fake IDs murder for hire and eventually a huge bait trap. The Wild West has returned.
•Facilitates communication between members of terrorist organizations and criminal enterprises, either in code or encrypted.
• People choosing to associate almost exclusively with like-minded people and a corresponding narrow and limited viewpoint and mentality.
•Bullying of children, which has been taken to an extreme new level and is appalling.
•Perverts trying to prey on children.
Personally, I like being able to do much faster and comprehensive research in science, learn more about math and science, find people who share similar and somewhat obscure interests like etymology, to read news from a non-American perspective without 15 magazine subscriptions, and lots of other things.
Good for many:
The internet has helped people with rare conditions find support, connected members of disenfranchised communities, allowed people in repressive regimes to get information to the rest of the world, provide real-time information in times of crisis or historical significance and made a lot of things easier to find.
I still think the jury is out, but the convenience is certainly comprised by the dark underbelly, and mental health is certainly a factor in the equation.
Where do you usually find these communities? I've sniffed around IRC chats to get my fix of socialisation and to find like minded individuals, but they seem to be pretty dead at the moment.