Opinion

The Generation of Generation Q

Agree to Disagree

October 15, 2007 - 11:00pm
By Rob Fishman

Last week, Thomas Friedman dubbed us “Generation Q” — the Quiet Americans, so plugged in (and tuned out) that our idealism stops at the computer monitor. With so much interconnectedness among the Facebook-YouTube-MySpace cohort, and so much wrong in the world, Friedman wonders why our generation looks so complacent.

The twentysomethings fire back that their technological moving and shaking is being mistaken for indolence; as a recent Sun editorial argued, activism has “transformed from sensationalized 1960s tear-gas rallies to online petitions and Internet discussion boards.”

Yet for Friedman — and, I suspect, many among the Baby Boomers and the “Greatest Generation” — we come off as apologists, hiding our apathy behind a high tech façade: “Martin Lu­ther King and Bobby Kennedy didn’t change the world by asking people to join their Facebook crusades or to download their platforms,” Friedman chides us nostalgically.

In truth, we are complacent — and if you look around, for good reason.

For my generation, technology has had a distinctively quieting effect. In nearly every walk of life, technological advancements have instilled this generation with a deep sense of inevitability that encourages us to look inward. In a sense, Friedman has it backwards: we don’t lazily hide behind technology, so much as technology inspires us to stay quiet.

Take sports. In an edge-of-your-seat final quarter between the Dallas Cowboys and the Buffalo Bills last week, a few of the thrills came from great catches and kicks, to be sure, but the real drama resulted from technicalities — from an instant replay review of a 20-yard pass and from a split-second time out that voided a field goal kick that made the victory “one of the most implausible in the Cowboys’ illustrious history,” according to an ESPN recap of the game.

It’s strange, watching these hippo-sized linemen beating the hell out of each other … all until a flag drops, at which point they respectfully defer to a high-definition replay.

Much the same in other sports: as the Daily Scotsman noted when FIFA sanctioned a trial run for a soccer ball that “beeps” when it crosses the goal line, football fans can’t quibble with technology that “ensure[s] justice and eradicate[s] controversy.”

For sports fans and players alike, technology has obviated the important human element of competition. The exciting disputes are no longer about “bad” or “close” calls, but about close-up high-definition simulacra of the plays in question; as controversy is eradicated, sports fans are, for lack of a better option, quiet.

Consider a seminal American experience for my generation: the O.J. Simpson trial. In an adversarial procedure that (we now know) failed to capture the truth (if he did it, of course), the determining factor was DNA evidence, which according to a New York Times article at that time, was not challenged by the defense at all on the basis of its “validity as a science.”

Though the DNA evidence may not have been “clear or convincing to a jury of non-scientists,” according to the Times article, it was ultimately presented as indisputable fact. Where Clarence Darrow drew on philosophy, religion and, yes, science to defend Leopold and Loeb in the “Trial of the Century,” Johnnie Cochran’s famous catchphrase was “if it doesn’t fit, you must acquit.” Like the instant replay, DNA evidence isn’t up for debate, it’s a foregone conclusion.

Perhaps the most glaring example was the 2000 presidential election, when the Supreme Court upheld the voting tabulations accrued by the disputed ballots in Florida to hand the election to George W. Bush. The Court, while lamenting the “unfortunate number of ballots which [were] not punched in a clean, complete way” in Bush v. Gore (2000), ruled that the technology of the day would have to suffice, and that it could not read into the intent of voters — even if half a chad was clearly punched.

What’s dangerous in these cases is not the technology itself — for surely, we applaud fairness in sports, exonerations based on DNA evidence and new digital voting platforms — but the excesses and unintended consequences of these innovations.

Thus, dinner table disputes end as quickly as one can BlackBerry the answer; road-side directions are relics of history thanks to GPS technology; and those impossible-to-understand song lyrics no longer require funny substitutions because you can Google them straightaway. Because information is so readily accessible, technology has made us close-minded, more attuned to what’s for lunch than what’s on the news (though, like CNN.com, menupages.com is a mere click away).

The direst consequences of a technocracy are the stuff of entertainment: the Orwellian justice system in the blockbuster hit Minority Report and the simulated boxing match which precedes the actual fight in Rocky Balboa being two prominent examples of technology meting out results before the parties have spoken. When Tom Cruise or ESPN can anticipate outcomes before events, deliberation loses meaning.

Is it any wonder that Generation Q, which saw the guilty O.J. vindicated by DNA evidence and the calamitous Bush crowned by faulty ballots, appears so apathetic?

Faced with the most bitter and divisive of conflicts, our societal “referees” regularly defer to technological precepts of justice over human concepts of fairness. With the world on fire, Generation Q isn’t questioning the lies of WMDs in Iraq or global climate change — no, we’re keeping our mouths shut and burying ourselves further in our computers.

Rob Fishman is a senior in the College of Arts and Sciences. He can be contacted at rbfishman@cornellsun.com. Agree to Disagree appears­ Tuesdays.



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An interesting article, but

An interesting article, but I give no bye to our generation because of technology. After the 2006 federal election in Mexico, where Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador was defeated by a 0.5% margin, protestors closed Mexico City's main avenue for weeks. They took over the airport and closed the stock exchange and they blocked highways. This was of course severly detrimental to the economy of a country competing with China, Brasil and India for foreign investment.

In response, people like my father (who supported the winning candidate now President Felipe Calderon Hinojosa), annoyed at the authorities unwilling to reestablish order, chose to stop paying taxes aware of the consequences of this type of action. What is my point? Mexicans have the same technology as the U.S. yet both sides of the political spectrum are willing to put it on the line to defend what they think is right.

New born Christian Albert Gore, sadly now a Nobel Laureate, in spite of having obtained more votes in 2000 let a supreme court take the presidency out of his hands, and nobody was on the streets fighting or suspended the payment of his/her fiscal obligations. This was of course beneficial to the economy but speaks very poorly about Americans of our generation. Yes, from the Greatest Generation, who grew up in a depression and fought a war that took 50 million lives, to the Nintendo playing clowns that are scared of terrorism of today, we have gone down hill, but technology cannot be blamed.

Don't be a dope

This is typical scolding by a public figure and typical whining by a little punk blaming his apathy on the OJ and George Bush.

Come on, you don't have to be naive. Just recognize the obvious. Normal people want to live their own lives and have no interest in the public sphere unless it really impinges on their personal lives or there seems to be a quick and easy way to do away with something repulsive.

Proof? Look at World War Two. The Americans didn't get in until they were attacked by Japan and Germany declared war on the United States. And this wasn't a matter of the politicians going against the will of the people. They didn't want to save the world from Hitler. And what do we call that generation now? The Greatest Generation.

Vietnam War? Big protests? Would there have been protests without the draft? It's hard to believe.

Russian Revolution? None of the revolutionaries expected it. Russia had to suffer huge losses during World War One before it could happen.

There's no need to feel guilty about being normal. And you don't have the right to blame other people for being normal. That doesn't mean that you shouldn't do anything for the public. Only that you are not really built to be so inclined.

If you want to start doing good, stop feeling guilty and then blaming your supposed wrongdoings on others.

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