It would seem that the ALS icewater
challenge, like the Hunger Games, has gone viral. Perhaps everyone is buying in
to the Tribute mentality. I've been asked to do one, more than once - and thank
you to the friends who were kind enough to include me. My instantaneous
reaction was, 'Yeah, go ahead, why not?' But, then I gave it a little thought
and as a result, I'm not going to, nor do I feel compelled to give
whatereveritis to the nearest ALS foundation.
Just so as to be clear, I hate iced water
on my head the same as the next man, but it's quite bearable. I know. I spent
five years at public school and cold showers were often used as punishments.
I have two basic reasons why I'm not
going to take part, both of which I think are compelling in themselves.
First, ALS research, due to the very
nature of the disease, requires both adult and embryonic stem cells as
biological raw material. Embryonic cells
are the harvest of abortions. Go ahead,
Sherlock. Join the dots. But, this is the weaker of the two reasons. Secondly,
and more importantly, the speed with
which my gut agreed and screamed out 'go ahead' in itself gave me pause.
Putting the bucket down for a few minutes,
I began to consider the effect that social media
activism is having on our culture – and my/ourselves as actors and consequently
participants in it. I've turned into a blogger with a slight political edge to
me, consequently it's clear to me that this medium’s capacity for acting as a
vehicle for good is beyond doubt, and yet the principle of instant, do-it-now connectivity
has a flipside. Anyone who has ever commented on a social activism website sees
how easy it is for a herd mentality to develop, where everybody is nodding in
furious agreement and dissent is shouted down, often quite violently. This is,
of course, absolutely OK, I suppose, so long as the herd is headed in the right
direction and so we meekly trot along mooing and lowing with everybody
else.
Peer
pressure has a nasty habit of distorting perspective. We're all racing to
belong without first pausing to think through all of the options before
clicking “like”. How many, apart from Jonathan Livingston, have elected to fly against the wind because they
don't like being just another seagull in the flock as well as stopping to
investigate exactly how the money's being spent before emptying the ice cube
trays? Exactly. I don't think anyone needs to beat themselves up over it -
that's not the point. It's OK to feel a little excluded, even strange, and,
perhaps more than a little prone towards caution and self-awareness in the
future.
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