Does the internet make you hate? – CNET

Being on Twitter when Donald Trump was elected was a learning experience. Commentators went berserk, and I started really thinking about the tweets I was seeing.

Tweeters using hashtags like #NotMyPresident and #HateWon implied that anyone who voted for Trump had done so out of prejudice. It’s us, the good guys, against them, the bad guys. We hate the bad guys — and you should too.  

The Twitter reaction speaks to a problem I’ve encountered a lot in recent years. Conversations about important topics don’t happen because people classify you as one of the bad guys rather than go through the trouble of engaging with an opposing opinion.

I understand why. Every day, the internet exposes us to so much hate it becomes hard to not see it in real life, even if it’s not there. That makes it easier than ever to see your neighbor or coworker or a random stranger as one of the bad guys. 

Mad world

The internet is rough. Sexism, racism, religious intolerance are always just a click away. You don’t have to dig around the edges of the darknet to find it. An anti-Semitic statement is posted to social media like Facebook and Twitter every 83 seconds, according to the World Jewish Congress. The words “slut” and “whore” popped up over 200,000 times over a three-week period on Twitter during a study last year.