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appalachiablue

(41,144 posts)
Mon Dec 23, 2019, 01:39 PM Dec 2019

'The Smartphone Is Our Era's Cigarette-- And Just As Hard To Quit'

'The smartphone is our era's cigarette – and just as hard to quit.' Ross Barkan. This single piece of technology has obliterated the promise of the internet and corrupted human interaction. The Guardian, Dec. 23, 2019.

In the long lost year of 2011, I managed to graduate college without owning a smartphone. Even then, four years after the birth of the iPhone, I was not yet an unreasonable outlier. All my immediate friends owned flip phones. The pressure to join the future had not yet overtaken us. We texted, we talked, and we went whole days without considering, very much, the phones in our pockets. No one dipped down every 10 seconds to tap their screens. All the small black pieces of plastic could do was communicate with one another, take fuzzy photos, and churn through pixelated websites none of us would bother visiting. Our attention spans were whole, resilient. The internet, with its tendrils of early social media, remained locked behind the laptop screens in our dormitory rooms, bookending days lived elsewhere.

I think a lot about this era as the 2010s draw to a close, a decade that will remembered for its seismic political upheaval: kicking off with the first black president, ending with a former reality TV star and nativist con man in the White House. Yet the 2010s weren’t merely the Trump decade. They were also dominated, from start to finish, by a single piece of technology that has obliterated the promise of the internet and corrupted human interaction. The smartphone is to the 2010s what cigarettes were to much of the twentieth century, a ubiquitous and ruinous marker of the zeitgeist.



By now, you know what the smartphone has wrought. You are alive, after all. You are probably reading this article on one. Few technologies have so rapidly consumed every demographic, every age, every cultural and sociological setting, urban and rural, rich and poor. In the late 2000s, we allowed a few corporations to persuade us that this advanced, alien technology – assembled via de facto slave labor in Asia – was essential to human existence. We readily bought in, condensing our lives behind the sleek glass. The scroll hooked us like a drug, triggering the exact right loci in our brains; suddenly, we could never be bored again, doped by endless Facebook and Instagram feeds, retreating from unnecessary conversation or thought into an infinity of trivia. The internet never left us.

In the 20th century’s conception of the 21st, the smartphone is usually missing. Space colonization, apocalyptic nuclear war, and uncanny androids were always far easier to dream up than the concept of human beings willingly carrying around supercomputers with sophisticated tracking devices. Captain Kirk’s communicator can’t play Candy Crush. There are no Amazons or Googles in his 23rd century to harvest the data we generate so advertisers can up-sell us into further debt. The surveillance state, back then, was mere big government. Today, thanks to smartphones, our lives are mined by public and private entities alike.

..Children, reared with smartphone-addicted parents, compete with the screen’s chemical glow for attention. When they are unruly, they are granted their own. To venture into any public square – bus, train, doctor’s waiting room, even library – is to confront a vast majority of the human populace in thrall to devices they cannot ignore for more than a minute at a time....

More, https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/dec/23/smartphone-techology-iphone-mobile-cigarettes

9 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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dewsgirl

(14,961 posts)
1. I think it's worse than smoking. My phone is like a detachable appendage
Mon Dec 23, 2019, 01:48 PM
Dec 2019

one that can be lost or even destroyed, but is fairly easy to replace. I just went through this😳 When my phone fell off the top of the car and I realized what happened, I was on my way to a full blown panic attack, when I loose the damned thing it's just as bad.
I hate FB, my addictions are Twitter and DU.

Cartoonist

(7,317 posts)
2. We can't win
Mon Dec 23, 2019, 01:51 PM
Dec 2019

Either climate change will kill us, or phones will sap our lives away.

Is this happening in China or Russia? If not, does that give them an advantage?

appalachiablue

(41,144 posts)
3. Really! Less than 10 years ago I read that kids in China were
Mon Dec 23, 2019, 02:04 PM
Dec 2019

so addicted to screens that their parents sent them to 'boot camps' in the mountains to try to break the habit.

Nitram

(22,813 posts)
4. I love my smartphone. But I use it far less than many people.
Mon Dec 23, 2019, 07:39 PM
Dec 2019

Love the calendar (with event reminders), contacts (always have the number, email and address I need), and the fact that I can always contact someone if I need to (although I still use the landline at home). The plant, mountain peak, and bird ID apps are great on hikes, I connect to my entire CD library via the cloud, use the GPS when driving someplace unfamiliar, read the Washington Post when my paper is delivered late, look up facts on Wikipedia or Google but it doesn't rule my life. It doesn't damage my health the way cigarettes do, I have a minimal prepay plan so it's not expensive like cigarettes, and I don't take calls in public unless it's to let someone know where to meet me, so it doesn't bother other people the way cigarettes do. I also had little patience for people who were always complaining about computers. It's just a useful tool, not a way of life.

appalachiablue

(41,144 posts)
7. Good that you can handle it well, there are those who can't of course.
Mon Dec 23, 2019, 08:37 PM
Dec 2019

Hopefully there will be more substantive info. on the harmful aspects of smartphones and screens in the coming years.

Nitram

(22,813 posts)
8. You know, there are many temptations in life that can lead to harmful effects.
Tue Dec 24, 2019, 01:20 AM
Dec 2019

Society needs to inform children and adults of potential dangers. Some people will always succumb to the perils of the world. The MSM has been trying to alert people of potential dangers. Schools can also play a role. In the end, if people don't pay attention, there's not much else we can do. I'm not sure regulation is the answer in this case.

Stuart G

(38,434 posts)
5. What about this desktop computer that I am using as I write these words..
Mon Dec 23, 2019, 08:14 PM
Dec 2019

Just as addictive as the ...smartphone, or what about ..."Democratic Underground"?

appalachiablue

(41,144 posts)
6. A lot of behavior is addictive, but I think the emphasis on smartphones
Mon Dec 23, 2019, 08:34 PM
Dec 2019

is justified, it has become like a talisman or human attachment for many folks. The degree to which people become dependent is important especially if there's significant interference with daily life, work and relationships.

So far I haven't felt a need to check in with a computer or DU every 5 minutes while driving a car or socializing at a party. People struggle and break up over a lot of compulsive behavior- substances, electronics, following sports, shopping, more.

Nitram

(22,813 posts)
9. It's all about balance, whether it's about food, sex, phones, or drugs.
Tue Dec 24, 2019, 01:22 AM
Dec 2019

None of it is bad if done in moderation. We need to find more effective ways to teach that.

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