Twitter Filtering the Gnat while Swallowing the Camel?
Nov 12, 2023 7:57:44 GMT -5
Post by Radrook Admin on Nov 12, 2023 7:57:44 GMT -5
Filtering the gnat while Swallowing the camel?
Matthew 23:24 ►
You blind guides! You strain out a gnat but swallow a camel.
www.gotquestions.org/strain-gnat-swallow-camel.html
You blind guides! You strain out a gnat but swallow a camel.
www.gotquestions.org/strain-gnat-swallow-camel.html
I have just finished struggling for half an hour on Twitter trying to complete a test because of my alleged suspicious behavior? Since they were not specific, I have absolutely no idea what they were referring to. Was it my describing how we flung paper airplanes at our teacher all at once at school while he was writing on the chalk-board, to avoid individual identification?
Now, I can definitely understand condemning the encouragement of throwing paper airplanes at teachers. After all, it disrupts the teaching session and schools are for learning. However, such a drastic reaction to such a petty thing inevitably raises very serious moral issues involving inconsistency of policy. Which means that they are not applying their moral standards to everyone consistently. Similar to filtering the gnat but swallowing the camel scenario.
You see, at Twitter, there are entire categories of fighting-at-school videos where kids are savaging one another, and others are cheering while fellow classmates are being stomped on their heads. Other categories feature adults savaging one another or else parents violently abusing their kids.
Now, compared to throwing a few paper airplanes, that glaringly pales in comparison. And yet, all these accounts that encourage violence, are perfectly morally acceptable at Twitter? So there is a serious moral discrepancy in the Twitter policy that needs to be addressed.
Otherwise its tantamount to punishing one thief for stealing a penny, while permitting other thieves to steal from the city banks.
Now, I can definitely understand condemning the encouragement of throwing paper airplanes at teachers. After all, it disrupts the teaching session and schools are for learning. However, such a drastic reaction to such a petty thing inevitably raises very serious moral issues involving inconsistency of policy. Which means that they are not applying their moral standards to everyone consistently. Similar to filtering the gnat but swallowing the camel scenario.
You see, at Twitter, there are entire categories of fighting-at-school videos where kids are savaging one another, and others are cheering while fellow classmates are being stomped on their heads. Other categories feature adults savaging one another or else parents violently abusing their kids.
Now, compared to throwing a few paper airplanes, that glaringly pales in comparison. And yet, all these accounts that encourage violence, are perfectly morally acceptable at Twitter? So there is a serious moral discrepancy in the Twitter policy that needs to be addressed.
Otherwise its tantamount to punishing one thief for stealing a penny, while permitting other thieves to steal from the city banks.