Friday 9 January 2015

Nous sommes Charlie. But nous sommes so much more.

My first post of the year was going to be something along the lines of "Most Insane New Year's Resolutions Ever", for which I intended to offer my best contender of 2015.

In a moment of inspired positive thinking insane lack of forethought I decided to give up coffee and wine for January, and thereafter significantly reduce my coffee intake. I'm not sure what induced me to consider such a crazy notion or how I imagined I would function without the former - or recover without at least occasional doses of the latter, but suffice to say I lasted a week!

I also considered recording aspirations and intentions for the year ahead, but frankly life has never adhered to any carefully made plans and flying by the seat of my metaphorical pants whilst ricocheting off the usual (and unusual) obstacles life chooses to throw at me is, apparently, the only way to live. (Small wonder I never managed to ditch the coffee, in the absence of a crystal ball and personal Doppelgänger rocket fuel coffee is a survival prerequisite.)

It's been a hectic start to the New Year, my parents managed to both catch 'flu despite having the annual vaccine, and it hit them hard. Along with our usual health issues, school social issues and my rapidly reducing tolerance levels for such a high level of daily "excitement" it's small wonder I crashed spectacularly today. There is only so much adrenalin the body can take, today mine threw its toys out of the proverbial pram and dictated that I spend several hours sat on the sofa only moving my rm to drink tea, and perhaps my fingers to type in a kind of quasi-recovery. Blogging is without doubt the best sort of therapy there is.

I've read many articles today, several about the depressing events in France. One of the reasons I blog is because I do believe we all have a right to an opinion, and whilst tact and diplomacy is central to responsible debate there is never, ever an excuse for violence in disagreement. The massacre in the offices of the magazine Charlie Hebdo is indefensible, no matter what your religious beliefs are. The pen is, in the long term, far more powerful than the gun. (By pen I include typed words, and the power of social media.) The #JeSuisCharlie hashtag has spread across the whole world via social media platforms and millions unite to condemn the recent horrific events.


It is an important, valuable and human response to tragedy and extremism, but also evidence of something more - that whilst the articles written and cartoons drawn in responsive solidarity to these events demonstrate how the human race still values intelligent communication there is a parallel modern trend to over-simplify and reduce complex issues to a strap line, a buzz word or a slogan.


Once upon a time the tabloids held sway on such dumbing down of information, but it's ubiquitous now. No news article is complete without a basic infogram to explain "difficult" concepts to viewers, once complex science programmes sport patient, over-smiley presenters who patronisingly barely scratch the surface of the topic they present. Programmes look to their excessively large travel budgets to pull in viewers with as much excitement as possible. Worse still information for children is reduced to "bitesize" snippets of utterly unsatisfying, bland information. Quite honestly it's as insultingly bland and lacking in (intellectual) nutrition as a children's menu in family pub restaurant!

And I'm increasingly concerned that our children are offered less and less substantial information. We frequently hear how children are reading and writing less, becoming more reliant on Social Media by the day. Yet according to Helen Skelton, writing for Parentdish it is academics who are putting children off reading. That is rubbish. It is the modern trend towards a superficial, bland and insultingly unsatisfying way in which children are spoken too and interacted with - online, via television and through too many "fast food for kids" type books. Coupled with overly-full schedules there simply isn't the time, or information to really get "stuck in"to a topic anymore.

When was the last time you watched CBBC? Seventy-five per cent of its programmes are utter drivel, relying on the basic assumption that anyone under the age of fourteen has no interest in, or capability of understanding anything beyond vapid discussion of "Celebs", music or fashion. Yet children have a habit of rising to expectations. They are born curious, expecting no limits to their learning. Learning is eagerly anticipated and expected - but we are increasingly closing the door on intelligent discussion and reasoning and lowering the ceiling on their potential understanding.

This "dumbing down" of information and reduced expectation of understanding is everywhere. We teach to exams offering a finite body of knowledge as a means to an end. In our busy, hectic lives we rely on soundbites to inform ourselves of world events and make knee jerk assumptions based on precious little information. This is not only limiting our involvement, understanding and experience of life but is potentially dangerous, as evidenced by the inflammatory comments all over social media over the past couple of days. We condemn the terrorists who commit such atrocities but they too are probably responding to an over-simplification of their own world view. And in response, we distil events into a couple of hashtags on social media.  Yet tolerance requires education, and education requires the opportunity to learn.

It's time to stop selling ourselves short intellectually. Look beyond the headline, stray from the herd and inform, analyse, reflect and think critically. Don't jump on the latest hashtag bandwagon unless you are willing to delve deeper and investigate the underlying realities. #JeSuisCharlie is an excellent example of how we swallow the soundbite yet fail to think critically beyond it. Horror at such appalling events shouldn't require support for, or identification with what in actual fact were pretty racist and (to many) offensive cartoons. Too many confuse it with a license to insult.

Without knowledge and understanding, freedom of speech is worth little. A new generation is growing up believing that high speed, reactive social interaction is not only appropriate but the only way to interact. Yet tit deprives us of critical response and makes conflict more likely.

Nous sommes Charlie. But nous sommes so much more.

16 comments:

  1. Love your line "It's time to stop selling ourselves short intellectually" I completely agree there's so much more to the biggest headlines than what we think we know.

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  2. I actually think it is more down to parents that kids read less. We went to the library a lot as kids and I take my boys a lot too, but some kids had NEVER been.

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  3. I don't think that my children have watched kids TV that much for years but my nine year old enjoys watching David Attenborough and other documentaries. He absorbs everything he learns and loves to talk about it and events going on in the news x x

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  4. I think social media has its place but it's so sad that children are missing out on other ways of gaining information.

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  5. My kids have watched abit of tv now back to school . but am a big fab of crafts and baking with them.

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  6. In a world where we are trying to cram as much into our days as possible reading often falls to the wayside

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  7. I remember when I was younger - there was no such a thing as facebook/twitter or such. My Mum pushed me to read a lot and I'm forever grateful for that as I love reading now and when I see news in a TV I'm very skeptical of what media showing us. One can never be sure of what exactly happened and what manipulated media wants us to think that happened and all the reasons behind.

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  8. My daughter was reading 'The Lion, The Witch and The Wardrobe' at school before Christmas. She got infuriated by it because they only read a small bit at a time and they were told not to read ahead at home! By the end of term they hadn't finished the book and so in the last week they spent the afternoons watching the film of it! Needless to say she got the full series for Christmas and has been steadily working her own way through them.

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  9. I find that my older two rarely watch TV in the traditional fashion, instead seeking out information or documentaries or series that appeal to them online, and are both voracious book readers. But then again that also sums up me and my other half too - although we do watch tv and spend time on the internet, it is often documntary DVDs we are watching or informative sites we are reading, so I guess the kids pick up on that and follow suit!

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  10. I think social media will become more important whether we like it or not and no matter how much we encourage other forms of media, it is all too easy to find things out quickly online x

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  11. Kids don't read as much as they should books are not gifted as often as we had them when younger.

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  12. I remember being gifted a lot of books when I was younger but I think it is a sign of moving with the times that it is now kindles and ipads being used.

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  13. My kids have a thirst for knowledge and will find the information they want via a variety of mediums which does include books and technology

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  14. I think kids certainly don't read as much as me of my siblings did as a child but we didn't have computers (or TV actually, my parents didn't own one) but I think a healthy mix is whats important x

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  15. What a great post. Ross and I are trying our best to encourage Grace to read more but, as Fritha rightly says, we didn't have computers. I have to say that I did watch more tv than Grace does and I still read. I am starting to figure that she will do it when the time is right for her. Thank you for linking to #PoCoLo

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  16. When I think of the difference between my childhood (with no internet/mobiles) and Baby's, it is kind of scary x

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Many thanks for taking the time to comment, I really value your responses.

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