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Carson Chittom's avatar

As someone who has been on the internet since 1996—strictly speaking not “early,” but early enough by the standards of the wider culture—I have occasionally struggled to explain to people how the Internet of the late-Nineties and early-Aughts differed from the one we see today. Now I will simply refer them to the section of this newsletter subtitled “The Internet is the Negative World.”

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Peter Scholtens's avatar

First, on Renn's hypothesis, I can't help but wonder how much is impacted by a confirmation bias. What you look for is what you get. How you treat others is how you will be treated. Which is related to Keller's approach. Being winsome is arguably just treating people with neighbourly love.

Also, I think the timing of the cultural shifts are quite regionalized and there's an urban-rural divide too. In central Canada, arguably we've been neutral since the seventies, and negative since the nineties. Quebec was probably earlier yet. In fact, most contemporary French-Canadian crude language is religious rather than sexual, which may indicate the strength of their anti-religious feelings.

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