Henry quoted Stolen Focus by Johann Hari
This made me wonder what the message is that w absorb from social media, and how it compares to the message that we absorb from printed books. I thought first of Twitter. When you log in to that site- it doesn't matter whether you are Donald Trump or Bernie Sanders or Bubba the Love Sponge you are absorbing a message through that medium and sending it out to your followers. What is that message? First: you shouldn't focus on any one thing for long. The world can and should be understood in short, simple statements of 280 characters. Second: the world should be interpreted and confidently understood very quickly. Third: what matters most is whether people immediately agree with and applaud your short, simple, speedy statements. A successful statement is one that lots of people immediately applaud; an unsuccessful statement is one that people immediately ignore or condemn. When you tweet, before you say anything else, you are saying that at some level you agree with these three premises. You are putting on those goggles and seeing the world through them. How about Facebook? What's the message in that medium? It seems to be first: your life exists to be displayed to other people, and you should be aiming every day to show your friends edited highlights of your life. Second: what matters is whether people immediately like these edited and carefully selected highlights that you spend your life crafting. Third: somebody is your "friend" if you regularly look at their edited highlight reels, and they look at yours this is what friendship means. How about Instagram? First: what matters is how you look on the outside. Second: what matters is how you look on the outside. Third: what matters is how you look on the outside. Fourth: what matters is whether people like how you look on the outside. (I don't mean this glibly or sarcastically; that really is the message the site offers.)
— Stolen Focus by Johann Hari (Page 82)