this post was submitted on 18 Oct 2025
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[โ€“] Cocodapuf@lemmy.world 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I think a lot of us empathize with the protesters. I don't actually see any posts saying "this is dumb".

I am still confused though. I mean I understand protesting Trump, ICE, and the government in general. I can't control that, so protest is one of my only courses of action. But with technology... we can just not use it. I think I haven't used Facebook in over 15 years, I've never used Twitter. And I'm happier for it, they're right, that works. I use a smartphone, but I limit the kind of apps I want to put on it. If I find that something, a phone, app, website, whatever, is impacting my life, keeping me from dealing with daily responsibilities, I know it's a problem, so I'll stop using it. My point is, I do have control over my tech use, so why rally about it? After all, all the protests in the world won't give you better self control, that's a skill you need to build.

[โ€“] Cris_Color@lemmy.world 1 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Yeah, I mostly just meant in terms of how much I directly relate with the perspectives of the protesters, it seemed at the time of my comment like most of the commenters looked at things somewhat differently to them (which is fine)

I do think you might really be underestimating how deeply addictive tech can be for many people. For people who grew up on platforms like facebook, Instagram, and twitter, and spent enough time there before reflecting on that pattern, those deeply engrained habits can be difficult to shake to the extent of causing not insignificant anxiety

I had social anxiety as a kid (still do) and so used those platforms almost none because they stressed me out (until I joined reddit in highschool), and even I really struggle with some amount of technology addiction I'm working really hard to replace with better patterns.

I pick my phone up and check all the apps for no reason. I feel a bit anxious if my phone isn't near by. I run out of time in one app I have a time limit set for and immediately jump to another one. I feel a bit stressed when I have to put it down. Not intensely so, but the more I pay attention the more I can tell it's there and see how it's molded my behavioral patterns over time.

I have pretty good solutions to those problems, and think I'm making decent progress, but technology absolutely 1000% has warped my life to be about it. With me often serving it rather than it serving me. I can only imagine how difficult it might be for folks who spent lots of time on those platforms, and are less inclined to tinker with their tech and play with open source stuff, and take alternative technological routes