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Showing posts with label Digital Activism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Digital Activism. Show all posts

Monday, October 2, 2023

The Echoes of Civil Rights: From Selma to Silicon Valley

 The Echoes of Civil Rights: From Selma to Silicon Valley. Strap in, because we're about to go on a journey that's part history lesson, part wake-up call, and a dash of something you didn't see coming.

Let me tell you, folks, it's 2023 and we're still wrestling with some age-old questions. Questions like, "Why can't we all just get along?" But before you chime in with a one-liner about world peace, let's take a detour and talk about the echoes of civil rights—from Selma to Silicon Valley.

Here's something you didn't expect. Ever wonder why your phone—your lifeline to the world—knows you better than your grandma? It's because algorithms are the new poll taxes and literacy tests of our time, gatekeeping who gets to speak and who gets heard. If Selma was a march for equal rights, Silicon Valley is a sprint for equal bytes.

And let's not ignore the daily routine that's as habitual as your morning coffee. You wake up, grab your phone, and check your feed. But instead of thumbing through a newspaper like your parents, you're scrolling through a world curated for you. Ever consider that this digital reality is a new battleground for civil rights? The right to be seen, the right to be heard, and the right to exist in a space that increasingly defines our society. If we don't march through this digital divide, we risk marginalizing voices that have fought for centuries to be heard. It's electrifying and terrifying, all at once.

You know what's awe-inspiring? The resilience of the human spirit to keep fighting. Just like the marchers on the Edmund Pettus Bridge, we too can bridge the gap between our digital lives and our real lives. How? By becoming digital activists. You don't need a sign or a chant—although those never hurt—you just need a click. A click to share, to like, to amplify. Because the new civil rights movement will not be televised; it will be digitized.