Lately, I’ve grown to hate my Facebook feed. But I’m also morbidly fascinated by it. It fuels the fires of my discontent with a steady stream of posts about bone-headedness and sheer
WTF behavior.
As it turns out, I’m not alone. Many of us are morally outraged by our social media feeds. But does all that righteous indignation lead to anything?
Last week,
MediaPost reran a column
talking about how good people can turn bad online by following the path of moral outrage to mob-based violence. Today I ask, is there a silver lining to this behavior? Can the digital tipping point
become a force for good, pushing us to take action to right wrongs?
The Ever-Touchier Triggers of Moral Outrage
As I’ve written before, normal things don’t go
viral. The more outrageous and morally reprehensible something is, the greater likelihood there is that it will be shared on social media. So the triggering forces of moral outrage are becoming more
common and more exaggerated. A study found that in our typical
lives, only about 5% of the things we experience are immoral in nature.
But our social media feeds are algorithmically loaded to ensure we are constantly ticked off. This isn’t normal.
Nor is it healthy.
The Dropping Cost of Being Outraged
So what do we do when outraged? As it turns out, not much -- at least, not when we’re on Facebook.
Yale
neuroscientist Molly Crockett studies the emerging world on online morality. And she found that the personal costs associated with expressing moral
outrage are dropping as we move our protests online: “Offline, people can harm wrongdoers’ reputations through gossip, or directly confront them with verbal sanctions or physical
aggression. The latter two methods require more effort and also carry potential physical risks for the punisher. In contrast, people can express outrage online with just a few keystrokes, from the
comfort of their bedrooms…”
What Crockett is describing is called slacktivism.
You May Be a Slacktivist if…
A slacktivist, according to
Urbandictionary.com, is “one who vigorously posts political propaganda and petitions in an effort to affect change in the world without leaving the comfort of the computer
screen”
If your Facebook feed is at all like mine, it’s probably become choked with numerous examples of slacktivism. It seems like the world has become a more moral -- albeit
heavily biased -- place. This should be a good thing, shouldn’t it?
Warning: Outrage Can be Addictive
The problem is that morality moves online, it loses a lot of the
social clout it has historically had to modify behaviors. Crockett explains: “When outrage expression moves online it becomes more readily available, requires less effort, and is reinforced
on a schedule that maximizes the likelihood of future outrage expression in ways that might divorce the feeling of outrage from its behavioral expression...”
In other words, outrage
can become addictive. It’s easier to become outraged if it has no consequences for us, is divorced by the normal societal checks and balances that govern our behavior and we can get a nice
little ego boost when others “like” or “share” our indignant rants. The last point is particularly true given the “echo chamber” characteristics of our social-media
bubbles. These are all the prerequisites required to foster habitual behavior.
Outrage Locked Inside its own Echo Chamber
Another thing we have to realize about showing our
outrage online is that it’s largely a pointless exercise. We are simply preaching to the choir. As Crockett points out: “Ideological segregation online prevents the targets of outrage
from receiving messages that could induce them (and like-minded others) to change their behavior. For politicized issues, moral disapproval ricochets within echo chambers but only occasionally
escapes.”
If we are hoping to change anyone’s behavior by publicly shaming them, we have to realize that Facebook’s algorithms make this highly unlikely.
Still,
the question remains: Does all this online indignation serve a useful purpose? Does it push us to action?
The answer seems to be dependent on two factors, both imposing their own thresholds on
our likelihood to act. One is if we’re truly outraged or not. Because showing outrage online is so easy, with few consequences and the potential social reward of a post going viral, it has all
the earmarks of a habit-forming behavior. Are we posting because we’re truly mad, or just bored?
“Just as a habitual snacker eats without feeling hungry, a habitual online
shamer might express outrage without actually feeling outraged,” writes Crockett.
Moving from online outrage to physical action -- whether it’s changing our own behavior
or acting to influence a change in someone else - requires a much bigger personal investment on almost every level. This brings us to the second threshold factor: our own personal experiences and
situation. Millions of women upped the ante by actively supporting #Metoo because it was intensely personal for them. It’s one example of an online movement that became one of the most potent
political forces in recent memory.
One thing does appear to be true. When it comes to social protest, there is definitely more noise out there. We just need a reliable way to convert that to
action.