AMERICANS ANNOYED BY "ALL THIS INTERNATIONAL SHIT" ON INTERNET

Web's Increasingly Worldly Flavor Threatens Americans' Worldview

PULLMAN, WASH. (SatireWire.com) -- The profusion of international news
available on the Internet has made it increasingly difficult for the
average American to ignore the rest of the world, a trend researchers say
threatens Americans' long, proud history of disregarding anything not about
them.

"With all the foreign newspapers and multi-cultural sites, the Internet is
making it almost impossible for the average American to remain uninformed
and apathetic," said Samantha Lessborn of Washington State University,
which conducted the survey. "Americans can still do it. But it now takes
effort, whereas before it was as easy as turning off Tom Brokaw whenever he
said 'In South Korea today...'"

According to survey participant Danny Grisham, a 22-year-old from Cheyenne,
Wyoming, it's not just the plethora of international news on the Web that
is irritating. "Look, I can get around the news. I just turn off Reuters
headlines in MyYahoo," he said. "But even some of the search sites like
Yahoo and Alta Vista are available in different languages. Like everybody
in the world doesn't speak English. Yeah, right."

"I can see where it's important if we're, like, beating some country in the
Olympics or bombing them or, ideally, both," Grisham added. "But if some
Colombian drug lord sinks a ferry full of Israeli soldiers in North
Latvoania or Serbo-Malaysia, or wherever, and Americans aren't involved,
what has that got to do with me?"

Other respondents said they were appalled, not just by the availability of
non-U.S. news, but by the way important U.S. news is reported by some of
these foreign sites. "Yesterday, for instance, the St. Louis Rams beat the
Atlanta Falcons, OK, and I go to the London Times site and it's not even
there," said Chip Pernadge of Kansas City, Mo. "Jesus, no wonder those guys
lost the war and had to give Hong Kong back to Canada."

Sensing a market opportunity, Net Nanny, makers of Net Nanny filtering
software, announced this week it will introduce NetNarrow, an English-only
product that automatically filters out content that appears to be
international. Specifically, the software looks for world datelines and
keywords indicative of irrelevant foreign stories, including "Shiite,"
"post-Apartheid," and "Bob Geldof."

Survey-taker Craig Barker of Brooklyn, New York, said he will be among the
first to get NetNarrow. "On the Web, there are so many ways to get news
from so many different places, I could really get some fresh insights into
what's going on in other countries if I wanted to," he said.. "But I don't
want to."

"You'd think these Internet people would know that," Barker added. "I mean,
that's why the Internet is called America Online, right? It's supposed to
be about America."


_______________________________________________
Futurework mailing list
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://scribe.uwaterloo.ca/mailman/listinfo/futurework

Reply via email to