When Is It Safe To Text or Tweet



Just like many of you this past week I was sickened—yes, that’s the word I would use—by a video that went viral. Viral like a disease that’s infecting way too many in our communities. A good portion of our population.

I think it’s called racial prejudice.

The same disease that drives some of us to download apps like GroupMe meant to spot potential shoplifters, but which turned into racial profiling. The same hair-trigger reaction that caused a shopkeeper to fear a really large black man approaching his store (he wasn’t even in the store because they saw him coming and locked the door) who turned out to be an NBA player.

The young woman’s crime: She was texting. Obviously other kids had their phones out because there are SEVERAL videos of this incident on-line. People text in their cars and they don’t get pulled over and thrown to the pavement. (I wish.) We are a society used to live-blogging, simultaneously walking, eating, and tweeting. Congress does it when the President is delivering the State of the Union address. So what is the deal here? How is texting disrupting a roomfull of students—anymore disruptive than say an officer throwing a fellow student onto the ground and straddling her?

Which leads me to analyze and question:
Times Not to Text, Times Not to Tweet
1)      when you’re black
2)      when you’re a woman/girl or variations of
3)      when you’re young—especially too young to vote
4)      when you are dispossessed (see all of the above)
5)      just shut up
6)      lastly, not in a classroom

Times to Text, Times to Tweet
1)      when you are white
2)      then you can be any gender!
3)      when you are privileged (how is it possible to be anything else?)
4)      when you’re young (because the old tend to be invisible)
5)      especially when using emoticons
6)      lastly, anywhere!!!

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