[Reading-hall-of-fame] Re: Musk posts baseless conspiracy theory about Paul Pelosi attack

Cynthia Greenleaf cgreenl at wested.org
Mon Oct 31 14:27:35 GMT 2022


Thank you Colin,
May I share this letter with others?

Cynthia Greenleaf, PhD
Senior Research Scientist
Literacy Services, WestEd
cgreenl at wested.org


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> On Oct 31, 2022, at 7:17 AM, Colin Harrison <colin.harrison at nottingham.ac.uk> wrote:
> 
> Dear editor
> 
>  
> 
> If posting baseless conspiracy theory stories that are immediately reposted and that gain tens of thousands of 'likes' within hours is Elon Musk's idea of democratising social media, then I'm going to follow the lead of other European academics who have contacted me today from Germany and the Netherlands to say that they are permanently unsubscribing from Twitter (Musk posts baseless conspiracy theory about Paul Pelosi attack on Twitter, Guardian, 30 October). I've spent much of the last ten years researching how best to educate young people into becoming safe and confident Internet users, but this becomes more difficult every day. Academics and teachers need to let Musk know that his thoughtless and dangerous behaviour does not broaden democracy. Instead, it supports the view, already held by tens of millions of Americans, that if you don't like the world that democracy has given you, you simply use money and violence (amplified by social media) to eliminate it. Twitter has a unique foothold within social media and is widely used by academics, but ELINET, a research consortium of literacy academics from 28 European nations, has already unsubscribed. Musk needs to learn what Kanye West learned last week: that social media actions have consequences.
> 
>  
> 
> Yours sincerely
> 
>  
> 
> Colin Harrison
> 
> Emeritus Professor of Literacy Studies in Education, University of Nottingham

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