I couldn’t care less
about how issues, being typically, an issue, got talked so much all over the
social media. 1MDB, TPPA, the education system, the JPA false alarm, and so
many other headlines which are not even academic or should I say; undebatable.
Undebatable in a sense of how unnecessary certain issues can be, from how
irrelevant the sources can be, up to how silly the reaction from the netizens
can be.
We all have been very
familiar to all these situations right? We are Malaysians after all and in this
small country, we can’t really avoid ourselves from being caught up in
situations that might have this tendency to being asked “Hey have you heard
about this?” or “Have you watched that video on that facebook page?” and being
as Malaysian as we could, as respectful as we are, it’s pretty hard to avoid
this kind of situations.
"Everyone gets to be a
star"
I tried so hard to
relate this small part of this article to the song ‘Everyone Gets A Star’ written
by Albert Hammond Jr, which has the lyrics; “These guys have all got problems
These guys have all
got their problems.” But it only works for these two lines and another two that
says; “Although you're getting angry, I know everyone gets a star.” I mean,
just look at this and think about how it would be very perfect if the wording
was meant to sound; “I know, everyone gets to be a star.”
Let’s just look back
at how our social media really works these days. We would open our Facebook
app, scroll throught the News Feed and read along all the posts that appear on
the feed. The best thing about this is that other people keep on sharing other
posts, or even videos, and this is how an issue usually got spread out like
wildfire.
But hey, everything
must have its good sides, and not just bad sides, right? I like some campaigns
on the internet, which as the nature of a campaign, it has to go viral. Some of
the campaigns like Pseudoscience, ‘Kempen Semak Status Hadis Sebelum Sebarkan’
and some medical officers who post things educating the public and busting
myths in our culture are good examples on how to use the internet correctly.
What I would like to
imply on this ‘Facebook Effect’ is how people nowadays, the youth especially,
they go around and live on following the issues that have gone viral all over
the social media. What I like the most about this is that every single Facebook
user has the right to voice out their opinions and this is the most interesting
part, where every user has their own rights to be a star, on their Facebook
account at least.
It’s also very fortunate
that on Facebook, there’s hardly any limit on how many posts a user can publish
per day. So let’s move to Twitter. Twitter is a place that I like very much.
140 characters, and everyone gets to argue on things, on issues, and the
discussions can get very lively with other people joining in.
But with 140
characters?! We can’t even put a full proper sentence in there and people take
Twitter discussions seriously nowadays. There are people who claim to be
trolls, who fake their silly tweets just to get attention from the other
Twitter users, and there are also people who claim to fight for their rights,
also in Twitter. Go create a Twitter account if you don’t have one and you’d be
surprised just how fast you can be a star in that ecosystem.
Consume and costume lifestyle
People like to do
businesses nowadays. There are a lot of new cafes, foodtrucks, small shops and
even new online shops in the internet. The number doesn’t seem to be declining
at the moment. People sell stuff, and there are some other people who do not
sell, they buy and consume stuff.
Everyone has the ego
to always look good, or to be appreciated by their colleagues, their classmates
and all, so the ego has to always be fed. We end up following trends, following
what’s the ‘in thing’ today, buying things we don’t even need, and showing it
all on our social media. Of course, we have the rights to publish anything we
like right on our social acconts? Because that’s our personal space and no one
have the rights to tell me what to share and what not to share.
Yes, and we, some
other people who observe, are kind of worried with how this trend is currently
going. I call this lifestyle as ‘consume and costume lifestyle’. Let’s face the
fact, our youth are so easily affected by what other people are currently doing,
regardless of whether it is a good or a bad thing. Just look at how the Vape
thing got so much attention from the youth. They are now the sellers, and also
the buyers of this ‘vape industry’.
Where do we go from here?
So I talked about how
worrying the way we use our social media and the lifestyle of majority; not all
of the youth in our country today. Where do we go from here? I didn’t separate
the youth in two groups, the ones who go to university and the ones who don’t.
I don’t see any need or any significance in classifying these two groups. Why?
Because you and I, being a university student doesn’t make us any better than
the other group.
Look at our
universities. Look at all the official programs initiated by the HEP. Look at
all those students who kind of work for the HEP. Look at how inefficient all
the programs have been. Look at how many of those programs, that fill the time
of the students, even on weekends, are actually non-intellectuals.
Our universities have
so many flaws they need new direction on where they are heading to. It’s sad that students always have to look at outside
of the campus to actually go to intellectual-based programs, to go to current
issues forum, to go to listen to presentation of NGO’s surveys. They are
university students, they have the rights to actually be fed with intellectuals
and academic stuff. But what if the university is always taking the students to
do something else, let’s say for example; entrepreneurship? I’m not saying like
entrepreneurship is a bad thing to educate the students but this is not the
direction a university should take.
What’s the relation
between university not doing what a university should do, to ‘consume and
costume lifestyle’ and the social media? The youth. The 18-30 years old age
group. We used to have this kind of thought where we would say that university
students are always better than the others. But today it isn’t always the case.
The youth are the main users of the social media or the internet. The youth are
the ones who are directly affected with so many problematic national issues.
The youth are the ones who are needed to be there, to be vocal and academic on
dealing with these issues. But where do we go now? The university doesn’t seem
to hold any solution to any of these problems.
Everything is political
I remember going to a
talk in 2015, where the speaker said ‘everything is political’ a few times in
his talk. That caught up my attention, and even from a muslim perspective, we
cannot deny the fact that our beloved Prophet Muhammad s.a.w. was being
political even before he became a prophet. Being political is a big sunnah,
apart from other very important Sunnah, and that’s basically it.
Unfortunately, how
frequent can we hear someone that’s around 18-30 years old age group, saying
something like “I don’t’ talk politics”, “You can talk to me about anything but
please not politics”, and the most favourite of all; “Politics is too dirty”.
This is what our youth has been thinking about politics, about nasional isssues
and almost about anything that has the word government and politics in it.
This is not an
exclusive problem among those who do not go to university. Trust me, university
students are also thinking the same way as well. They do not hold the idea that
everything is political! Instead they keep on thinking on how to raise their
own money, their own survival. That’s the reality today, we all know that.
Everyone
is struggling with the bad economy. But that’s never an excuse for us, or for
all the university students to live only with their own lives in their head.
The people out there are hoping for the educated ones to at least do something,
change the policy, recover the economy, make a lot of job opportunities for all
Malaysians, but hey the university students mostly don’t want to even think
about it.
Most of them are so
busy on the social media, creating funny contents, sharing their own
achievements, buying stuff they don’t even need, pampering themselves with good
electronic gadgets, and do all of this while saying “We don’t do politics”.
Maybe they just want
to be a star. I remember reading tweets saying some vloggers got married and
guess what, a few days later, a video was out. A video about how simple and
minimalist their wedding was. Good message of course, but seriously? After all,
they are stars to a certain group of people.
A group of people who
couldn’t care less about what’s going on in the country. Or maybe a group of
people who would just say things about issues and be a star on their personal
social accounts.
Wake up. Take some
time to admit the fact that everything is political. Take part in politics
(which doesn’t mean you have to be in any political party). Be the voice of the
youth in politics. If the youth do not realize this reality, maybe one day it
would be very hard for us to be our own star as there might be tight internet
surveillance in our country.
It might be very tough for any of us to start our
own business as the economy might collapse if things stay the same for a long
time. It might also be very difficult for us to keep going with the ‘consume and
costume’ lifestyle. Well, maybe some youth will not even care, as they might be from rich families. But most of us, we don’t live with much wealth in hand.
The youth should at least do something, play a part and be political.
No comments:
Post a Comment