Monday, June 11, 2007 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com 5 EMMARIE HUETTEMAN Blog bullies GARY GRACA The Paris privilege w A s a teenager, I spent count- less hours justifying my online journal to my par- ents. To them, it was beyond com- prehension why I'd High school want to . waite togirls are the anything real Internet vaguely predators. personal in a forum anyone could read, especially with so many Internet predators. And, after all, "when I was your age, I didn't want people to read my diary." It's not a diary, I'd argue, or at least it wasn't to me. It was a way of communicating with my friends. I wrote about what hap- pened at school, who everyone was dating and other gossip, and my friends could add their two- cents on the comments page. I was just another normal, awkward teenager leaving a trail of seem- ingly inconsequential thought on the Internet. But somehow, it made me feel connected know- ing that someone knew my exact mood at that moment (based on LiveJournal's canned list of emo- tions, everything from quixotic to bitchy) and my side of the latest gossip. But after a while, my friends' responses became less and less friendly. The gossip became mean- spirited as people surreptitiously targeted one another in their entries. Comment sections became battlefields for heated debates and even unprovoked personal attacks. At least a couple fifteen-year-old girls cried. While our society assumes that only pre-teens (and sketchy adults masquerading as teenagers on the Internet) use websites like LiveJournal, such sites have unar- guably revolutionized commu- nication for our generation, and not necessarily for the best. With access to the Internet, anyone can author a blog - whether that per- son has something worth saying or not. But by giving adolescents the opportunity to voice their opin- ions in public - an opportunity once reserved for the supposedly more responsible members of the media - the Internet has allowed them to elevate high school drama to a tabloid-like level of sophisti- cation. Worse still, there's a degree of suspended reality involved in Internet communication. With- out face-to-face interaction, we can't actually experience the con- sequences of our words, making it easy to hurt others without a sec- ond thought. On LiveJournal, we can gossip about our friends just as much as we gossip about our foes, publicly humiliating them without having to actually say it, let alone to their faces. Our generation has given "talking behind her back" a whole new meaning. Unfortunately, it seems these incidents could grow with us, evolving from bouts of teenage drama to cases of adult immatu- rity. Forget about the kids who can't write academic papers with- out a ll or two; what about the ones who keep their blogs into adulthood, thinking it's okay to write frankly about how much they hate their bosses in order to unwind after a long day? I guess I can't blame my par- ents for wondering. Why do we want to share personal details with an unseen audience, poised for judgment? We all have differ- ent motives. Maybe we're curi- ous, participating to find out what other people are writing about themselves. Maybe we're bored, treating Internet communica- tion like the next fad after Beanie Babies. Maybe we're lonely, writ- ing in the hopes that someone will read and understand us a little bet- ter. And yeah, maybe we're a little naive, too trusting that society will do the proverbial "right thing" and not harm us with the information we willingly supply. But too often, it does harm us - not necessarily in the form of the Internet preda- tor that every parent so fervently fears, but in the form of the eighth- grade bully who grows into the college bully. It would be easy to separate myself from that adolescent, armed with naivety and ablog, but it would be a lie. I gave up my LiveJournal in last August, finally convinced that I could not win the battle against hurtful, guiltless semantics by try- ing to be reasonable. Maybe the most mature decision our genera- tion can make is just to leave some things unsaid. Emmarie Huetteman is the summer associate editorial page editor. She coo he reached at huetteme tiamichedu. Normally I don't mind when people are infatuated with celebrity gossip stories. Granted, I would rather have peo- ple talking about more Hilton's deal important s issues like should be the war in given to more Iraq, but it's ill inmates. endearing to know that celebrities are real people with problems too. And when those problems are like Anna Nicole Smith's untimely death and the ensuing paternity battle or Britney Spears's impromptu haircut, they are interesting and, God forbid, maybe even amusing. But Paris Hilton and her adven- tures at the Los Angeles County Jail are different. Hilton's story provided a media opportunity more important than the ordinary celebrity shenanigans that grace the headlines everyday. For once, millions of Americans were on the brinkofbeingexposed to theunfair and brutal realities of country's prison systems, but what followed was coverage that devolved into a melodrama about celebrity privi- lege and public outrage. Instead of using Hilton's trivial story as a platform to educate an interested audience, the media treated it as a spectacle. Although the frenzy that fol- lowed Hilton's release from jail on Thursday would make anyone think otherwise, maybe - just maybe - releasing the socialite who everyone loves to hate from jail and putting her on a restric- tive probation was the right thing to do. At the very least, Hilton could possibly have valid medical concerns. The heiress is currently taking psychotropic medications and has a history of depression and anxiety. Additionally, she has not eaten since returning to jail and has been moved to the medi- cal ward out of concern for her health. The fact that the public prac- tically started to gather up its pitchforks and lanterns for an old- fashioned mob riot doesn't change these concerns. And the fact that other prisoners have more seri- ous medical concerns and are still incarcerated doesn't justify keep- ing her in prison either. If nothing else, Hilton's release only proves that more prisoners should be receiving similar medical releases. The reality is that prisons are not hospitals or asylums. Although it's easy to forget, roughly one in every 32 Ameri- cans is either in prison, on parole or on probation, according to U.S. Bureau of Justice statistics cal- culated in 2005. Of those people who are incarcerated, more than half reported symptoms of men- tal illness in 2006. According to a 1999 study, roughly one-sixth have medical concerns not relat- ed to colds, injuries or surgeries. This includes more than 23,000 prisoners with HIV/AIDS. Just like the situation on the outside, these medical concerns are only made worse by the aging of the population. And in the same waythatregular people with cancer, hepatitis, dia- betes or mental illnesses require expensive and continuous care, so do prisoners. But what prisoners usually receive is something closer to negligence. California's corrections system is a good example of this. In one 2004 incident, a prisoner receiv- ing dialysis removed his shunt. While the patient screamed for help, it was reported that the pris- on's guards were too busy watch- ing the Super Bowl to come to his aid and the patient bled to death. This incident was one of many that led to a federal class-action law- suit that found California's prison system to be so deplorable that it violates the minimal benchmarks of the Eighth Amendment. But how many of the news sto- ries about Hilton mentioned these realities? I don't mind that Hilton was released from prison. For once, the justice system may have been using other available options to get prisoners the care they need and to ease the drain on taxpayers, who provide these prisoners with their expensive medical care. It's just sad that using these options had to come in such a shady way. But more importantly, I was hoping that Hilton's "celebrity privilege" would be extended to more of America's ill inmates. After Hilton was brought back to jail literally kicking and scream- ing, there doesn't seem like there is much hope for that. Gary Graca-is the summer editorial page editor. He can be reached at gmgraca@umich.edu. CHRIS KOSLOWSKI I I m planning to write a Global Wairing bohe thicasiromer. What should I call i H owiaboutIcalmudHerei a my Stupid Book a o a yow, O on dy gusogoiig to and realac e that no aanyr how r iy rmes you call i e ntcommie y or iresoorihie pollung way of lie destroyig our plnet a How about traalar, or Howgl Learned to Finall Admra that land my Gshcl Warengiionsre lIredihly Moton a # . r . i . a«a~w .m wwx) Ir MO E NINE LETTERS M m iRE NE ' 1 tadersare encouraged to sumit letters to the editor Please nclude the writer's name, col at michigandaily.com lege and class standing or other University affiliation. Send letters to tothedaily@umich.edu. R dore up-to-date opinion at michigandaily.com/thepodium