Like, in a practical sense? Do you have any stories or examples from your life?

  • john_brown [comrade/them]
    ·
    edit-2
    14 hours ago

    It means that a large part of my job is just copying and pasting things that have already been sent to clients because they straight up do not read everything they're sent even if it's just three or four sentences in a paragraph. This has gotten worse since Covid. Loads of these people are business owners, too. I can't imagine working for them, it must be a fucking nightmare.

    edit: It also means a lot of clients balk at text communication entirely insisting that it's easier to explain something over the phone. Inevitably, the thing they absolutely needed to monopolize someone's time for can be expressed in a single fucking simple sentence.

    • keepcarrot [she/her]
      hexagon
      ·
      3 hours ago

      So, when I think of "text", I think of speech, audiobooks, film, as well as literal text etc etc. For instance, reading the Parenti quote and understanding its meaning would be the same as listening to someone say the Parenti quote and understanding its meaning.

      Which I thought this was about. If a politician says something, the ability to parse the layered meanings (usually, "this is the public thing I'm saying" and "these are the interest groups I'm signalling loyalty to"), and not like... Being able to read cooking instructions in text but being able to follow cooking instructions in a tiktok.

      • john_brown [comrade/them]
        ·
        3 hours ago

        I think the inability or unwillingness to actually read and process everything presented to them probably applies to the speech of politicians as well. They're not paying attention to everything being said much less analyzing it critically.

        • keepcarrot [she/her]
          hexagon
          ·
          3 hours ago

          I feel like some processing is going on. They understand that the speech is signalling loyalty to interest groups, but they don't actually remember the words said and also mistake the loyalty group being signalled (hence the "leopards ate my face" phenomenon, at least partly). This isn't critical analysis, the belief that "politician is saying that for me!" and "politician is saying what we're all thinking!" is the barest bones of processing. They do engage a bit more energy if a politician says something they openly disagree with.