Facing the screen, do you want to be an angel or a keyboard hero? - Illustration: UniCamillus
And I completely agree with every word of that.
Being criticized as "rice" if not using slang
Using the word "remind" seems too gentle.
In today's story of cultural behavior, the advice of our elders to a group of young people hiding behind their keyboards, nurturing their licentious thinking and careless language must be called by its right name: Correct those "rude mouths"!
The artist who devoted himself to art through each inspiring performance suddenly had countless strangers flood into his house and write sarcastic, sarcastic words on the wall like "old man", "not good enough", "fame-seeking"...
And while many people choose to silently ignore harsh words or "retaliate" against anti-fans at all costs, an artist chooses to give a warning full of hidden meanings and profound but sincere advice:
" This story should be clear and distinct. Whoever loves or likes whoever is fine, but remember we are enjoying art from the perspective of people with Vietnamese culture. A nation that loves peace. Values love, respects righteousness, loves learning, and loves the country. No parent wants their child to be a slut. No school wants its students to be uneducated! "
As parents, we always pay attention to training our children to speak well and think well. Every day, we stand on the podium and carefully train our students to know how to say hello, thank you and apologize, to be tolerant and forgiving...
But children leaving their parents' arms and the embrace of school are exposed to negativity on the internet. The "toxic smoke" in behavioral culture keeps hitting their eyes, entering their ears and sowing the seeds of disease in the land of children's souls.
Just a click or a light touch of the hand, and the toxic smoke will immediately penetrate the minds of young people. Seeing it often will make your eyes familiar, hearing it often will make your ears familiar. And once infected, it will control people unconsciously.
There are young people who swear out of habit and are criticized for being "rustic" if they don't use slang when communicating. By making excuses like "living honestly", "living straight", "living with substance", a group of young people display a culture of poor and ugly behavior.
"Reinforce" the two legs of the tripod
Why can so many young people nurture such negative and toxic emotions in their souls? Do parents know that their children are littering the virtual world, or do they still believe that they are polite children? Do each parent pay attention to monitor their children's digital footprints to provide timely guidance and correction?
The online world allows us to connect without limits, express our personal opinions and observe all the changes in the world around us. Unfortunately, we are increasingly witnessing more and more harsh words, offensive status lines, scandalous stories and gossip.
Technology is serving humans and humans have exploited it to carry out their evil intentions. The "stones" hiding behind the keyboard keep throwing at the kind-hearted people with countless criticisms, insults and generalizations.
That must be one of the reasons why Vietnamese people were once ranked among the countries with the lowest civilization index in cyberspace?
Behavioral culture in cyberspace in general and art appreciation and commentary in particular needs to be urgently corrected!
Many countries around the world are increasingly aware of the negative side of social networks and have taken drastic measures to prevent the spread of bad and toxic information, and to appropriately punish those who take advantage of virtual networks for personal gain, violate privacy, and defame honor.
We cannot just theoretically shout slogans about improving cyberspace behavior.
Let's take strong measures to prevent evil with strict sanctions and a tight legal corridor to push back the toxic smoke on the virtual network.
And to reduce the "rudeness" on social networks, I think the two pillars of family and school must "reinforce" moral lessons from real life to virtual networks.
Source: https://tuoitre.vn/dep-nhung-cai-mo-hon-tren-mang-xa-hoi-cach-nao-20240908080513934.htm
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