spiderman-s-wisdom
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| Spider-Man taught us that power demands responsibility. The internet taught us that power attracts people who couldn’t spell responsibility if you spotted them the first five letters. The responsible ones? They don’t scale nearly as fast as the reckless ones. | Spider-Man taught us that power demands responsibility. The internet taught us that power attracts people who couldn’t spell responsibility if you spotted them the first five letters. The responsible ones? They don’t scale nearly as fast as the reckless ones. | ||
| - | Responsibility Doesn' | + | **Responsibility Doesn' |
| - | Power attracts the irresponsible like flies to honey. The internet built the honey factory. | + | Power attracts the irresponsible like flies to honey. The internet built the honey factory. The reckless didn’t just win; thanks to the internet they rewrote the rules, so responsibility itself feels cringe. |
| - | The reckless didn’t just win; thanks to the internet they rewrote the rules, so responsibility itself feels cringe. | + | We begged for flying cars. We got billionaire chaos goblins with verified checkmarks instead. The responsible don’t go viral. That’s the whole problem. |
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| - | We begged for flying cars. We got billionaire chaos goblins with verified checkmarks instead. | + | |
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| - | The responsible don’t go viral. That’s the whole problem. | + | |
| The Cranky Cynic cuts through the BS: challenging oversimplified narratives and spotlighting the real, nuanced journey of human innovation, and laughing at “truth by consensus.” | The Cranky Cynic cuts through the BS: challenging oversimplified narratives and spotlighting the real, nuanced journey of human innovation, and laughing at “truth by consensus.” | ||
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| + | ==== Spider-Man’s mantra stuck with me: “With great power comes great responsibility.” ==== | ||
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| + | When I first started teaching technology back in the 1990s, as the internet stumbled out of its nerdy cocoon and went commercial, I stressed our responsibility to understand the power of the internet as a communications tool and to use it wisely. | ||
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| + | I wasn’t preaching doom, or gloom, just stressing the idea that if you’re going to use this shiny new communications tool, maybe don’t use it to spread chain emails about Bill Gates giving you money. | ||
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| + | Trouble is, the internet gave us great power, and most people used it to share cat memes and conspiracy theories. Responsibility? | ||
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| + | **Origins of the Phrase (Or, Who Said It First?)** | ||
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| + | Comic book geeks will happily debate which Spider-Man issue first dropped the line, but it was the 2002 Tobey Maguire movie that burned it into pop culture. | ||
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| + | Of course, the phrase predates Marvel. | ||
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| + | Some folks believe the origin of the phrase is based on a Biblical quote of Jesus of Nazareth. In the Gospel According to Luke, Luke 12:48 (Luke chapter 12, verse 48), | ||
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| + | Variations on the phrase "To whom much is given, much is expected" | ||
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| + | Voltaire allegedly said it too, though the internet loves to credit him for everything short of inventing Wi-Fi. | ||
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| + | Winston Churchill dropped it in a 1906 speech in the House of Commons | ||
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| + | Theodore Roosevelt wrote it in a famous letter 1908, | ||
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| + | The point is: the idea’s been around forever. We just remember it because Uncle Ben died and Hollywood gave us a catchphrase. | ||
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| + | **The Brave New Online World** | ||
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| + | Remember The Outer Limits? The 1960s version ended every episode with a moral lesson about science and responsibility. | ||
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| + | Today’s internet ends every episode with a comment section, which is basically morality theater performed by trolls. | ||
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| + | Back then, online forums felt like magic—connecting with people across the globe, trading ideas, building communities. Fast forward, and now we’ve got social media: a place where “community” means arguing with strangers about pineapple on pizza while advertisers quietly auction off your browsing history. | ||
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| + | The power of the internet is connection. The responsibility is remembering that the person you’re connecting with might be a bot, a scammer, or your uncle pretending to be a 23-year-old influencer. | ||
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| + | Parents worry about who their kids are talking to online. These days, the “stranger danger” talk needs a Wi-Fi password. | ||
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| + | **Myths, Legends, and Lies on Speed Dial** | ||
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| + | The internet’s biggest flaw isn’t speed—it’s laziness. | ||
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| + | People don’t fact-check; they just assume the top ten search results are gospel. That’s how myths become “truth.” If repetition made things true, Elvis would still be alive and living in Delaware. | ||
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| + | News travels faster now. Lies travel faster too. A gross exaggeration is still a lie, but now it’s a viral lie with a hashtag. | ||
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| + | **The Cynic’s Closing Note** | ||
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| + | Spider-Man taught us that power demands responsibility. The internet taught us that power attracts people who couldn’t spell responsibility if you spotted them the first five letters. The responsible ones? They don’t scale nearly as fast as the reckless ones. | ||
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| + | So yes, with great power comes great responsibility. But online, with great power comes great irresponsibility—and usually a blue checkmark. | ||
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spiderman-s-wisdom.1773859449.txt.gz · Last modified: by cynic
