There are aspects of our lives that are only true because we collectively believe it to be true.
A good example is paper money, its value is what we agree it is, the moment we stop believing, it becomes worthless.
The same is true for Laws, Borders and Political/Social systems.
يقولون: الصحفي الأمريكي الأشهر والأبرز ( تاكر كارلسون) ليس صديقاً للعرب والمسلمين، لكنه يحاول كشف الحقيقة.
أتابع الرجل من مدة وأعتقد أنه أفادنا وأفاد قضيتنا المركزية أكثر من عشرين قناة تلفزيون عربية.
نحن مظلومون وكل المنحازين للحقيقة هم أصدقاؤنا.
تحية كبيرة لتاكر وكل أصحاب الكلمة الحرة في العالم.
د. عبد الكريم بكار
This may seem controversial, but I’ve always subscribed to this take—that you cannot be bullied on the internet. I also agree with the idea that bullying requires a lack of escape and a power dynamic between you and the bullying party to qualify as such. A random stranger tweeting an insult at you is, in all honesty, not bullying in my opinion. Being hated based on someone’s opinion of you is a matter of their moral character, not bullying, whether you feel offended by it or not.
This is why I also say that I don’t see any human being on this planet who’s capable of bullying me on the internet. It’s simply not possible. I can’t be dragged into the gutter by even the dirtiest pig if I don’t wish to be, and I possess both the emotional and mental bandwidth to fire back. Beyond that, there’s no power differential between me and any supposed bully, someone who may not even qualify to function in my space in real life. And then there’s the option of disregarding them so completely that they might as well not exist.