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Covering Politics in Cyberspace

Malaria, TB and Laptops

In an effort to explain just how monumental the Internet is and will become, Phil Noble asked if you would rather be a Harvard-educated kid in America with no computer or a peasant in India with one. His answer: the peasant in India. He went on to say that he predicts that in the future, poor kids all over the world will be getting $100 laptops.

This may be a first, but I am not the idealist in this debate.

I asked during tonight’s “The Future of Politics Online” dinner discussion, if we - as in wealthy Westerners - have failed to get enough mosquito nets and malaria pills to the world’s poorest children, who’s going to give them laptops?

And even if they get a laptop, what about Internet access? Electricity? Education on how to use the laptop effectively? Northwestern University professor Eszter Hargittai argued at USC on April 16 that technological advances have not lead to a Tom Friedman “flat world” but rather to more social inequalities and a deeper digital divide.

Some journalists in the audience responded that the poor already have these technological capabilities. The widespread use of cell phones - rather than land lines - was given as an example.

But a cell phone is not a laptop. It does not require electricity or much training.

Furthermore, is that really where wealthy donors should be spending their limited funds? Yes, it is better to teach a man to fish, and maybe the poor would greatly benefit from being connected to the global community. But if millions of children are dying from malaria, tuberculosis, AIDS and starvation, what good is a laptop?

Posted by Hanna Ingber Win on 04/18/07 at 09:35 PM in News

Comments

“Eszter Hargittai argued at USC on April 16 that technological advances have not lead to a Tom Friedman “flat world” but rather to more social inequalities and a deeper digital divide.”

Right, in 2007, we are invited to believe that poor people got a better deal in 1997, 1947, 1927, 1897, 1857, 1757, 1257, 427, -127, etc.

MORE social inequality?  God, for the Halycon days of 1627 and BCE 2047! Technology really sucks and hard, for sure. Is there any way to register dumb oblivious cranks like this, in case they buy automatic weapons?

That is “Progressivism” all over, arguing that the world is getting poorer, as the world grows richer, according to any known standard.

Posted by on 04/1907 at 12:45 AM
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