You’ll remember how the other day Shore old boy Trenton Oldfield swam midstream to disturb the Oxford boat race in order to protest something or other. One of the rowers, William Zeng, had
 this to say about the incident: 
When I missed your head with my blade I knew only that you were a swimmer, and if you say you are a protester then, no matter what you say your cause may be, your action speaks too loudly for me to hear you. I know, with immediate emotion, exactly what you were protesting. You were protesting the right of seventeen young men and one woman to compete fairly and honorably, to demonstrate their hard work and desire in a proud tradition. You were protesting their right to devote years of their lives, their friendships, and their souls to the fair pursuit of the joys and the hardships of sport. You, who would make a mockery of their dedication and their courage, are a mockery of a man.
Excellently put. Trouble is, Zeng did this on 
Twitter, so that eloquent paragraph originally came out like this: 
8 Apr William Zeng  @Zengscape 
FavoritedFavorite • Close Open Details 
and the hardships of sport. You, who would make a mockery of their dedication and their courage, are a mockery of a man.
8 Apr William Zeng  @Zengscape 
Reply RetweetedRetweet Delete FavoritedFavorite • Close Open Details 
You were protesting their right to devote years of their lives, their friendships, and their souls to the fair pursuit of the joys
8 Apr William Zeng  @Zengscape 
Reply RetweetedRetweet Delete FavoritedFavorite • Close Open Details 
to demonstrate their hard work and desire in a proud tradition.
8 Apr William Zeng  @Zengscape 
Reply RetweetedRetweet Delete FavoritedFavorite • Close Open Details 
you were protesting. You were protesting the right of seventeen young men and one woman to compete fairly and honorably,
8 Apr William Zeng  @Zengscape 
Reply RetweetedRetweet Delete FavoritedFavorite • Close Open Details 
no matter what you say your cause may be, your action speaks too loudly for me to hear you. I know, with immediate emotion, exactly what you
8 Apr William Zeng  @Zengscape 
Reply RetweetedRetweet Delete FavoritedFavorite • Close Open Details 
When I missed your head with my blade I knew only that you were a swimmer, and if you say you are a protester then,
You have to read it from bottom to top to make sense of it, and the sentences are chopped off in the middle! 
That is as good a demonstration as any other as to why Twitter will
 never be an effective medium for argument.
Good call Tim!
ReplyDeleteThanks - and thanks for the link!
ReplyDeleteThough I suppose I should stop being so bitter and twisted about twitter stealing the bloggers.
ReplyDeleteWhy not be bitter and twisted? I have never gotten into Twitter, and I resent it too. So there!
ReplyDelete