LIVE STREAMING
Photo: Pixabay

Anti-immigration weapon of choice: The tweet

We know that immigration is a hot-button topic. Discourse around pathways to legalization, regularizing status and what to do about unaccompanied minors…

MORE IN THIS SECTION

Expectations for Change

Beyond the statistics

Celebrating Year-Round

Community Colleges

Changes in the political

SHARE THIS CONTENT:

We know that immigration is a hot-button topic. Discourse around pathways to legalization, regularizing status and what to do about unaccompanied minors detained at the border has been vitriolic and filled with hyperbole. But President Obama's announcement of executive actions that may enable undocumented immigrants who are the parents of native-born or naturalized U.S. citizen children (and who have been here longer than five years) to be eligible for temporary legal status and work authorization for two years has really upped the ante.

And the preferred medium is the tweet. 

There are many reasons for this. Unlike Facebook, it is possible to be wholly anonymous on Twitter, or to adopt multiple personas, and thus engage in uncivil behavior relatively consequence-free. With an emphasis on relative. According to a study published in the Journal of Computer-mediated Communications,  "Uncivil comments not only polarized readers, but they often changed a participant’s interpretation of the news story itself."  

The president's changes to immigration policy announced Nov. 21 produced a bumper crop of polarizing comments: 

 

  • LEAVE A COMMENT:

  • Join the discussion! Leave a comment.

  • or
  • REGISTER
  • to comment.
  • LEAVE A COMMENT:

  • Join the discussion! Leave a comment.

  • or
  • REGISTER
  • to comment.