Quote:
Originally Posted by Alan Kaufman
Does it strike anyone here as strange that the two authors, Alan Kaufman and Sherman Alexie, who stand up to oppose the hi-tech cestruction of books are each the sons of genocided people? Kaufman (me) is son of a Holocaust survivor; Alexie is Native American.
Perhaps we intuit something that you don't, about how trashing of sacred cultural
artifacts such as the book has genocidal implications that you all, in your haste to embrace all these toys, may be unaware of, through no fault of your own. We just happened to be born to genocided people. And we're trying to warn you, alert you, that despite all the reassurances that it won't happen, can't happen, etc., the fact remains: hi-tech is destroying books and book culture. The book world is in collapse. And this bodes terribly for our culture and civilixation. It is a step into barbarism of the worst kind, though one may not immedioately see this.
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It strikes me as odd that you think there is a single individual alive on this entire planet that does not hail from one or more cultures in their ancestry that has been the victim of genocide or other similarly grandiose evil actions.
Then your implication that books are somehow a sacred part of culture is just about the most ridiculous thing I've read in the last hour. Books are a technology exactly like computers are a technology. They are a fantastic technology, very effective at their purpose. Some people prefer a different technology now, that is ALL that is happening. No significant producer of books has, to date, suggested that standard paper books are going anywhere. None.
I hope that someday you recognize how ridiculous your claims are.