INTERNET COMBAT BASICS
Avoiding Vernacular Homicide: The Wordsmith
Introduction
Forums are one of the oldest forms of social networking. On
the surface they are excellent marketing tools and provide a valuable knowledge
base for any given subject. But laced within every forum are landmines. Members
fall victim to vernacular homicide due to their careless navigation of forums.
This section will define the pitfalls that forum members face.
While forums record the most accidents, the evolution of
social media presents additional obstacles that could slap your net cred with a
fatality. Twitter, facebook, comment sections on sites like Lifehacker are
danger zones.
Don't Piss the Wordsmith Off
Words kill. Keyboards are the second leading cause of death
of the Internet persona. (I'm not sure what the number one cause is, but I'm
pretty sure it's watching Justin Bieber videos on Youtube.)
You may think that slight, thinly-veiled jab at the wordsmith,
in passing, will go unnoticed. It will not. Wordsmiths are similar to sharks in
the sense that they swim the Internet looking for opportunities to exert their
knowledge of the written word. Mention the wordsmith by name and you're
chumming the waters, asking to be Quint from Jaws.
Pissing of the wordsmith is no different than disturbing a
hornets’ nest. Before you know it, you are being stung by a string of words and wit
in perfect cohesion.
What to do?
The simplest answer is to run. Unfortunately, the human ego
does not favor the flee option in a fight-or-flight scenario. But when you’ve be burned bad enough to have
Richard Pryor’s ghost appear next to your computer and say, “Look motherfucker,
fire hurts. Think this shit out before you mix up a mess of words and hit that
send button.”
You should listen to him.
But you won’t.
You should scurry over to another board in the forum.
Usually forums have boards that certain members never migrate from. This is an
opportunity to let your wounds heal. Just blend into a thread about the new Testament
album and hope no one recognizes you as the person that got clowned on another
board.
But you won’t.
You will concoct a response – a retaliation that will have
you gleaming when you hit send. That’s a false sense of security. You are about
as safe as a camera lens in Kayne’s presence.
But since there is no stopping you, here are the guidelines
to surviving a second attack.
I. The Diversion
Throwing in a third party as a diversion is a tactic that
can prove to be successful if done properly. You must bring something funny and
witty enough in hopes that the crowd’s attention will wander from your
floundering. If you fail to do so, the spectators will start placing bets on
when you will suffer the same fate as Apollo Creed in Rocky IV.
II. It is
not necessary to dissect and rebut the ENTIRE thrashing.
This just gives the wordsmith more
opportunities to exercise his mind and gives the crowd an instant replay of the
beating.
III. Do not ( under any circumstance) quote a
sentence and respond with an emote.
This will cause several
problems. One, it will show that you have no reply, but you’re too stupid not
to acknowledge it. You should have played like Genesis and sent “No Reply at
All.” Two, and this problem is two-fold, you will bring attention to the flame
that obviously left you speechless. This will also highlight it for readers
that may have missed it the first time. In turn, this will cause them to re-read
the entire post while your beating is replayed in their minds.
IV. If your response does not smell of vengeance, do not quote the sentence.
IV. If your response does not smell of vengeance, do not quote the sentence.
If you actually muster up a response that involves words
make sure they have bite. Responding to a critical hit requires a retaliation
that is an equal deduction of life points. Otherwise you might as well walk
around with “Finish Him” written above your head. A few generic put downs followed by
questionable pictures lifted from the Internet
in hopes of diverting the crowd’s attention from the reality that you
have not returned with an acceptable burn will not work. The wordsmith knows
this tactic all too well. He has seen it many times. He may choose to call you
on it if your gibberish doesn’t provide him with enough material.
V. Threatening Violence is the Endgame.
V. Threatening Violence is the Endgame.
Everyone can bench press air. Never forget that you are in
cyberspace. Being a third grade thumb- wrestling champion holds no weight on
the Internet. For every twenty bicep curls you can do with your keyboard, there
is a WOW veteran that can do twenty-five.
Threatening violence does two things. One, it shows everyone
watching that the wordsmith is under your skin, no matter how many times you
cry that he isn’t. It’s just fun, it’s all jokes. You try to validate this by portraying
violence in a cartoon manner. By this stage, you’re transparent. Two, once the
violence gauntlet is thrown down, the fight is over. The wordsmith didn’t beat
you. You beat yourself. It’s the boomerang effect. You threw the words, he
laughed, they came back to you, and knocked you the fucked out.
Conclusion
You must learn and accept the fact that the wordsmith it
smarter than you. You’re not the first victim of his vocabulary beatdown. You’re
not bringing anything new to the table. Each reply is an opportunity for him to
polish his skills as he prepares for more formidable opponents. You’re the 1976 Tampa Bay Buccaneers. You
cannot win. But all is not lost. The
Internet is full of people that would like to play emoticon flaming with you.
Stick to that game. And secretly study a thesaurus. But don’t just memorize
words that will help you win at Words With Friends. Actually learn the meaning
of the words and maybe one day you’ll say goodbye to the little, yellow smiley
face.
Remember, Ivan Drago doesn’t lose. That’s only in the
movies.
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