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eyes on the U.S.

Social Media - The Digital Breadcrumbs That Feed Our Souls

"Enjoying" a performance by singer Robin Thicke
"Enjoying" a performance by singer Robin Thicke
Lobsang Salguero*

-Essay-

BOGOTA — Have you heard? Your phone is spying on you, Apple isn’t as friendly as you think, and Facebook is getting scarier by the day!

Today, information is an increasingly valuable currency, not only because it allows companies to generate strange intangible assets that are so difficult to replicate, but also because what we do with our mobile phones in particular is more and more complex, things that would have been considered magic not that long ago: taking photos and sending them in seconds to places dizzily far away, for example.

But after everything we heard from Edward Snowden, we are questioning the way we manage information and the trust that we put in companies and corporations that we don’t know. But what we should really be questioning is the way we use our time creating, processing and sharing this knowledge.

My work colleagues, family and friends very often criticize my participation in social network sites because they see them as a waste of time. But the truth is that it’s the most effective way to share what we’ve learned and to take advantage of what others have learned.

Let’s say, for example, that we took a wonderful trip to the beach, and in the process discovered a great budget hotel with an attentive staff. A few years ago, we would have kept the hotel’s card and shared the information with our closest friends. These days, we’re much more likely to post something about our experience on tripadvisor.com, then, via Facebook, show all our friends the charm of that special breakfast and the owner’s smile as she served us that fresh fruit in the morning.

By passing on this information, we simultaneously help these business owners and engage in communication, conversation and trust with our friends, acquaintances and even strangers.

Using social media sites allows us to share our knowledge and make the world more accessible to everyone. And if that isn’t the goal of mankind, then what is? To cram useless knowledge into our heads? To ponder obscure articles written by academics who decided to redraw the world in their office in the manner of Plato’s cave? The world is outside, and life is to be shared. We are connected by our thoughts — a global village, a collective intelligence.

Russia gave Snowden a safe haven with a computer, a secure connection, some good vodka, warm red borscht and encouragement to publish everything he knows in open networks. So as far as I’m concerned, the dawn will come. Long live colloquial knowledge, the two-way gatherings within the walls of debt and equity. Long live the breadcrumbs that lead us to the photo of that beautiful woman in the faraway plaza in a destination we’ve only dreamed of. Long live free information, easy to access and as thorough as we dare to make it.

*Lobsang Salguero is a teacher at Icesi University in Colombia, director-creator of Singeria (www.icesi.edu.co/singergia) and a consultant in trade and advertising.

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Geopolitics

Syria's Child Soldiers: Armed Factions Are Sending Kids To The Front Lines

After more than a decade of war in Syria, where some 90% of the population now lives in poverty, children are working as fighters for the armed factions to help feed their families.

 Displaced children play with toy guns in the make-shift camp of al-Bardaqli near Sarmada, northwest Syria.

Displaced children play with toy guns in the make-shift camp of al-Bardaqli near Sarmada, northwest Syria.

Juma Mohammad/IMAGESLIVE/ZUMA
Samer al-Mahmoud

AFRIN — To feed his family, Marwan Qaiquni had no other option but to have his two children, Rabah and Shehadeh, to work as day soldiers with the armed opposition groups in northwestern Syria.

Rabah and Shehadeh, who earn up to $4 a day, guard Turkish military points or are stationed on the first and second front lines. With no guarantees or compensation in the event of death or injury, the brothers are among hundreds of children and adults who have resorted to such work in the war-torn country in recent years.

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As the conflict enters its 14th year, "More than 90% [of Syrians] now live in poverty, the economy is in free fall amid tightening sanctions, and increased lawlessness is fueling predatory practices and extortion by armed forces and militia," said Paulo Pinheiro, chairperson of the UN Independent International Commission of Inquiry for Syria.

A UN report last June said that armed groups have recruited children throughout the conflict and civil war in Syria. And that the number of children recruited has risen steadily over the past three years — from 813 in 2020 to 1,296 in 2021 and 1,696 in 2022. Many of these children have died on the front lines. The Syrian Network for Human Rights (SNHR) reported in November that at least 12 children were killed while fighting alongside the factions allied with the opposition forces in 2023.

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