Donald Trump’s election ‘an enabling force’ for hate, U.S. scholar says
HALIFAX — Social media platforms like Facebook and Twitter may have provided the combustion for the explosion of hateful views, but more online policing isn’t the solution, says a leading scholar on the Holocaust and other crimes against humanity.
“Policing the internet is extremely difficult because it’s an open source,” says Stephen D. Smith, a professor at the University of Southern California who is also executive director of the USC Shoah Foundation, and holds the UNESCO chair on genocide education.
“It feels like that’s coming a little too late because the behaviour is now established … We aren’t going to be able to roll that back.”
Instead, Smith believes educators have an obligation to help students develop new skills aimed at recognizing and responding to online hatred.