2. The bastardisation of language. The New York Times recently banned the use of the word ‘tweet’ in its hallowed pages. They could add ‘re-tweet’, ‘tweeter’, ‘tweeple’ and ‘twibe’ to the list. As John Cleese pointed out, there is only one ‘tw’ word that should be used to describe these people: ‘twat’.
3. The creation of micro-celebrities. There was a reason a certain anchor was fired from his/her job and why that rent-an-analyst has enough time to update his Twitter feed every 15 seconds. They weren’t particularly good at their jobs and need the accolades of the me-too crowd to feed their egos.
4. Mistaking 140 characters for political activism. Yes, gang rape, flooding and drone strikes are bad. But railing against them in ALL-CAPS does not require courage.
5. I agree with myself. Being limited to 140 characters makes it impossible to start a good argument. Instead, everyone just pats each other on the back for their wisdom and wit.
6. The play-by-play commentary. Only the truly insane would follow a cricket match on Twitter when they could watch it on TV or follow live updates on Cricinfo. Yet, whenever Pakistan is playing a match, people on Twitter feel the need to announce every wicket and boundary. Cricket commentary on Twitter is as incisive as that provided on TV by Rameez Raja.
7. Constant self-promotion. Congratulations, you have a blog. So does everyone else. If it was any good I would already be reading it.
8. Using the number of followers you have as a measure of self-worth. The only people more pathetic than you are those who collect Facebook ‘friends’ the way Roger Federer collects tennis titles.
9. Its addictiveness: as any self-respecting voyeur knows, there is nothing quite like getting a peek at all the disgusting habits and mannerisms that define humanity. And Twitter, which is exclusively populated by the dregs of humanity, is a voyeur's dream.
10. Myself. Because Twitter is my crack cocaine and I need a fix right now.
Published in The Express Tribune August 22nd, 2010.
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