The Digital Burka: How Screens Became Our Self-Imposed Shackles
From work-from-home to work-without-face—why the age of convenience is turning us into faceless ghosts in glass cages
If you believe in free speech, subscribe to support uncensored, fearless writing. The more readers who chip in, the more time I can devote to it. I’m not yelling from the sidelines—I’m a university professor fired for criticizing Hamas.
Subscribers get at least three essays a week, plus open comments. It’s $6/month (less than $4 USD). People say, “It’s just a cup of coffee,”—so when you’re at the Substack café, pick mine. Cheers.
Now, a confession fit for the times: my books on digital communication have sold fewer than 500 copies. Combined. They’re digital, not hand-bound by monks—but still. Behold the towering monument to my obscurity.
And what do I teach? Marketing. Naturally. There’s a poetic symmetry in that—like a vegan butcher or a sober Irishman.
But don’t mistake me for some embittered, rotund luddite clutching a Nokia 3310 and snarling at Wi-Fi routers. I am not anti-digital. I do not yearn for a cave, candles, or a quill. What I am is anti-delusion—and nowhere is the collective…
Keep reading with a 7-day free trial
Subscribe to Freedom to Offend to keep reading this post and get 7 days of free access to the full post archives.