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There is no doubt that Facebook has become an outlet for self-aggrandizement represented in such a way that mundane things become magnified and disseminated in mere seconds. There are even times when the venue could jeopardize connections, relationships, and even jobs. But this need for information regardless of necessity is the very reason Facebook survives and will continue to do so for some time. As the author so aptly puts it, “If someone is offering you a carrot you did not pay for, chances are that there is a stick somewhere.”
I think many people feel the same way towards Facebook as a social networking site. Those who abhor it and never attempt to join and those who have joined but decided to uphold their privacy later on or just out of boredom. But the fact remains that it has given people something to talk about, online or on other mediums such as magazine articles. It has diversified life as we know it. Relationships, as pointed out, have become virtual and the interesting idiosyncrasies of human communication have drastically changed. But this is not to say absolutely that everything Facebook has offered is negative. As they say, different strokes for different folks.
The letter changed in the most fundamental sense by checking the grammar and trying to look for a much better flow in the ideas that I am trying to convey. It directly addresses the editor of Washington Post as indicated from the very first line of the letter. The primary purpose is to relate to the editor my opinion of the article. The first thing that was conveyed was my initial reaction of amusement upon reading the article. I figured that the best way to reiterate this is to quote the actual line that made me laugh. The laughter is not out of absolute unaffected humor but because of the irony, it contains.
A comment was also made on the way that the article was written. The author has pointed out very valid claims on the effects of Facebook on relationships that I agree with. But at the same time, at the end of my letter, I wanted to point out that Facebook in its totality is not all negative. It does not only survive but continues to flourish because there will always be people who approve of its dynamics. All the same, no one is mandated to join or continue membership. I would like to say that I tried to incorporate the criteria provided in the rubric for this assignment. In a letter such as this one, it was mentioned that different styles depending on the personality of the writer and I hope the letter adequately contains my own.
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