Social Media as Eternal Testimony

Your word is your prison.

Julian S. Taylor
GEN
Published in
12 min readSep 3, 2021

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NOTE: Within this text, wherever gender is not key to the explanation, I am using the Elverson ey/em construction of the Spivak Pronouns.

Photo by Efren Barahona on Unsplash

In the 1970s people believed things. They believed that Richard Nixon was a crook. They believed that the war in Vietnam was essential to preserve democracy around the world. They believed that The Beatles were the best band in history. Some people even believed that Jesus had been reincarnated in Texas. People believed things as they have always believed things. Among most people, those beliefs were private possessions. If pressed, an individual may express a belief; but, as a general rule, your beliefs were yours: “I’m a Christian but I’m not religious.” “I’m conservative but I like folks.” Deeply held beliefs tended to be tossed off as the personal experience that they were.

Cavett Robert, successful lawyer, salesman and motivational speaker, suggested the following as advice to sales trainees, “Since 95% of the people are imitators and only 5% initiators, people are persuaded more by the actions of others than by any proof we can offer.” This expert salesman proposes that people are divided into initiators and imitators. Initiators testify. They raise their voice and argue for a particular belief. Imitators accept and hold the belief the initiator…

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Julian S. Taylor
GEN
Writer for

Software engineer & author. Former Senior Staff Engineer w/ Sun Microsystems. Latest book: Famine in the Bullpen. See & hear at https://sockwood.com