Netizens shame COVID-19 profiteers

By The English Farm on 3月 12 2020
Topical

The Japan Times published an opinion piece arguing that the issue of people hoarding surgical masks has served to show people’s true nature. It notes that the outbreak has resulted in the spread of fake news and racism, and some unscrupulous people have been reselling face masks and even toilet paper at highly inflated prices on sites such as Mercari.

The author says that social media has also become a tool for shaming those engaged in bad behavior in Japan. Sites such as Twitter have made it simpler to spread footage of morally dubious activity. For instance, users uncovered truly ridiculous posts, including one in which 35 packs of masks were being sold for ¥75,000 by someone who claimed to have risked their health getting them.

The opinion piece concludes that this issue has revealed the fractured moral impulse of the Japanese internet at large, split between those taking advantage of a horrible situation for profit and those operating for the greater public good.

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Discussion
Please summarize this article in 3 sentences.
Do you agree with the assertion that events like the coronavirus outbreak serve to reveal people’s true nature?
Do you think that people should be allowed to profit from emergency situations? Why or why not?
Is there value in netizens shaming people for bad behavior?