The problem with the cancel culture is that the further one goes with censorship, the closer one gets to the kind of dictatorial behaviour that most of us would hope to avoid.
It's far better to debate than cancel.
??
The problem with the cancel culture is that the further one goes with censorship, the closer one gets to the kind of dictatorial behaviour that most of us would hope to avoid.
It's far better to debate than cancel.
Mate, if there were any other task -- say, doing something on the computer -- that you still got wrong at all after many years of doing it, and having all the incentive in the world to get it right, I'm sorry, but nobody would call it easy.
But more importantly, no matter how big or small the effort, you don't get to decide for me that I MUST care about your pet issue. Out of all the issues -- ranging from world hunger, to global warming, to Apple vs Microsoft vs Linux, to whatever -- that I might devote my limited time and mental capacity to, you have unilaterally decided that YOUR issue is THE one I MUST have in the top X that I actually care about and devote an effort to.
Sorry, but... what in Lucifer Morningstar's good name do you think gives you that right? Do you think you're royalty, or...?
I don't even care if it's a big or small effort. You don't get to unilaterally decide that I need to do it.
Jesus F Christ. Forget "cancel culture" or whatever, THIS is the real problem of the modern age: people thinking they're entitled to tell you that THEIR pet issue -- be it gender, Apple vs Microsoft vs Linux, saving the polar bears, or whatever -- is THE one you should have at the top of your list to care about. And taking it as some kind of hostility if you don't actually care about what they tell you to.
And anyone who thinks that refusing to let them dictate what I should care about is no different from actual hostility... yeah, well, that's exactly the kind of entitlement I was talking about.
Nobody personally owes you anything, much less to let you write the list of what they should care about.
But nobody owes you any care or effort towards whatever your issue is.
she's a celebrity, nobody needed to contact disney. this was unearthed from decades ago or something private, she put it out there on her social media. proud to do it, actually.
Wow, leave some straw for other people.
Take your own advice? Because everything you wrote in this message was a gross distortion.
Good one.
I can't speak for him, but the way I can understand what he's trying to say, it's that basically Disney (as well as most corporations) are quite conscious about their image. In fact, they pay dozens of people whose only job is to make sure the image they present is the best it can be. It's the whole reason to exist of, say, the PR department in a corporation. If you create a crap-storm and are famous enough (even just by virtue of the crap-storm) and associated with their brand, nobody needs to call them. They'll act anyway.
That’s true.
Also, it’s not like people are contacting her employer like they’re not monitoring her Twitter already or pulling out recordings of private private statements or a misrepresentation or distortion of her. These were public statements to millions of people, including her employer.
she's a celebrity, nobody needed to contact disney. this was unearthed from decades ago or something private, she put it out there on her social media. proud to do it, actually.
I can't speak for him, but the way I can understand what he's trying to say, it's that basically Disney (as well as most corporations) are quite conscious about their image. In fact, they pay dozens of people whose only job is to make sure the image they present is the best it can be. It's the whole reason to exist of, say, the PR department in a corporation. If you create a crap-storm and are famous enough (even just by virtue of the crap-storm) and associated with their brand, nobody needs to call them. They'll act anyway.
That’s true.
Also, it’s not like people are contacting her employer like they’re not monitoring her Twitter already or pulling out recordings of private private statements or a misrepresentation or distortion of her. These were public statements to millions of people, including her employer.
Okay, so an actor says some stuff that people object to on Twitter.
1. She says the objectionable stuff.
2. People on Twitter say they object.
3. Some other people maybe contact her employer directly and call for her to be fired because of objectionable stuff.
4. Her employers fire her.
Which of these four things do we have a problem with, and how can we remedy those things to maybe stop it happening again?
1. Maybe stop her from saying the objectionable stuff? Apparently some people wouldn't like any intervention there.
2. Stop people on Twitter from objecting? Is that either feasible or desirable? If not, there is no point complaining that people are complaining.
3. Should people be prevented from calling someone's employer? Well, it may not be a nice thing to do, but how do you prevent it in a feasible and desirable way?
4. Maybe we can prevent employer's from firing their staff without very good reason. Personally, I hope that the US would improve its labour laws and get something other than "at will" hiring. Perhaps if the actor is a member of a labour union, they can get the union to get on the employer's case about it.
So, yes, I hope her union has something to say about it. Maybe she can get all her conservative friends to rally round labour unions and get them to put pressure on these capitalist pig-dogs who would frankly sell their own grandmothers if it earned them a buck.
Dunno about US improving labour laws to that extent. Even the most unionized countries don't really protect against everything. E.g., here are the rules for Germany, a country which is as unionized and social-economy as it gets: https://www.winheller.com/en/busine...tion-of-employment/reasons-for-dismissal.html
They quite explicitly involve stuff like "offensive comments, including on social networks, against the employer or work colleagues." So is basically breach of just about any enforceable clause in your contract. Among other good reasons.
You may be entitled to a written warning for the first offense, but after that, your ass is fair game.
Dunno about US improving labour laws to that extent. Even the most unionized countries don't really protect against everything. E.g., here are the rules for Germany, a country which is as unionized and social-economy as it gets: https://www.winheller.com/en/busine...tion-of-employment/reasons-for-dismissal.html
They quite explicitly involve stuff like "offensive comments, including on social networks, against the employer or work colleagues." So is basically breach of just about any enforceable clause in your contract. Among other good reasons.
You may be entitled to a written warning for the first offense, but after that, your ass is fair game.
Hmmm... we're running out of avenues. What can we do?
The problem with the cancel culture is that the further one goes with censorship, the closer one gets to the kind of dictatorial behaviour that most of us would hope to avoid.
It's far better to debate than cancel.
If anyone genuinely can't distinguish between the very different stances of:
1. Being against you doing X, and
2. Not caring either way about whether you do X or not,
well, then they're an entitled idiot, and I don't care what they think about me.
I mean, let's try it for any other X
1. person A is against Mexicans in their neighbourhood, while
2. person B doesn't care if they have Mexican neighbours or not.
1. person A is against hiring blacks, while
2. person B doesn't care if there are blacks or not among his coworkers.
Sorry, but anyone who genuinely finds position 2 indistinguishable from position 1, isn't some kind of progressive. That's some entitled twit who thinks the whole world owes him to champion his cause and help him get what he wants.
It's in fact, exactly the kind of entitlement delusions that produce the incels, among others. Those too think that everyone who isn't actively championing their right to get laid is the enemy.
Do you even have a point you're trying to make, or is it just browbeating attempts from here on?