dudalb
Penultimate Amazing
And Bafferts use of the Cancel Culture excuse is just plain pathetic.
because their intentions are bad
After the winning house in the Kentucky Derby tested positive for a prohibited level of a performance-enhancing drug and is facing disqualification, the trainer (Bob Baffert) goes on Fox News and blames "cancel culture". Baffert has a record of more than thirty previous doping incidents.
It seems that "cancel culture" is the new whine-du-jour for conservatives and rightists caught out in misconduct.
Okay, bit of a side track here. I'll put a pin in it.I am still failing to see how Gamergate and the Sacco firing/rehiring are at all closely related.
Okay, bit of a side track here. I'll put a pin in it.
Which post includes "hand-waving the entire thing away as cancel culture" upthread?
This reminds me of some bad relationships I've been in...Hating "Cancel Culture" does always seem to boil down to "Moral relativism for me, moral absolutism for you."
"When you're wrong, you're wrong. When I'm wrong STOP EVERYTHING AND HAVE A DEEP NEVER ENDING INFINITE HAIRPSLIT PHILOSOPHICAL DISCUSSION ABOUT THE VERY CONCEPT OF WRONG, WHO GETS TO DEFINE IT, AND EVERY POSSIBLE PARALLEL DISCUSSION!"
Which one was hand-waving the entire phenomenon, though? I generally try to link specific actions (e.g. calling for firing someone) to specific consequences for specific individuals (e.g. Sacco, Richards). I don't think you're giving that approach a fair shake here, even though you claim it's okay at #2955.Any of your posts that conflate these disparate incidents of "cancelling".
Any of your posts that conflate these disparate incidents of "cancelling". My point remains that most of these incidents do not have that much in common and linking them together as "cancel culture" is trying to force a square peg in a round hole and has become increasingly clear is mostly a culture war ploy by reactionaries.
It's possible to do bad things with good intentions. "The road to hell is paved with good intentions".
Okay, bit of a side track here. I'll put a pin in it.
Which post includes "hand-waving the entire thing away as cancel culture" upthread?
Whenever I see something that fits the common definition, I use the common phrase. So far no one has suggested an alternative phrase for the performance of group shaming on social media designed to induce withdrawal of support from a public figure who has committed some transgression.It's not a side track, I think it's very telling that you conflate all these issues into the same phenomena.
Whenever I see something that fits the common definition, I use the common phrase. So far no one has suggested an alternative phrase for the performance of group shaming on social media designed to induce withdrawal of support from a public figure who has committed some transgression.
Once again, though, I have to ask in which post I handwaved away the entire phenomenon instead of addressing specific instances. I'm afraid you may have me confused with someone else here, or perhaps with Fox News.
You've left off the bits that are actually new, even though I just typed them out above. Why?Seems odd to coin a new phrase to describe the very basic foundation of society, that people might expect good behavior from others and withdraw support from those that fail to do so.
You've left off the bits that are actually new, even though I just typed them out above. Why?
So far as I can tell, only a handful of preexisting social phenomena have received a new coinage as a result of how massive connectivity has significantly changed the way we relate to one another. I happen to think this particular coinage is handy, because no other phrase compactly describes the process of social shaming plus social media, which enables countless people who've never previously heard of someone (e.g. Kroger Andy) to call for their immediate punishment.So what, every preexisting social phenomena that has already existed is now a new phenomena because the internet exists?
So far as I can tell, only a handful of preexisting social phenomena have received a new coinage as a result of how massive connectivity has significantly changed the way we relate to one another. I happen to think this particular coinage is handy, because no other phrase compactly describes the process of social shaming plus social media, which enables countless people who've never previously heard of someone (e.g. Kroger Andy) to call for their immediate punishment.
Yes, lots of people are very upset that new media is increasingly decentralized and that the traditional gatekeepers have less and less power to direct discourse. It was much easier to evade consequences for bad actions back when there were fewer and more powerful gatekeepers of public dialogue.
There's probably an interesting conversation to be had about the decentralizing impact the internet has had on public discourse and more broadly on human society, but I can't see how such an obviously bad-faith framing like "cancel culture" is going to be a productive foundation for that.
Keep linking to your dictionary.com definition while reactionary freaks howl at the moon about cancel culture. Congrats on being the one true defender of the real definition.
But what about true victims of Cancel Culture like Bill O'Reilly? It was common knowledge that he sexually harassed his employees see the lawsuit from 2006 where he was recorded wanting to rum falafel all over his assistant in the shower. Nothing came of it because that was before cancel culture. Then he has another settlement for sexual harassment and because of cancel culture it starts costing him advertisers and then his show.
Whom are you accusing of bad faith and do they read your posts?There's probably an interesting conversation to be had about the decentralizing impact the internet has had on public discourse and more broadly on human society, but I can't see how such an obviously bad-faith framing like "cancel culture" is going to be a productive foundation for that.
Has anyone here argued that O'Reilly ought to have evaded professional consequences or that his termination was the result of cancel culture run amok?That really is the perfect illustration of how cancel culture impacts real lives in a negative fashion.