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by jmacdotorg 5062 days ago
Wandering a bit OT, admittedly, but I feel obliged to push back against this notion. I know you didn't mean it this way, but I see it too often to wave away worse examples of abusive behavior, and it's just not healthy.

The "nicest guy" would not use language like "bitch" or "fag" in comments (to pull the first example I saw in that post's responses), because this implies an assumption that comparing the target to a woman or a gay man should be received as a deeply cutting insult. And this alone acts as enough of a cover for me to judge that book, really.

No, these are in fact rather horrible little people, and it wouldn't surprise me if they were in league with the perps who erased this guy's stuff for teh lulz or whatever.

1 comments

Yeah, you're right, the behaviour is intensified on the Internet, probably because of a greater perceived sense of anonymity. On the road, you've got license plates, people with cameras, cops, the risk of getting into an accident, etc. to occasionally keep people in check.

But to clarify my earlier point, if the nicest guy can turn into a bad person on the road, imagine what a not-so-nice person can turn into.