| > The reaction is disproportionate to his contribution, though. His donation was quite small, and at no point did he use his status as a public figure to speak out in favor of Prop 8. What difference does donating 10cents vs $10,000 to a cause make? By donating you are supporting the bill/policy/action. > What he did was wrong, but it was not enough for us to prop him up as a sacrificial lamb in the name of equality. It would serve no common good, bringing us no closer to repealing the law, but could lead to consequences for Brendan far worse than any well-meaning blogger could conceivably intend. The law was already struck down as unconstitutional. But it took 5 years to do so. > Let us instead work to change his moral stance, whether by argument or by example. If tomorrow Brendan Eich were to say - and genuinely believe - that marriage is just as much a right for gays as it is for heterosexuals, then that would be a victory far sweeter than punishing him for having once believed wrongly. I think there is some anger over how Brendan Eich responded; which is not directly admitting to anything. I don't know if I would ask for his resignation, but he still hasn't addressed this very well. The problem seems to be that he refuses to address his stance on it. So you can't very well work with him when he doesn't even admit to donating the money, nor admit to believing that gays should not marry. |
There's nothing to admit though, he didn't commit a crime, he gave money to an organization. What is there to admit?