| He has his past. If that was truly the case he would have explained this when asked about it. He did not. He quit his job rather than do this. Prop 8 had 52% of the vote. It is a mainstream opinion. With ads like this [1] I'm not surprised. His money went to support those, by the way. And you probably meant was. "ok" to be kneejerk judgmental. You and everyone else I've asked this question to seem to dance around it. How is this any different than supporting any other kind of anti-equality thing? * Don't say his views were in the past, they clearly are not, given his post-reveal behavior. * Don't say this is different unless you can objectively prove a way that this particular right is somehow different from the right of women or blacks to vote. So which is it? Why is disliking people because they think women are beneath them or think blacks are sub-human any different than this? It's the same xenophobia dressed up in new clothes - that makes it okay now? it's we need to be more tolerant as a society. We need to treat everybody with respect And part of which is naming and shaming those that fail this relatively simple task. Being tolerant does not mean accepting intolerance in the same way that being pacifist does not mean accepting war. He did apologize for hurting people Which holds about as much water as "sorry you were offended" in my book. The view underpinning the action he (sort of kind of weaselly) apologized for is still there as strong as it ever was. He couldn't even be bothered to give a counter donation. The problem with online bullying is the target's motive & the truth does not matter This is where we diverge. I have no problem what-so-ever castigating someone for bad behavior if it's actually proven that they did engage in bad behavior. Mis-aimed outrage is a huge problem with online communities. However, I see no such mis-aiming here. You've got someone who failed in two big respects - the ability to treat other people with respect in private, and the ability to handle basic CEO duties such as PR and recognizing conflicts of interest. He was unfit to be CEO and did not deserve that position, with those two things in mind. Maybe that's a value judgement, but that's mine to make. I want tolerance Rejecting intolerance is the first step. However, if I don't like your opinion about something Again, you're mis-framing Eich's action as if it were a mere opinion or thought that crossed his mind one day, and not something he gave money to support (this in particular: [1]) and gave his job rather than repudiate. That tells me all I need to know about his "personal beliefs" and how he feels about them. -- [1]: http://www.slate.com/blogs/outward/2014/04/04/brendan_eich_s... |
He has not said anything hateful.
In many ways, I think his opinion is not conducive to equality. In fact, the notion of marriage is unequal. It's unequal to people who don't want to get married or are polyamorous. Also, there are many natural inequalities. There are many gray areas. Also, everybody has prejudices and promote inequality in some contexts.
However, just because someone has an opinion of inequality, doesn't mean he should be the target of a smear campaign.
Tolerance is important.
> Rejecting intolerance is the first step.
That's why I'm rejecting the gay rights movement's online bullying tactics. You don't get a free pass just because you were an oppressed minority in the past.
> Which holds about as much water as "sorry you were offended" in my book.
He said he is sorry he caused pain. He admitted to causing the pain and apologized for that. He did not turn the blame around to say your perception is wrong.
He is the target of your hate. Let go of your hate. Hate is the dark side...
> I have no problem what-so-ever castigating someone for bad behavior if it's actually proven that they did engage in bad behavior.
It's not proven that he behaved badly. Also, who is the proper judge of this? The mob always feels like they are the right judge. The mob always feels justified. How else could the mob justify the bad things that mobs do to their victims?
> you're mis-framing Eich's action as if it were a mere opinion or thought that crossed his mind one day
Have a rational dialog about this. Express how much pain Prop 8 caused. Express why this is an inequality & how that affects you. Don't act with vengeance.
That is why Martin Luther King & Ghandi were successful. They did not act like their oppressors. They had the moral high ground. If they acted with vengeance, equality would not be as far as it is today.