I mean, her attackers didn't explicitly state their voting intentions, true, but I don't think the 'right wing' give a shit about supposed whitewashing, ableism or transmisogyny in the fanart for children's cartoons. God knows I don't.
Since when has voting been the touchstone to right/left? More than that they are styles of behaviour, or ways to approach the world, an entire ethics...
Just because Joseph Stalin was a 'Communist' does not mean he was on the left any more than the KGB were radical cheerleaders. Gulags, bullying, repression, denial of self expression, an entire apparatus of authoritarianism - I'm pretty sure you're getting the picture.
On Zamii:
I honestly feel bad for her. Although I'm no great art connoisseur her work looks quite good to me. And it's clear from the fact she was getting it out there that she is/was genuinely enthusiastic about it. And really the criticisms are petty, a dress size or two, a change of hairstyle, a different skin tone. Without having more than passing familiarity with her work I can't honestly say if there is latent racism there or not (or at least whether the degree of it is any higher than the background count... if you prefer) but there is nothing blatant and no overt comments or sensationalizing to attract unwanted attention. One comment I did notice was the claim that at 20 she definitely knew exactly what she was doing. Um yeah, righto, would have thought that myself when I was 20... probably think it now (although I won't later
). But really the tumblr community was/is quite divided on the issue:
https://motherboard.vice.com/en_us/article/an-attempted-suicide-forced-a-tumblr-community-to-open-its-eyes-about-bullying
The fallout split members of the Steven Universe fandom on Tumblr in two: those who claimed that Paz's artwork was regressive/problematic and believe that she deserves to be continuously policed, and those who support her brand of artistic freedom and believe that the community's aggressive brand political correction is shutting out potential and important voices in the community.
Continuous policing plus shutting down dissent vs artistic freedom and diverse voices, reminds me of right vs. left. And a diversity of voices means
all the voices. Shutting down those you don't like is business as usual for reactionaries.
http://fusion.net/story/223425/zamii-steven-universe-fandom/
In the words of Tumblr user Stephan K
“You can say “hey, that made me uncomfortable” in a way that’s reasonable or, better yet, just don’t follow them. Abuse en masse is not the correct response. That’s the response of a bunch of over-reactionary assholes.”
Regardless of the flags waved, or the content of the positions (reputedly) held, there is the overarching form of expression, or way of interacting with the world. To oversimplify - is the behaviour inspired by love and a desire for sharing and improvement or by hate and a desire for confrontation and destruction. Opening things up or shutting things down. Two very different styles of behaviour.
The case of Brendan Eich it is a whole lot murkier. Firstly, regardless of political views he has/had done a whole lot of good for the world with his coding work - free open source software that has opened up access to many people (myself included) to the internet without the need for a dubious profit driven corporation as intermediary. That Mozilla has itself become corporatized and is perhaps not so wonderful as it used to be is by the by. Secondly although there was a mob of sorts it was (immediately, at least) instigated and led by a private, profit driven company, OkCupid, which definitely had a financial motive (8% of its business being from relationships that potentially could have become banned). Sure they could have had other motives too. Thirdly, and significantly there was no evidence whatsoever that he had discriminated against anyone at Mozilla becasue of their sexual preferences/orientation. His only 'crime' was to have donated, 6 years previously, to a campaign fund for banning same-sex marriage.
https://www.forbes.com/sites/susanadams/2014/04/04/mozillas-brendan-eich-persecutor-or-persecuted/#70a4a5ea35cd
...Andrew Sullivan, the popular writer of the Daily Dish blog who is openly gay and an early supporter of gay marriage. “The whole episode disgusts me – as it should disgust anyone interested in a tolerant and diverse society,” he wrote. “If this is the gay rights movement today – hounding our opponents with a fanaticism more like the religious right than anyone else – then count me out.”
Or again:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brendan_Eich
Conor Friedersdorf argued in The Atlantic that "the general practice of punishing people in business for bygone political donations is most likely to entrench powerful interests and weaken the ability of the powerless to challenge the status quo".
It is one thing to be at odds with people wanting to deny the rights to same-sex marriage but quite another to want their blood for holding the contrary position. It is murkier still in the context of this thread since Eich refused to apologise and stepped down (=was forced out) as CEO of Mozilla instead and this only 11 days after the Mozilla board appointed him already knowing the full story of the political donation. Oh, and should we mention the three high profile board members (2 former CEO's) who resigned in protest at the time of his appointment... um, yeah? Still this is the world of corporations complete with image and media manipulation and all that goes with it; no sympathy for these shenanigans even or especially in an organization which prides itself on its progressive credentials.
So an advertisment driven, dating webiste embarked on a boycott campaign (but... why?) that, shock-horror-sensationalist-tabloidmedia, led to a shutting down of diversity. So prospective CEO's should avoid all acts of moral courage well in advance? Or better yet exclude themselves completely for expressing their political views? Out damn moral courage, out.
The Matt Taylor shirt strikes me as a quite clever mobilization of the Space Amazon meme [sic: anachronism warning] and astounds me that it caused more than a passing comment. (Yeah, quite appropriate to ask in passing if he thought it might be sexist, might even have got an intelligent reply or started him thinking.) Totally (contra New York Post) so much more aesthetically pleasing than a suit and tie - clip on or otherwise - at least to me, and I genuinely dig the colours. [sarcasm] But the guy is clearly a fucking humanist. Not one Giant Killer Robot anywhere on the shirt. And he works for a Space Program, how is this even possible. [/sarcasm] Honestly are the people who took task with him for this out there burning like 70 years of SciFi covers, in between overturning most of the stalls at the various Game Developers conferences. Come on people priorities. Oh wait [/sarcasm] really.
Deskbound geek guy wearing sexy adventure heriones - of course it has its haters but do they even stop to think? But arguably worse are the hater of these haters:
https://www.theguardian.com/fashion/2014/nov/17/comet-scientist-matt-taylor-shirt-awful-what-should-wear-instead-rosetta
As generally happens when a subject takes a feminist turn on the internet, the idiots then turned up, with various lowlifes telling the women who expressed displeasure at the shirt to go kill themselves. (This is not an exaggeration, and there is no need to give these toerags further attention in today’s discussion.)
And in this game of strange bedfellows (oh wait is that doubly sexist, ha, ha):
Boris Johnson http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/science/space/11234620/Dr-Matt-Taylors-shirt-made-me-cry-too-with-rage-at-his-abusers.html
I watched that clip of Dr Taylor’s apology – at the moment of his supreme professional triumph – and I felt the red mist come down.
He wasn’t weeping with sheer excitement at this interstellar rendezvous. I am afraid he was crying because he felt he had sinned. He was overcome with guilt and shame for wearing what some people decided was an “inappropriate” shirt on television. “I have made a big mistake,” he said brokenly. “I have offended people and I am sorry about this.”
So in all three cases there are more than enough people willing to defend these people who rightly/wrongly have been harassed by mobs, whether they have apologised or not. But honestly the mob succeeds in shutting down views that it does not like
in advance if we resort to creeping around with a lack of moral fortitude. (Note that this is not an argument for painting a massive target on one's back either.) It also plays into the mobs hand if we join in their tactics of flagrant confrontation or harrassment, particularly when other avenues exist to be pursued.
I find it sad, in the way Turing was sad, that here we have three individuals that to varying degrees, and each in their own way, were contributing to the social commons being shut down by mobs. Particularly because they had become targets precisely of the significant contributions they had already made - more than the vast majority of mobsters ever will, and that is no doubt part of the problem. And all this without judgement on whether their 'transgressions' even were such or serious.
[As an aside back to Lout Whippers and debate/devils advocacy: 'It is not the Sleep of Reason that produces Monsters but its Ceaseless Vigilance' roughly Deleuze, somewhere I can't remember, cf. Goya.
As to the internet mob itself: hookers and blackjack - at least the secondary meanings I started trying to draw out a few months ago. Hookers being the gross commercialization of the internet that started with the device of the p0rn industry back in the early 90's and Blackjack being the highly rarefied distillation of the skinner box deployed in 'cyber'-technology. Back to the fondleslab.
]
p.s. Staring into the well of human misery is an unpleasant experience; got to hope it never looks back at me, or at least too closely...