This isn't a freedom of speech question, although it's fun to see that hoary old chestnut make another appearance on a forum. Always entertaining to see people invoke "freedom of speech" whenever they're feeling cross about something.Calbeck said:I suggest you look up any discussion of free speech which has ever entered a court of law in the United States and Britain. That, or consult a lawyer so they can give you a blank stare and then toss a legal brief on the subject in your lap.
Protip: "forced into going somewhere else" is one of the side-effects of a "chilling effect". Hence the reason I realize you have no idea what you're responding to.
Jesus, you're all over the place. Firstly, I never said journalism shouldn't be criticized. Secondly, once AGAIN I was referring to the "laymen" you are so happy to hand wave the behavior of. I mentioned blacklisting and mass mail campaigns as an attempt to squash opinions you dislike. You hand waved it as the actions of "a mass of people on the internet" who apparently needn't be held to any standard of behavior at all, because "mass of people" I guess.Calbeck said:Hm, let's see: lack of connective material, leaping to conclusions strictly on basis of he-said/she-said, and making assertions without any support. Well, if that's the kind of journalism you don't think should be "criticized"...
Sooo....that was a fun change of subject. Once again, I recall a single incidence of this happening, related to discussion of a single event, and you've pretty much confirmed that. Unless you just felt like not listing all the other "websites" that joined in this call to "quash" the discussion you've been happily having for weeks and weeks now?Calbeck said:Except for the reality: by that time, ZQ's personal affairs were barely 1% of posts on the GamerGate subject --- ASIDE from people opposing the group, who almost without fail brought it up.
So, clearly, it seems to me that you feel Stephen Totilo was ONLY calling for GamerGate's opposition to be quashed. Interesting interpretation, that.
Not to mention that by the time of the "single sourced call" we're talking about, most other gamer-related venue of speech had already been censored by their site owners. So at this point, they were exporting their quashing to sites they had no control over, but you seem to want to minimize that fact.
This is sort of a common theme, isn't it? I ask you a question, and suddenly we're talking about something else! It's kind of neat.
The whole of Reddit and 4chan tried to "quash" discussion on other websites! Gasp! When did that happen! The whole of Reddit! Like, all of it? All of Reddit tried to quash discussion on other websites?Calbeck said:The whole of Reddit and 4chan immediately come to mind, neither of which limited quashing to "Zoe Quinn's sex life" either.
Or wait, do you mean "discussion was quashed" ON Reddit by the people who own and moderate Reddit? Well that's much less exciting, isn't it?
Alright, so...if someone shushed you in a library, you'd view that as censorship. If you were asked not to swear in the board room, you'd view that as censorship. So invoking "censorship" is basically your go-to reaction any time you're not allowed to say exactly what you want to say when you want to say it, even if it's on someone else's property. The Gater definition of censorship, which is what I thought.Calbeck said:[/i]a person who examines books, movies, letters, etc., and removes things that are considered to be offensive, immoral, harmful to society, etc... to examine in order to suppress or delete anything considered objectionable ; also : to suppress or delete as objectionable [/i]
You react to the term as though it, itself, is a crime: it is not. It is merely an accurate description of the mods of those websites conducting lawful actions to suppress speech of which they did not approve --- regardless, in fact, of actual content, since discussion of the movement was itself censored.
Wrong? Not wrong. Just advocates of the kind of "censorship" they're aggrieved about, on a much larger scale. Not allowed to say what I want on your website? Well then sir I want you fired and your voice removed from the discussion entirely. This is the "ethical" movement I am to understand is policing the non-ethical journalists, and am being asked to support.Calbeck said:Now, you respond by saying GamerGaters are wrong to blacklist, condemn, and seek the firing of people who in any other field of endeavor would already be fired for having dramatically embarrassed their parent company with broad-stroke insults of a core demographic.
I cannot agree. But since we're on the Escapist, I'm free to do that and so are you.
There's no law against mass mailing sponsors to try and get something removed from the internet, just like there's no law to stop fundamentalist Christians from trying to get violent shows off the air, or government officials with strong beliefs from stumping to get harsher laws strapped to entertainment products. People are allowed to do all of these things, I'm in no position to tell them no.
Surely you could just CRITICIZE the journalists in question, but it's much more important to SILENCE them forever and see to their ejection from the industry, so you never have to hear them ever again. This will better craft the world you want to see. Have at it! What could possibly be wrong with that?