John Keefer said:
While I see (but don't agree with) Olin's point of view, and at the same time abhor Sterling's bigotry, the tweet poses an interesting dilemma worth following.
I don't see the interesting dilemma here. You have the right to free speech, but not (to borrow a line from Jon Stewart) consequence-free speech. He has the right to be a bigot in his own home. He has a right to be a bigot in the streets. He has the right not hold up a sign at a black person's funeral saying "God Hates Black People," as WBC has done with homosexuals over the years. He has the absolute right to be a bigot so long as he doesn't threaten harm, attempt to incite violence, or attempt to cause panic.
He does not have the right to be employed, however, despite this[footnote]And I know the ownership of a franchise is a little more complex that that, but he still doesn't get any special right to no consequences, or for people to buy his merchandise, etc[/footnote]. And one of the great ironies is that it's largely conservatives up in arms. The same people who vote for the "at will employment" laws. The same laws that say a private business doesn't need to have a reason to fire you.
It also doesn't give you the right to be free from criticism. And it doesn't really matter if he thought he was saying it in private.
You even say this, though in less detail. So where's the dilemma? The home angle? Assumed privacy is nothing more than that: assumed.
Phrozenflame500 said:
Also, weird thing to bring up as a PR guy.
There's an old saying that I think needs updating to something like "Twitter makes fools of us all."
RA92 said:
He apparently took women to look at the 'beautiful black bodies' of his players while they were showering, so you can through in sexual harassment as well. And lets not forget multiple tenants of his filing (and winning) lawsuits against him for using racial slurs and not following through lease agreements because the were black. So he wasn't being just a bigot at his home.
Wow. Sounds like the acts of a victim to me.
Quantum Glass said:
I don't necessarily agree with Olin in this particular instance, but he clearly has noble intentions.
I'm hoping it's more of a "Devil's Advocate" thing.
Baresark said:
You aren't going to change his opinions on certain races by banning Sterling from the NBA
I wasn't aware that was anyone's intent. Can you point to some people who have said "If we ban him from the NBA, maybe he won't hate black people anymore?"
Also, anyone who thinks this is gonna stop anyone from buying Evolve... well you're a fooling yourselves. The fact that you would punish and entire game development team for the opinion of one man makes you little more than a child participating in kindergarten politics.
I'm confused. How are they fooling themselves? Not buying products gets the intended result, from getting rid of the Mozilla guy to getting back the Duck Dynasty guy. Even if you think it's "childish" or "kindergarten politics," it works. And by your own rationale, they're already not buying the games, so they can't be fooling themselves into thinking this will stop people from buying the game, because they already have a body of proof.
Pickapok said:
And he isn't even necessarily a member of the creative team, he's the guy that runs the forums. That's about as low on the team totem poll as you can get.
When you hire HR/PR/Community managers, they're ostensibly there to represent your company. This seems like a poor excuse.