SourMilk said:
...And what about those who seek to not give a shit? Must we embrace the spam of LGBT? I suppose nowadays you're either with them or against them.
I don't get the attitude here. They literally say "if you don't want to switch browsers, that's fine." You come off as far more hostile than the people you're complaining about.
Alcaste said:
As far as the attitude of "ugh it doesn't involve me" - Imagine if you were persecuted constantly for something you couldn't control and people had that attitude towards you? Yeah. It fucking sucks.
But...It does involve him. He specifically said he was gay.
Xan Krieger said:
It's not like it suddenly doesn't work if you're gay, it's just a man who has different political beliefs than some people.
Political views that one might validly not want to support fiscally. Which does not, by the way, translate into hate.
RJ 17 said:
So because the CEO of a company holds personal beliefs contrary to your own, you should just demand that he resign and that the company be boycotted?
It happens all the time for non-LGBT reasons. Is it different here because he's a homophobe?
You have the right to vote, you know, and that's how such things as gay-rights are solved...not by switching web browsers.
Voting isn't the only form of political pressure employed on companies or even governments. Again, I'm part of the "if you don't want to change, fair play" crowd, but this sort of justification is inane. And, I might ad, it's totally reasonable to not wish to fiscally support someone who gives or has given money to causes you object to.
Incidentally, but making something socially untennable, by costing people and/or companies money fiscally, we do impact social policy and even laws. By railing against this, you're railing against the same system that got blacks and women recognition, because these movements didn't happen by just waiting around for laws to be made. People made protests and demonstrations. They voted with their wallets and their mouths. They lived by example.
Before anyone asks, I supported the right of Chick Fil-A and their consumers. I supported the right of Duck Dynasty fans to their little tantrum. I support the Westboro Baptist's Church right to demonstrate in whatever shitty way is constitutional. I hold these beliefs all-around: if you do not like something, you do not have to support it. Even if I think it's stupid. It's also their right to be as homophobic, intolerant, or stupid as they want. I don't have to, nor will I, ever offer financial support to the above groups. Still, they have the right to their bigotry, and we have the right of self-determination, to act on it in whatever way we see fit (provided we do not harm them nor take their rights away).
I say this against my self interest as a member of the LGBT community. But the principle of free speech only works if we protect unpopular speech. At the same time, free speech is not freedom from consequences, as we as a people have the right to boycott or organise against someone in the same way Jackass: the CEO took part in a campaign against gay marriage.
JazzJack2 said:
The most is could do is have the CEO removed which is simply pointless and will do nothing to help gay rights.
Well, you know, except make such statements and actions socially unacceptable, which would make it harder for someone to openly oppose gay rights in the public market.
Eve Charm said:
What is this shadow complex again? I'm sorry but I don't really care how big an ass the guy running a BETTER AND FREE WEB BROWSER is. People are allowed whatever views they'd want or I'd never listen to anyone that votes republican.
Who said he wasn't allowed to have whatever views he wanted?