I guess you didn't actually read my post. I'll try a different approach.Vegosiux said:Give me about two hundred hours in a day, and I promise I'll fight all the good fights that are to fight. But people have lives, most adult people have lives that are mostly occupied with all those self-serving things like "sleep" and "work so I don't starve at the end of the week", some even "spending time with my family" and "hanging out with friends".C.S.Strowbridge said:There is a saying, "All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing." Not sure who said it (it is attributed to Edmund Burke) but it is a very important in this context. When we see someone being racist, homophobic, sexist, we need to point it out and do something about it. If we don't, we are culpable for what these people say and do. "Qui tacet consentire videtur." "He who is silent is taken to agree." You are not "good man doing nothing", you are fighting against those who are trying to do something.
But if you're going to play the guilt card, if you're going to tell people they're "part of the problem" because they're not rallying behind your particular banner,
TYT Sports was talking about the Super Bowl and they took viewer questions. One of the viewers compared the game to a rape. Anyone who has played an online game should not be surprised with that comparison. However, the host said we need to stop using that term when describing a sporting event. It didn't take him 200 hours to do that. It didn't even take him 2 minutes to say calling anything but rape rape is offensive. If everyone did that, then people would stop using that term so inappropriately. If you are not doing that, then you have no right to complain when people point out misogyny in sports, using this example, or in video games, as it happens there as well.
I'm not calling ultreos2 part of the problem because they are not rallying around my banner. I'm calling him part of the problem because he is actively fighting against those who are pointing out sexism in the "Geek Community". Saying, "Stop attacking me!!!!!" whenever someone points out a real problem in the "Geek community" is making the problem worse, because it gives the offenders cover.