Thank you. I still stand by the sentiment behind that tweet, just to be clear. Long after #gamergate is dead and buried, assholes will still be assholes and harass the living shit out of public figures they do not like. Its a sad and awful truth. I wonder who people will blame it on then when there is no hashtag to pin it on any more? My presumptions is we just go back to saying its 'gamers' as a whole.
It would seem a whole lot easier to just right here and now blame the single asshole doing it. But I guess that's too idealistic.
Yes, you're right, there are always going to be assholes out there. What we can do is try to minimize and negate those assholes in all aspects of our culture. As Leigh Alexander said, "When you decline to create or to curate a culture in your spaces, you’re responsible for what spawns in the vacuum. That’s what’s been happening to games." We haven't been curating our spaces very well.
Before I dive into that, quick sidenote - some posters keep bring up soccer fans as a possible analogue, that if someone said "soccer fans are racist assholes", that other soccer fans would be offended at being grouped in with them. I'm a soccer fan - I won't deny that there are vocal racists who are also soccer fans, and that there are contingents even in the US of groups of fans who might not be racists, but are definitely violent assholes. However, those groups are widely condemned by other fans, by the teams they support, and by the leagues in which the teams play. Fans get banned from stadiums for months, years, or even life for such behavior. I personally have gotten someone kicked out of a soccer stadium for chanting racist stuff at Caribbean players. That vile behavior is being addressed, and as such, the great behavior such as
this, or
this gets highlighted instead.
In terms of gaming, we aren't doing a good job of policing our numbers. Yes, the worst harassment in this particular case is done by a few, but general harassment is casually accepted by the gaming community. This has gone on for a long time now. Console wars, from Nintendo / Genesis to today. The dismissal of people who play certain types of games as "non-gamers", and the bullshit argument that was "hardcore vs casual". Dismissing games from Nintendo as "kiddy" and people who played the Wii as "non-gamers". Harassing people in multiplayer games because you beat them. Harassing people in multiplayer games because you didn't beat them. Harassing people on your team because they didn't what you thought they should have done. Harassing people on your team because they did what you thought they should have done, but you were wrong. Harassing reviewers because they gave a game 8.8 / 10 (Twilight Princess), or 8/10 (Uncharted 3), or because the reviewer is Tom Chick.
And we haven't even started on being a woman playing or making or writing about games.
Like it or not, this is part of our community and there hasn't been enough done to condemn the bad acts. And it has happened frequently enough and over a large enough period of time that we can't say "oh, it's just a couple of bad apples". It's a not insignificant part of the gaming community. Yes, there are some absolutely wonderful aspects of the gaming community. But there are also some absolutely vile aspects as well, and the reaction to those aspects has not been forceful enough. If you want people to not blame 'gamers' for this terrible behavior and to start highlighting the good stuff, we need to start going out of our way to condemn the bad behavior and start excising it from our community.
To me, #GamerGate has become the embodiment of the bad part of our community, the part that lashes out at people for not liking the same things they like, the part that harasses people for not being as good at games as they are, the part that harasses women for being women. There might have been a valid discussion about gaming journalism and ethics, but it's not going to happen now, at least not under the #GamerGate banner. It's now far too tainted with the tinge of harassment and attacks against people who have any sort of disagreement with the idea that the status quo is fine.
Again, you're absolutely right that there are always going to be assholes who harass and belittle others. But until we start loudly saying "No, that's not okay, you need to change your behavior, and if you don't we're going to boot you out", we're implicitly saying that we find that behavior to be acceptable and a part of our culture. And yes, if nothing changes, "gamers" will get blamed, and can we really be surprised when that happens?
Edit: To echo others - I think your heart is in the right place. I know you want what's best for the community. But part of being in a community is recognizing that there can be bad actors in it and that the actions of a few can easily taint the entire community, and that it's up to that community to reform / reject those few. I know you're trying to do it from the inside, but people from the outside don't necessarily see that - they just see you as part of that group that they reject. I know it's an unnuanced view, but when it comes to masses of people who are all shouting stuff, nuance tends to go out the window.