JumpJeff84
Member
When will people learn that you gotta be careful on twitter?
Not just that, how often I see 'I am going to rape the replay button' in Youtube comments is disgusting. What's even weirder is that this should be considered a positive comment seeing they like the video (often a music video or whatever). When did that ever become an acceptable expression, don't people realize what they are actually saying? :/
When will people learn that you gotta be careful on twitter?
don't people realize what they are actually saying? :/
He deserves a lifetime ban for that.
Wow. That's missing the point.When will people learn that you gotta be careful on twitter?
Well that's a great way of dismissing any criticisms. Usually anyone who says retarded it is because they object to a point you are making and hold an equally dim view of you.
The casual usage of rape and gay as a pejorative is much worse and definitely senseless.
Yes, as it mirrors professional sports code of conduct. This is mostly in place of "sportsmanship" idealism, but largely more for protecting their "brands".Would this be a model to follow?
No, however they should have had an alternate fill the position in the semi-finals.Was disqualification to harsh a punishment?
The action or the reprecussion? There have been folks ejected from various tournaments, but I am not sure about the "professional" level. An ejection for a tweet outside of the game though doesn't sound like something I've heard about before.Does this incident stand out in the competitive gaming scene?
Will tacking this kind of action open up esports to an wider audience and competitor pool?
If he can't be professional, he doesn't deserve to play in a professional gaming environment. I say good riddance.
So... Question for everyone calling for a lifetime ban.
If you ever said something stupid and senseless at work, would you be okay with a lifetime ban from your current career? Because that's basically what you're saying here: One screw up, and you have to start over from scratch.
Let's be real here: What he did was bad, but not "fuck off forever and never come back" bad.
I think the punishment is fine.
He is not the first person to say something really stupid on Twitter nor the first person to be punished by it. For the most part these people need to realize that -insert made up statistic here- of the stuff they were going to write on twitter is pointless, adds no value and should be kept to themselves otherwise you'll get in trouble for it.
People have gotten way too concerned with being politically correct and sensitive these days. They're all just words.
Considering the fact that what he said is a violent threat to another human being predicated on misogyny and political oppression, I'd say that a "lifetime ban" from an esports organization is getting off easy. That was way beyond merely "stupid and senseless." It was hateful, violent, and oppressive. Not sure what the laws are like in that part of the world, but in many places that tweet would be grounds for severe legal prosecution.So... Question for everyone calling for a lifetime ban.
If you ever said something stupid and senseless at work, would you be okay with a lifetime ban from your current career? Because that's basically what you're saying here: One screw up, and you have to start over from scratch.
Let's be real here: What he did was bad, but not "fuck off forever and never come back" bad.
If I said "I'm going to rape some girl" my career with my current compay would probably be over. I most certainly would be starting over from scratch.So... Question for everyone calling for a lifetime ban.
If you ever said something stupid and senseless at work, would you be okay with a lifetime ban from your current career? Because that's basically what you're saying here: One screw up, and you have to start over from scratch.
Let's be real here: What he did was bad, but not "fuck off forever and never come back" bad.
If I said "I'm going to rape some girl" my career with my current compay would probably be over. I most certainly would be starting over from scratch.
That's not "out of context." Just because something is said casually doesn't diminish its presumed context. "Rape" is a word whose meaning and force depends on understanding its context. It would be effectively meaningless without it.I'm not sure about this. It was a bloody daft thing to say, for definite, but a lot of the time it's a phrase used out of context of its intended use.
Newcastle manager Alan Pardew got hauled over the coals for this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ToAah0ME4bY
"Strong boy, absolutely rapes him."
I'm not defending it in any way, I'm just saying for quite a while now it's been used outside of its usual context.
(It's still awful.)
People have suggested a lifetime ban from all tournaments. That would be the equivalent of you losing your job at your current company and being banned from all other companies in your field of work. What does that do? Make an example out of him? Great, that doesn't really solve anything. It just teaches people to watch what they say on Twitter, not to change how they think about words. Increase the ban from one year to somewhere around 3-5 and provide opportunities within the eSport community for conversations on poor uses of vocabulary. That will do far more for bettering the eSport scene than merely lifetime banning a guy.If I said "I'm going to rape some girl" my career with my current compay would probably be over. I most certainly would be starting over from scratch.
So... Question for everyone calling for a lifetime ban.
If you ever said something stupid and senseless at work, would you be okay with a lifetime ban from your current career? Because that's basically what you're saying here: One screw up, and you have to start over from scratch.
Let's be real here: What he did was bad, but not "fuck off forever and never come back" bad.
That's not "out of context." Just because something is said casually doesn't diminish its presumed context. "Rape" is a word whose meaning and force depends on understanding its context. It would be effectively meaningless without it.
I really wonder what goes through some individuals mind when using your 160 characters on Twitter to type "I am going to rape some girl soon" and pressing enter.
At what exact point does it seem like a good idea
I just want to say, just because we give him the benefit of the doubt does not mean we're giving him the benefit of a "magic eraser." He will carry the stain of what he said for the rest of his career, and eSports should use this as an opportunity to help carry this conversation forward. Indeed, he should be included as part of that conversation.In this case I'd have given him the benefit of the doubt, told him it was unacceptable, let him issue an apology, and then move on.
Well, that all depends on how you understand the relationship between words and action. If I were a white American and I said to a black American "I'm going to lynch you," would it matter if I meant that "literally" or not? No. But it's a statement that draws its force and meaning from deeply rooted structures of violent oppression (i.e. "context"). Its "literalness" is irrelevant. And the fact that a word like "rape" would be used casually perpetuates a worldview in which the action itself is understood to be acceptable.My point being that he didn't mean it in as literal sexual assault.
I really wonder what goes through some individuals mind when using your 160 characters on Twitter to type "I am going to rape some girl soon" and pressing enter.
At what exact point does it seem like a good idea
I just want to say, just because we give him the benefit of the doubt does not mean we're giving him the benefit of a "magic eraser." He will carry the stain of what he said for the rest of his career, and he should have the opportunity to help carry this conversation forward.
Well, that all depends on how you understand the relationship between words and action. If I were a white American and I said to a black American "I'm going to lynch you," would it matter if I meant that "literally" or not? No. But it's a statement that draws its force and meaning from deeply rooted structures of violent oppression (i.e. "context"). Its "literalness" is irrelevant.
So... Question for everyone calling for a lifetime ban.
If you ever said something stupid and senseless at work, would you be okay with a lifetime ban from your current career? Because that's basically what you're saying here: One screw up, and you have to start over from scratch.
Let's be real here: What he did was bad, but not "fuck off forever and never come back" bad.
Entirely appropriate. Jerkoffs like this need to learn the concept of consequence.
1. real rape is horribel, there is no discussion
that said, he used this to provoke his enemy, i think people here are overreacting as soon as the word is beeing used... (and as i said, rape is horribel. doesnt change the fact that its a metaphor in gaming and widely used. is it hard to differentiate or is this word not allowed in general and for having another view im vile shit now?) :/
whatever, he got his ban so it wasn't apropriate i guess.
btw, dont forget what gank ment...
So... Question for everyone calling for a lifetime ban.
If you ever said something stupid and senseless at work, would you be okay with a lifetime ban from your current career? Because that's basically what you're saying here: One screw up, and you have to start over from scratch.
Let's be real here: What he did was bad, but not "fuck off forever and never come back" bad.
I really wonder what goes through some individuals mind when using your 160 characters on Twitter to type "I am going to rape some girl soon" and pressing enter.
At what exact point does it seem like a good idea
My point being that he didn't mean it as in literal sexual assault.
Presumably.
Just as Alan Pardew didn't mean it as Essien seriously sexually assaulted another player on a football pitch.
Again not excusing it - it's a stupid word to use - but I have noticed it coming into fashion more as childish reference to destroying something.
In this case I'd have given him the benefit of the doubt, told him it was unacceptable, let him issue an apology, and then move on.
I get what you're saying, but assigning deliberate malice is also beside the point. He clearly meant his statement to draw on structures of violent oppression, even if he didn't mean he would literally commit the act. That seems pretty malicious to me, even if unthinking. I just don't see a way around it.Oh no doubt, and I tried to convey that in my edit. It was perhaps an unthinking and stupid thing to put, rather than a malicious one, is my point.
Which is what exactly?btw, dont forget what gank ment...
There's a reason companies now usually have sections in their employee handbook about social media presence.
If I said something like that in a public forum and my company found out, I would be fired pretty much on the spot. That's pretty much SOP these days. If your social media behavior reflects poorly on your place of employment, even if just by association, you aren't going to be an employee there for much longer in many cases.