I really don't understand why this is still going on. Oh yeah, probably because it's an easy story for sanctimonious gaming journalists to whip up.
why not just read the op?
I really don't understand why this is still going on. Oh yeah, probably because it's an easy story for sanctimonious gaming journalists to whip up.
I'd argue that leaving the strip up and saying we don't purposefully offend people but we also won't hold back, on any topic, would do that just fine. Profiting off of the comic, creating merchandising, wearing it to a convention with the stated goal of being "all-inclusive, because we're all outcasts", and encouraging your fans to do the same, is an aggressive move. And aggression when it comes to the specific topic of rape just doubles down on the issue, I think.
Fair enough. I suppose the "why" is that the tone of your opening and subsequent posts seem to be coming at this topic more in search of validation for your preconceived opinion on the matter and less in search of an objective and open discussion.
Not that you are in any way obligated to be objective on the matter, tis your opinion. That's my opinion on the whole thing, anyways.
Okay, so let me pose a hypothetical question that I won't give my opinion on right away. I'm just going to ask to see what people think (and I apologize if it sounds like I'm implying something or if it seems inappropriate. I honestly am just wanting to see what people believe).
I've given the 411 about the Jessica Nigiri incident, and then, of course, we have the 2010-2013 Dickwolves controversy. Given the outrage over the Dickwolves controversy and how the Nigiri thing was handled (and you can throw in the trans thing in here, too, if you want), do you think that perhaps there's a hidden misogynistic conspiracy at work here? You think that there's a more sinister reason for their handling the Dickwolf controversy, or Jessica (or even there being a hidden agenda behind their own booth babe rule), given who might be the first to complain?
In other words, are they one of the reasons why we have people like Anita Sarkeesian calling the game community an "unquestioned boys club"?
This is incorrect. True that the quote originated from an article interview about the bill, and he mentions the desecration of the graves. But the quote itself is about people in general. Not anti-semitic looters or anyone specific.
Oh yes. Follow the money. Clearly anything to keep women down is fair game.
Gaming is an "unquestioned boys club" because the people making games now were the people playing games 10, 15, 20 years ago and developed a lifelong passion for it, and they happened to be overwhelmingly male. As more women get interested in playing games they too will aspire to make games and the ratio will begin to balance out. Now whether you think the gaming industry should accelerate that trend and make a conscious effort to make games that appeal to women is a debate that we can have until the cows come home. But seriously, there's no "He-Man Woman Hater's Club" bullshit going on here.
Rape jokes can be offensive to some people, so those kinds of jokes shouldn't be made.
But why stop there?
We should ban ALL subjects that people find offensive from being in jokes. If anyone is offended by it in the slightest, we should punish the person making the joke. And if you're in the US and have a First Amendment right to free speech, it should be revoked.
Yeah! That'll teach 'em! NO MORE JOKES!
I was mostly talking about how gaming culture must be perceived from the outside in general, because of the aggressively hostile and bigoted behaviour towards anyone who isn't white/heterosexual/male.
But regarding conventions/conferences: they're in general fine in many aspects, but I've heard about, read about, and attended both consumer and industry-oriented events, privately and publicly, and some of the stuff is very toxic and unwelcoming to some people who aren't heterosexual men.
Not this shit again, even with the usual ignorant user
In other words, are they one of the reasons why we have people like Anita Sarkeesian calling the game community an "unquestioned boys club"?
Maybe so, but I would counter that most jokes are offensive to someone somewhere. The more PC we become over comments obviously made in jest, the more apt we are to end up with....well, the type of world we're quickly building for ourselves -- where no one can say anything without fear of reprisal.Personally, I think it's entirely possible to concede that perhaps some of the uproar over the dickwolves strip comes across as overly sensitive while also believing that a post like your's is uninsightful and completely misses the point by a country mile.
This is just an unacceptable level of painting in broadstrokes response. To fight what you find offensive you don't become an extremist and start demonising entire hobbyist cultures because that then paints your own collective as a "gang of nutters you shouldn't listen to".
This is incorrect. True that the quote originated from an article interview about the bill, and he mentions the desecration of the graves. But the quote itself is about people in general. Not anti-semitic looters or anyone specific.
I do think rape is a perfectly acceptable punchline. That's what the punchlines of many jokes are: awful, senseless, traumatic, depressing events or circumstances that human beings deal with via laughter.in the OP said:These ideas have been mainstreamed to the extent that Krahulik and Holkins cannot get away with pretending that it's only a vocal minority who see problems with using rape as a punchline which don't extend to problems with using murder in the same way.
I know, that's why I said "he's talking about the kind of outrage", not "he's talking about the looters outrage". The sentiment can be applied to any group of people who think their personal sensibilities gives them the right to antagonize those they disagree with. Like cartoonists and their fans being publicly hostile to victimised women who didn't like one of their comic strips.
Ryan was also quick to recognize his faults and when he went too far. If he felt like he genuinely hurt someone, he immediately recanted.
This is the guy who went on his site's forums to repudiate anyone defending him for saying "faggot" live on air and apologizing profusely for using the phrase.
That's how you act like an asshole with class.
Pretty ironic considering that the reason most people (you included) post that quote is because they are too lazy too say: "I think you are being unreasonable and no explanation of your position will change that". That's what it amounts and I've seen it used in many threads about this issue by people with inconsistent views on what they perceive as "freedom of speech".Boy, I'm out. No idea why the "outrage" side of this whole kerfuffle can be easily painted as knee-jerk nonsense pushers. No idea at all!
That's a fair point, and I appreciate it. There's still the issue of triggers, but I understand that society can't necessarily pussy-foot around things like that. There were better ways to handle the response for people like that though, on both sides.
Out of curiosity, would people have had a problem with this if the character had said that he was tortured?
Maybe so, but I would counter that most jokes are offensive to someone somewhere. The more PC we become over comments obviously made in jest, the more apt we are to end up with....well, the type of world we're quickly building for ourselves -- where no one can say anything without fear of reprisal.
Hyperbole? Yes. But if you don't like it, you're always FREE to tune out.
There is also a third possibility: 3) You are chiefly concerned with making it crystal clear that you will express yourself no matter who it offends. Even if you know for a fact it will offend certain, specific people.
2) You are deliberately intending to make those people uncomfortable. You have found their weak point and you intend to exploit it. You cannot claim ignorance or naivete as an excuse; you have been informed of how these people feel and you are using that knowledge to your advantage.
You are chiefly concerned with making it crystal clear that you will express yourself no matter who it offends, by deliberately intending to make those people uncomfortable. you know for a fact it will offend certain, specific people, and as such You cannot claim ignorance or naivete as an excuse; you have been informed of how these people feel and you are using that knowledge to your advantage.
If you understood the context of that image macro, you would realise why it is not appropriate to use it here.
Fry was not railing against the concept of offence in abstractia, but the specific usage of it by some on the Christian right to argue against Equal Marriage. Making rape jokes =/= a fundamental human right being denied to a segment of society.
The only thing I don't understand about this debate is why people on PA's side get so angry. The whole history of this thing is simple: PA made a joke about something that lots of people think is too serious for joking; those people got angry: PA didn't say sorry; those people are still angry.
Feminists believe that this kind of joke is indirectly harmful to all of us. They have reasons for believing that which you may not agree with, but that do have reasons. Why do expect them not to get angry in a situation like this? What "hidden agenda" do you think they are pushing? It all seems pretty straightforward to me.
Turns out rape victims find pretty hard to tune out memories of rape.
But yeah let's pretend that we are killing all humor with political correctness.
Reductio ad absurdum is a typical argument for ridiculous opinions.
Why are they allowed to get angry but not people who liked the comic?
So much this.I wish more people would see that it's OK to think the original joke isn't particularly offensive (I think it's fine) while simultaneously acknowledging that it might make some people uncomfortable and that we should try to show some empathy for those people instead of making comics and t-shirts to mock them.
Many people feel disenfranchised and ostracized because of this incident and I think we could all benefit from trying to see the story from that perspective instead of thinking things like "this doesn't offend me, so what's the big deal?"
How can we make PA disappear?
What you said was "He's talking about the kind of outrage those looters felt towards the Jews." And that's bullshit.
No one can have an opinion that differs with yours as long as you declare you're offended. You're right.
So much this.
Dominos, and Papa Johns.
I get uncomfortable about the puritanical urge to shun people because they said or believe something stupid.
I've learned so much from the new "inclusion culture" I've found on Twitter. I'm thinking about feminism and privilege much more often then I did before I started following so many inclusive people on Twitter.
But it makes me sad that these same people react with so much venom to people who say something dumb.
After Mike's dumb comments about transgender there was a moment where Jenn Frank was basically asking people to tone down their venom a bit and Courtney Stanton said some really vile things to her questioning her feminism and the people she chooses to associate with. At what point does that become harassment?
If people want to publicly say they're not going to attend PAX, that's their choice. But when it gets into this business where they try to make it seem like if you don't renounce Penny Arcade your enabling Mike's behavior that crosses a line that gets dangerously close to bullying.
I think it's wrong to think less of a Max Temkin, or Scott Kurtz, or Kathleen De Vere, or any of the indie developers who attended PAX because they still associate themselves with PAX and PA.
There would be no point in destroying this beautiful convention and this business because you think one of the founders is a jerk.
I dislike the people who run Hobby Lobby, Chik-Fil-A, Dominos, and Papa Johns but that doesn't mean it's right to shame people who like these business or work for these businesses.
If you never bought a product from people who never treated another person badly you would be living in a cold hut in the middle of the woods.
Oh man. What don't I know about Dominos? Or Papa Johns?
Oh man. What don't I know about Dominos? Or Papa Johns?
But it makes me sad that these same people react with so much venom to people who say something dumb.
Except it's coming from somebody that was cheerleader for a movement to ostracize George Kamitani over his artwork for Dragon's Crown.
Some of those who were "offended" were rape victims. Some of those who were "offended" are women who are exposed to the possibility of rape in cultures that make light of it.
How can you not value or pay heed to the opinions of such people when they are the ones most definitely affected by the series of actions in question?
I think this is why this tweet, while horrible, was so necessary for yourself and all the other "defenders of art and freedom""I do not agree with what you have to say, but I'll defend to the death your right to say it."
-- Voltaire