Yeah, this is pretty much how it reads for me. He should have simply said, after the first two sentences, "I'm sorry." Then he probably should have said what he's sorry for and why, rather than telling us a personal story. It reads as if it's a story about him and not the people he hurt.Yeah, there are plenty of people who had shitty childhoods who didn't grow up to be acidic towards homosexuals and women.
I mean, as with last thread about him talking about himself and how sorry he is... Good for him for making some kind of progress, but an apology should be him acknowledging where he fucked up and saying he's sorry and not "I was an asshole, but YOU KNOW....."
To quote:
So, sorry, he didn't say he regretted it, he said it was a "mistake," when the reason they pulled it in the first place was that it made people uncomfortable.
Yeah, this is pretty much how it reads for me. He should have simply said, after the first two sentences, "I'm sorry." Then he probably should have said what he's sorry for and why, rather than telling us a personal story. It reads as if it's a story about him and not the people he hurt.
Also a good step and one I recognized at the time, but frankly, it's up to trans people to decide whether to forgive him on that particular score.
WTF, no, of course I'm not just going to automatically accept their apology. You can't possibly be serious with this.
Let's try to recontextualize this. Imagine you have a kid, and they do some bratty but normal kid thing, like not sharing a toy at recess. In response, this other kid's parent gets mad and socks them in the face, gives them a black eye, they have to go home, stay out of school for a few days, giant swelling, can't see right, the whole nine yards.
Are you telling me that in this scenario, you'd accept an apology for that? That you'd make your kid, who was defenseless and did nothing remotely proportional to deserve it, accept an apology? That you'd ever consider that person remotely safe to be around children again? Forgiveness is proportional to behavior.
Why should we? Does knowing his personal story increase the likelihood of his apology being sincere?
While I agree you are whatever gender you decide you are, there's always grounds to discuss the differences between the genitalia you're given and someone who is transgendered.
Good lord, you'd think this guy killed a whole bunch of puppies going by some of these posts already. I'm not trying to excuse his behavior, but is it possible to hear a man out in good faith without tearing him down? What would you have him do? What would be enough? Should he be held responsible for his hurtful actions? Yes. Should he be reminded of his mistakes constantly for the rest of his life? You can count me out on that one. "He who is without sin cast the first stone" and all that. Don't become the jerk he has been by throwing him to the dogs when he comes forward with an apology. The very fact that you can take his words and believe they come from a well-meaning place should be enough. Just hold him accountable from this moment on. Maybe he won't change, and, in that case, what did you lose by giving him the benefit of the doubt? The opportunity to spit some venom and say, "I told you so?" What a miserable way to live.
The point of the personal story isn't just "this is what happened to me" though, its "this is what happened to me and this is how I perceived it and justified myself and now I look back and realize I was wrong"
Why should we? Does knowing his personal story increase the likelihood of his apology being sincere?
The only thing that actually determines whether the apology has value is his future behavior.
Inasmuch as the story shows an inkling of self-awareness I consider it a positive thing to share in and of itself, and as long as he doesn't try to use it as an explicit excuse for his behavior I don't think it detracts.
Also a good step and one I recognized at the time, but frankly, it's up to trans people to decide whether to forgive him on that particular score.
WTF, no, of course I'm not just going to automatically accept their apology. You can't possibly be serious with this.
Let's try to recontextualize this. Imagine you have a kid, and they do some bratty but normal kid thing, like not sharing a toy at recess. In response, this other kid's parent gets mad and socks them in the face, gives them a black eye, they have to go home, stay out of school for a few days, giant swelling, can't see right, the whole nine yards.
Are you telling me that in this scenario, you'd accept an apology for that? That you'd make your kid, who was defenseless and did nothing remotely proportional to deserve it, accept an apology? That you'd ever consider that person remotely safe to be around children again? Forgiveness is proportional to behavior.
I don't disagree with you, but where's the line of being justifiably upset and using the opportunity to be offended? I'm honestly just curious what you would consider to be a victim complex. I agree that what Mike said was abhorrent, but some people in here make a good point.
The very, very short version:
- After they drew a comic with a joke that people said made light of rape survivors (arguable) he doubled down on the joke, printed up shirts with it, bragged about wearing one to the con, and then later told people he regretted pulling the shirts from the store.
- Went on a giant twitter rant about how trans people aren't really of their preferred gender and can't ever be, because of their birth genitals.
- PA as an organization listed a ludicrous job listing for an IT person that any serious professional would scoff at, with the hope that fanboyism would trick people into working for less than they were worth.
There's other stuff, but those are the three big hits.
Healing animosity is being self-aware enough to realize that an apology would be the best way to start such a resolution. I hope I eat my words and that's exactly what he does soon.Because it's not an apology, it's his new year's resolution. He's explaining what the problem is, why it's such a hard thing to change, and resolving to change it over the next year.
Wasn't Mike supposed to be a Christian or something?
It's about as much of an adult apology as Mike is willing to make. A shame a majority of it is some after-school special level origin story for being childishly bigoted rather than directly owning what he did to survivors of rape and the transgendered.
We'll see if his actions line up with his prose...or if he is simply full of shit as I'm inclined to believe.
Do we have independent verification that this sob-story is even true?
I think you're confusing forgiveness with a lot of other behavioral concepts.
people have every right to be skeptical because he does this every fucking time.
he should be held responsible for his hurtful actions. He's a man. man up to his mistakes, which i hope it sounds like he's doing.
he should be reminded of his mistakes in an attempt to apply them and make himself, or others better people. humans learn from errors, and this is arguably an error.
i get where you're coming from tho
Do we have independent verification that this sob-story is even true?
I think in general our culture gives too little credit to people who have been victimized and is too quick to forgive people who victimize as long as they have money or power, so I would generally be loathe to attribute a "victim complex" to anyone who's pushing back against societal or institutional abuse.
That said, there's certainly a point in interpersonal interaction where a person can ride a slight too far. When you're just talking about a small number of people interacting directly, you can generally spot this when someone keeps asking for more and more stuff in "payment" for the wrongs done to them. In most cases this presages a co-dependent abusive relationship. The healthier response, in most cases, is just to cut off ties, not forgive the person but also not engage with them anymore.
(I'll note that this underlies some of the public responses to flubs like this -- there's a lot of people who don't actually want anything from people like Mike except to not have to ever hear from them again.)
I mean it caused problems for me, sure. I have a lot of character flaws because of it. But none of them excuse me being an asshole. It's all about finding ways to work around it. Either he's been spoiled or he doesn't care: at this point in his life he should have found numerous ways around his character flaws.
I'm just sick of him constantly doing the same thing over and over again. He's obviously not going to change, he needs to own up to it and be who he is.
lol, you can't be for real.
Parts of it kind of read like "Please don't boycott PAX or withhold donations from Child's Play just because I'm an asshole -- I really don't have anything to do with those things anymore!"
No, I'm not. The idea that people must be forgiven regardless of what they've done is one of the most insidious and powerful tools in the abuser's toolkit. This is what drives people back into the arms of parents who mistreated them their whole life; what keeps victims of physical abuse from leaving their spouses; what prevents serious institutional reform of organizations like the Catholic church that have cosigned and hidden abuse for decades.
If you talk to people who have serious training in counseling abuse survivors, one of the things they'll tell you upfront is that you don't have to forgive people, and that in many cases, it's much healthier to never forgive people who have mistreated you; it's much more important to keep the knowledge of why what was done to you was fucked up, and break the cycle by not repeating any of it.
So yeah, I'm not big on forced forgiveness.
I cannot wait for the apology for this apology.
Keep digging that hole, Mike.
It's not impossible that he's bluffing, but if he is bluffing, he's going all in here. Every single chip in the pot.
The backlash would be enormous if it was found out that he was lying in order to manipulate people's emotions. It's one thing to be an asshole to rape victims or transgender people. They're a minority. Some people would back him up. Lie to every single person in your readership? Hoo boy. That would sink the whole ship.
Not really inclined to believe he's lying myself, considering the potential consequences if he was.
So, sorry, he didn't say he regretted it, he said it was a "mistake," when the reason they pulled it in the first place was that it made people uncomfortable.
I had to think really hard about it and the only time I could remember really thinking he made a mistake was when he told us we had to pull the Dickwolves merch. I didnt really get a chance to elaborate on why that was though, and unfortunately by not doing so it created a bit of a firestorm on the Internet.
I absolutely regret everything we did after that comic. I regret the follow up strip, I regret making the merchandise, I regret pulling the merchandise and I regret being such an asshole on twitter to people who were upset. I dont think any of those things were good ideas.
Everything we did after that initial comic strip was a mistake and I regret all of it.
If you talk to people who have serious training in counseling abuse survivors, one of the things they'll tell you upfront is that you don't have to forgive people, and that in many cases, it's much healthier to never forgive people who have mistreated you;
Well....as someone with a personality disorder (Mostly recovered, Borderline Personality Disorder) - I can tell you that the sort of thing Mike is talking about is a very vital first step if that's what he's got going on. If you're a smart person and good at arguing, you can convince yourself that other people are the problem for a long time. I can also tell you that an inappropriate 9/10 emotional response can be VERY convincing. Heck, personality disorder or no, these things are true.I understand the wall he put up as a kid, but people tend to grow up as they hit adulthood and do not need to lash out at people who disagree with their opinions.
Isn't Penny Arcade just some comic?
No, I'm not. The idea that people must be forgiven regardless of what they've done is one of the most insidious and powerful tools in the abuser's toolkit. This is what drives people back into the arms of parents who mistreated them their whole life; what keeps victims of physical abuse from leaving their spouses; what prevents serious institutional reform of organizations like the Catholic church that have cosigned and hidden abuse for decades.
If you talk to people who have serious training in counseling abuse survivors, one of the things they'll tell you upfront is that you don't have to forgive people, and that in many cases, it's much healthier to never forgive people who have mistreated you; it's much more important to keep the knowledge of why what was done to you was fucked up, and break the cycle by not repeating any of it.
So yeah, I'm not big on forced forgiveness.
I haven't followed Penny Arcade, PAX or anything in a long time, and the only thing I do that was related to him is watch Extra Credits, which I love and is now not affiliated with them.
From my very outsider perspective it all reads like unnecessary drama that has no end. It honestly seems like people want to prove their side right more than achieve reconciliation sometimes (a tangential sentence).
Perhaps this is why my only link to an online gaming community is GAF gaming talk, and I avoid everything else.
I think it took balls to say what he said, and that he didn't need to. I'm glad my dickheaded behavior is not well documented on the internet, and the people who have put up with it have (for the most part) genuinely forgiven me (as I have done to others).
I don't understand really this story, but I wish the best for all, and hope some sort of understanding by all sides can occur.
edit: I've apologized for drinking too much a million times, and every time I mean it. I can't be the only one who can relate to relapsing.
Can you share some links to this concept?
I would caution, though, that being resolute in your intent to not give Krahulik a chance can lead to a way of thinking that's kind of like a mental arteriosclerosis.
What would that have to do with anything?