The board's server will undergo upgrade maintenance tonight, Nov 5, 2014, beginning approximately around 10 PM ET. Prepare for some possible down time during this process.
Joined: Tue January 01, 2013 8:12 pm Posts: 1121 Location: Lynchburg, VA
harmless wrote:
Chloe wrote:
harmless wrote:
And is there any way to take that test online?
#queeringRM
I'd be interested to see the material they were showing the homophobes as well, especially if only around 34% of non-homophobes found it arousing. Think it was hardcore bondage type shit?
_________________ I hate to say I love you, But oh goddamn I love you, You know I do.
I'd be interested to see the material they were showing the homophobes as well, especially if only around 34% of non-homophobes found it arousing. Think it was hardcore bondage type shit?
_________________
RisingTides wrote:
There is more kindness on the internet than we would care to admit to ourselves. Sometimes we are so afraid of falling victim to a ruse, we miss out on actual opportunities.
UT and OK are both in the 10th Circuit, OH and KY in the 6th, and VA in the 4th. If the other circuit courts keep on agreeing with the same conclusion through Windsor, it is possible, though perhaps unlikely, that SCOTUS could duck the issue and just deny cert on these cases.
Same-sex marriage became legal in the UK on Saturday. Very proud.
_________________
RisingTides wrote:
There is more kindness on the internet than we would care to admit to ourselves. Sometimes we are so afraid of falling victim to a ruse, we miss out on actual opportunities.
Same-sex marriage became legal in the UK on Saturday. Very proud.
elton john is getting married. hi friend.
_________________
RisingTides wrote:
There is more kindness on the internet than we would care to admit to ourselves. Sometimes we are so afraid of falling victim to a ruse, we miss out on actual opportunities.
What is RM's opinion of Brendan Eich's resignation?
I haven't spent a great deal of time reading into it but I have been following Andrew Sullivan's commentary and I'm sympathetic to his general point (as bolded below):
The guy who had the gall to express his First Amendment rights and favor Prop 8 in California by donating $1,000 has just been scalped by some gay activists. After an OKCupid decision to boycott Mozilla, the recently appointed Brendan Eich just resigned under pressure:
In a post at Mozilla’s official blog, executive chairwoman Mitchell Baker confirmed the news with an unequivocal apology on the company’s behalf. “Mozilla prides itself on being held to a different standard and, this past week, we didn’t live up to it,” Baker wrote. “We didn’t act like you’d expect Mozilla to act. We didn’t move fast enough to engage with people once the controversy started. We’re sorry. We must do better.”
The action comes days after dating site OKCupid became the most vocal opponent of Eich’s hiring. Mozilla offered repeated statements about LGBT inclusivity within the company over the past two weeks, but those never came with a specific response from Eich about his thousands of dollars of donations in support of Proposition 8, a California ballot measure that sought to ban gay marriage in the state.
Will he now be forced to walk through the streets in shame? Why not the stocks? The whole episode disgusts me – as it should disgust anyone interested in a tolerant and diverse society. If this is the gay rights movement today – hounding our opponents with a fanaticism more like the religious right than anyone else – then count me out. If we are about intimidating the free speech of others, we are no better than the anti-gay bullies who came before us.
Joined: Tue January 01, 2013 2:04 pm Posts: 37156 Location: September 2020 Poster of the Month
Free speech doesn't mean there shouldn't be professional consequences for the stances you take. Mozilla has every right to say it's not worth it to have that guy as the head of their company.
If he donated a thousand dollars to a group or initiative trying to ban interracial marriage would anyone care if there was outrage against him?
Joined: Wed December 12, 2012 10:33 pm Posts: 6932
First, it was pretty clear that internally Mozilla was collectively unhappy with this. Things like external protests from the likes of OKCupid aren't as troublesome as are public expressions of displeasure of staff, and board members bailing.
Second, an argument can be made that supporting an anti-SSM act like Prop 8 would be bad for Mozilla. By giving support to Prop 8, Eich indirectly would cause any LGBT members of Mozilla some unneeded hassle . I mean, it's nice if Mozilla under Eich's watch would still give full benefits to the partners in same sex relationships, but they can't do anything about, say, making taxes easier to file or awarding joint custody.
It doesn't make a big deal to me one way or the other (I continued to use Firefox through that short period), but I think there were rational reasons why Eich shouldn't have been CEO.
And on the Sullivan point that you bolded, I think there's a considerable gray area in that argument. If Eich was CEO of, say, Focus on the Family, it wouldn't be a big deal at all. If it was the ACLU, it would be a huge deal. Also, does Sullivan want to extend that argument to, say, someone that wants to reinstate miscegenation laws, or other anti-civil rights positions?
Joined: Tue January 01, 2013 3:24 pm Posts: 2868 Location: Death Machine Inc's HQ
cutuphalfdead wrote:
Free speech doesn't mean there shouldn't be professional consequences for the stances you take. Mozilla has every right to say it's not worth it to have that guy as the head of their company.
I agree with this, but conceptually it seems like it could stifle political speech by setting the precedent that if you end up on the wrong side of a cause (in this case, a stance shared by President Obama and Hillary Clinton back then) you are not promotable, so they only safe option is to never take a stance.
Joined: Tue January 01, 2013 2:22 pm Posts: 4377 Location: faked by jorge
broken iris wrote:
cutuphalfdead wrote:
Free speech doesn't mean there shouldn't be professional consequences for the stances you take. Mozilla has every right to say it's not worth it to have that guy as the head of their company.
I agree with this, but conceptually it seems like it could stifle political speech by setting the precedent that if you end up on the wrong side of a cause (in this case, a stance shared by President Obama and Hillary Clinton back then) you are not promotable, so they only safe option is to never take a stance.
it's a safe financial reason.
_________________
Dev wrote:
you're delusional. you are a sad sad person. fuck off. you're mentally ill beyond repair. i don't need your shit. dissapear.
Ross Douthat has out-Slatepitched me. Here I was, huddled with Andrew Sullivan, Reihan Salam, Conor Friedersdorf, and a few others in a strange platoon of gay marriage supporters defending Brendan Eich. Our readers on the left think we’ve sold out to the right. Now along comes Douthat. On behalf of his portion of the right—that is, thinkers—he says, quite graciously, thanks, but no thanks. Douthat recognizes what I was trying to get at yesterday: Eich’s ouster is in some ways a model for what religious conservatives would like to do in their own communities. They want the freedom to invoke their values in the appointment and removal of officers whose views offend them.
Liberals for Eich, meet Conservatives for Mozilla. Here’s how Douthat presents their case: If you want (as I do) a culture where Catholic schools and hospitals and charities are free to be Catholic, where evangelical-owned businesses don’t have to pay for sterilizations and the days-after pill, where churches and synagogues and mosques don’t have to worry about their tax-exempt status if they criticize “sexual modernity,” you also have to acknowledge the rights of non-religious institutions of all sorts to define their own missions in ways that might make an outspoken social conservative the wrong choice for an important position within their hierarchies.
Douthat offers this political deal: In the name of pluralism, and the liberty of groups as well as individuals, I would gladly trade the career prospects of some religious conservatives in some situations—not exempting myself from that list—if doing so would protect my own church’s liberty (and the liberties of other, similarly-situated groups) to run its schools and hospitals and charities as it sees fit. Would you, Dear Liberal Reader, accept Douthat’s deal? Would you let conservatives run their own companies and organizations by their own rules, even if it means removing a gay CEO? Douthat doesn’t think you’ll honor the deal. He thinks you’ll try to steamroll him, imposing your values on Hobby Lobby as well as Mozilla. So he draws a distinction: Had Eich been, say, an outsider to Mozilla, a hotshot brought in to shake things up, and had he also been an outspoken critic of gay rights or a massive Koch-style donor to social conservative causes, it would be fair to say that his appointment was simply a tone-deaf mistake, a pointless affront to the political sensibilities of the community in which Mozilla lives and moves and hires. But of course he was actually an insider, a man well known to that community, who (in addition to the minor feat of inventing Javascript) apparently had never had any kind of personal insensitivity or discrimination alleged against him. And his offense was not to be an outspoken social conservative, a major donor to Focus on the Family, a public paladin for the religious right … it was to have made a modest donation six years ago to a ballot initiative that won a majority at a time when most Democratic politicians still defended the traditional definition of wedlock. The purpose of this distinction is to explain why Eich’s removal was wrong, from Douthat’s point of view, while preserving the right of “an explicitly ideological institution”—or, apparently, an “evangelical-owned business”—to force out an officer who “went out of his way to publicly promote values noxious to his community.” I’m not certain whether this policy regarding “outspoken” dissent would make any openly gay executive fair game. But my bet is that Douthat would err on the side of employer discretion.
When Douthat predicts that liberals won’t accept that bargain, I’m pretty sure he’s right. But that doesn’t make his argument worthless. Even if you don’t buy Douthat’s conclusion, the substance of his description of the Eich case is worth considering. Eich, as Douthat observes, was well-known to the community of Mozilla employees and software collaborators. No one has accused Eich of discrimination or personal insensitivity. Quite the opposite. Today I was on a radio program on KQED, an NPR affiliate in Northern California, and a Mozilla employee called in to reinforce that point. Yes, Eich gave money to the Proposition 8 campaign six years ago. He even gave money to Pat Buchanan, if you go back 22 years. (He also gave money to Ron Paul and God knows who else—people can be eclectic in their political contributions.) At the same time, as Friedersdorf notes, Eich has promised to pursue Mozilla’s “anti-discrimination policies” (including sexual orientation), its “inclusive health benefits,” its “active commitment to equality,” and “working with LGBT communities and allies” to “make Mozilla supportive and welcoming.” These aren't new policies Eich had to swear allegiance to as an incoming CEO. He's been living them, as a central player in the Mozilla family, for years. Is it possible that Eich defies our stereotypes about social conservatives? That you can write a check to a “traditional marriage” campaign (even one that runs ads you didn’t write or approve—a standard I don’t think we apply to ourselves) without showing any evidence, in decades of professional collaboration and management, of any bias against gay colleagues or couples?
I don’t know how this story will turn out. Maybe someone will come forward to testify that Eich treated gay and straight couples differently outside the context of defining marriage. But it’s striking that so far, despite all the uproar, nobody has. Maybe what we’re seeing in Eich is the kind of complexity that liberals tend to accept when we talk about a person’s gender or sexual orientation. Maybe we ought to entertain the same complexity when we talk about a person’s morality and fair treatment of others.
_________________
Dev wrote:
you're delusional. you are a sad sad person. fuck off. you're mentally ill beyond repair. i don't need your shit. dissapear.
Oral argument for the Utah case in the 10th Circuit is going to be tomorrow. This is the one that I still think will end up being the headliner at SCOTUS.
Oral argument for the Utah case in the 10th Circuit is going to be tomorrow. This is the one that I still think will end up being the headliner at SCOTUS.
by oral argument they should have two guys sucking each off
_________________ Did the Mother Fucker pay extra to yell?
Oral argument for the Utah case in the 10th Circuit is going to be tomorrow. This is the one that I still think will end up being the headliner at SCOTUS.
by oral argument they should have two guys sucking each off
You cannot post new topics in this forum You cannot reply to topics in this forum You cannot edit your posts in this forum You cannot delete your posts in this forum