Xequecal wrote:
Is it a bad sign that I didn't immediately make the connection between his name and the Confederate general, and initially assumed they just pulled him because he's an Asian guy with a stereotypically white name and thus they pulled him out of a desire to avoid the appearance of cultural appropriation?
It might be a bad sign for your grasp of American history, but it's a far worse sign for ESPN in that they quite literally created a problem in order to be seen solving it.
This goes beyond merely virtue-signalingQuote:
In fact, that’s the crucial point: ESPN was not just ready to accede to nonsensical, hypersensitive left-wing orthodoxies, but willing to create new orthodoxies that didn’t even exist yet. It self-censored even when it did not have to, acting to narrow its own boundaries of acceptable speech. As Vox put it, “It’s not just virtue-signaling, but virtue creating.” Big corporations are now enforcers, not victims, of political correctness.
When even
Vox is calling you out for this, you're really out there. But ESPN didn't do this because it's somehow aggregated the most extreme collection of leftists to be found anywhere in the country in its management; it did this because - as the article explains - at any time, those sorts of people may get outraged over anything:
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Corporate appeasement of the Left is necessary because the Left takes scalps. Mozilla pushed out its CEO and co-founder, Brandon Eich, because he donated to an anti-gay-marriage referendum campaign. Just a mere “senior software engineer” at Google, James Damore never had a chance with his violation of orthodoxy in a memo exploring male-female differences. By contrast, conservative boycotts, whether against Disney or Ben & Jerry’s, inevitably seem to fail. However, in response to Chick-fil-A’s COO’s opposition to gay marriage, the mayors of Boston, Chicago, and San Francisco — wielding substantial market power between them — threatened to exclude the restaurant from their cities. Corporations want to avoid that at all costs. However, here they run into a difficulty: The Left’s social-media mobs are unpredictable. CEOs never know when their corporation will be attacked, even if it’s just for not condemning the latest outrage, not opposing Donald Trump, or not boycotting an entire state. The only way to not get left behind is to get ahead.
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The woke world is a world of snitches, informants, rats. Go to any space concerned with social justice and what will you find? Endless surveillance. Everybody is to be judged. Everyone is under suspicion. Everything you say is to be scoured, picked over, analyzed for any possible offense. Everyone’s a detective in the Division of Problematics, and they walk the beat 24/7. You search and search for someone Bad doing Bad Things, finding ways to indict writers and artists and ordinary people for something, anything. That movie that got popular? Give me a few hours and 800 words. I’ll get you your indictments. That’s what liberalism is, now — the search for baddies doing bad things, like little offense archaeologists, digging deeper and deeper to find out who’s Good and who’s Bad.
People get fired, lose their jobs, get doxxed... it really isn't surprising that something like this happened. Most of ESPN's customer base isn't infested with Portland/San Francisco level leftist whackjobbery, but ESPN is so terrified of people that aren't even their customers that they're willing to both make public fools of themselves over nothing and alienate large portions of their customer base more than they already have.