Gustin isn't the Queen.

Gustin isn't the Queen.
Soon the Arrowverse is just going to be carboard cutouts ....
Jason
1. You don't know what they know.
2. They also felt they knew him until this happened.
Isn't that literally answering for it?
Who decides? I guess the business owner in this case.
Call me when the state tells a citizen what they can say or not and we'll march together.
But not fire?
In this situation, the most powerful piece on the board is an African American female.
Candice is the one with real power to save or ruin Hartley.
While I don't buy into that premise, Eric Wallace being both the showrunner and being African-American would probably be the King on this chessboard?Gustin isn't the Queen.
In this situation, the most powerful piece on the board is an African American female.
Candice is the one with real power to save or ruin Hartley.
Yet nothing was ever alleged or implied, and they had to go back 6-8 years for tweets that were likely long forgotten. Don't you see the danger of this kind of horrible policing?
It's overkill.
The punishment doesn't fit the crime.
In some cultures, if you steal, they cut off your hand. Does that fit the crime? Why don't we kill him? That would also be answering for his tweets. There are punishments that don't fit the crime.
To an extent that's true, but is this right? Should you be fired for a tweet from years ago that has nothing to do with your job, your performance, and is meant in clear jest and does not reflect who you are?
Why just the state? Don't you believe in civil rights?
We have seen the state recently trample on fundamental rights in reaction to the virus,
but beyond that, let's extend this--Sawyer was fired for making a tweet years ago. But let's say he made a tweet in support of Biden and was fired for it. Fired for exercising his views. Fired for what he believes in. Should a boss be able to fire someone for religious beliefs? Fire you because you're a Jew, a Christian, a Muslim, a Hindu?
Should a boss be allowed to only hire one race, discriminating on the basis of race, religion, orientation
I'm going to make an educated guess and say you would say no to all of the above. Civil Rights acts exist to cover basic fundamental rights in the private sector. We are seeing stifling of views already. We are seeing some people calling for banning of movies like GONE WITH THE WIND or shows like DUKES OF HAZZARD because they don't like what they see.
Believe it or not, in some cases, no. I listed a few examples above. Let's say I hire you. You're doing a good job. No issues. One day, I find out you're gay. Can I fire you for that? It's a slippery slope between at will employment and discrimination.
Danger? I think that’s rather a strong word.
That’s your opinion, of course. What would you rather have seen? Just an apology? He has to sit out several episodes—which causes production problems on the whole.
Except it’s literally not a crime. It’s about how a business wants to be represented to the public.
You’ve said that before. 1. Cutting off the hand, it’s state sanctioned—and of course barbaric. 2. Kill him? Getting a little hysteric now, aren’t we? Let’s put this in perspective: he got fired from a job.
We know nothing about his performance at work other than what we have seen on TV. Unless you know more than the rest of us...
Of course, I do. That’s why I said I’ll march with ya when the state starts banning speech, you know, a civil right.
lols. I forgot, your posts aren’t to be taken all that seriously.
Let’s go full Godwin: should an employer be prevented from firing an actor who praised Hitler? Should an employer be forced to keep a Nazi on the payroll?
People have called for the banning of things for a long time. It’s nothing new. Call me when it’s illegal to buy Gone With The Wind.
Hiring and firing are two different things. And there’s a difference between hiring and firing an individual rather than NOT hiring a whole group of people based on race and religion. An individual is not a protected class.
You seem confused on the difference between the rights of a group of people and the individual. I can fire a black man if he’s not doing a job, but I can’t not hire black people because they are black. Do you not see the difference? So, you’re comparisons fall flat.
Danger is exactly the right word. What you are seeing is massive censorship that goes well beyond Sawyer. This is a level of McCarthyism.
Tow the line, or be blackballed. Say what we tell you, or be blackballed. When you start firing people for basic fundamental forms of expression, there's a problem. You are seeing freedom of speech shut down in multiple sectors and it's not good.
I think given the nature of the tweets, and the length of time since the tweets, and the fact that we know of nothing that happened on set, and the fact that there is no evidence he did anything wrong as an employee, yes, an apology would be sufficient.
What you are seeing it the point--that for any wrongdoing, there is a just punishment. Anything beyond that and we have overkill and overstepping. I believe that happened with Sawyer.
Presumption of innocence.
That's a fundamental right. But I'm talking about a civil right, which extends many constitutional principles to the private sector. For example, CW can't discriminate on the basis of race. It's not the constitution that prevents them from doing that. It's one of the Civil Rights acts. It may not have the power of the Constitution, but it is a federal statute. And right here, we have the CW banning speech.
That's not a counterargument. And there are quite a bunch of lawsuits and injunctions that show the overreach.
That's a terrific question. And the answer is it depends. Does a Nazi have freedom of speech and expression? As vile as it is, the answer is yes.
Should an employer have to keep a Nazi on the payroll? No, but let's have the fact pattern match the current one. Was the Hitler comments a joke, looking for shock value? OR is the guy an ACTUAL Nazi?
If it's the former, people need to lighten up and know that you're not dealing with an actual Nazi but rather a guy who made a bad joke.
So let me ask you--what if you were in the KKK or had racist or anti-semitic views years ago, but you're a changed person? Let's say you wore black face as an actor for a role. Or let's say you did it for Halloween one year, many years ago. Now you're older, wiser, and have done nothing anti-anyone. You just were dumb. Or you are reformed. An old picture of you in blackface resurfaces. An old picture of you hanging with people in the KKK or Nazis resurface. It's not you now though. Should you lose your job?
Calling for the banning of things means nothing. When it actually happens, that's a big problem.
An individual can be PART of a protected class though. Being fired for your opinions is a real issue.
I'm not saying you can't fire someone for merit. I do get the distinction. But merit requires something at least related to the job.
Can you fire that black person for kneeling during the anthem at a sporting event in the stands? Is that ok?
You do realize that McCarthyism was named after Senator McCarthy, right? As in State sponsored censorship, which is sorta against the whole First Amendment.
So, again, call me when the government bans Twitter, I'll be marching right along with you. In the meantime, Target is free to kick you out if you walk around shouting racial slurs because it's a private business. Much like a TV show.
So, what you're saying is... I can't fire an employee whose a Nazi, and whose public tweets would affect my business? That's a hot take.
Given that you just said we know nothing, maybe we aren't fit to decide what an appropriate punishment is.
And you are free to have that point of view. You are also powerless to decide what should happen to him. And, honestly it's immaterial. A business should be free to fire someone whose actions cause harm to their business.
"Hey, Jews, just lighten up about the whole Holocaust thing!" Hot take.
But, again, that's up to the employer. Maybe the employer is a Jew and takes deep offense to the joke. Maybe the employer is a Christian book store and the joke goes against the values of the company. Or maybe the employer thinks it's funny and doesn't care.
It's not up to me to decide my punishment. That's not how punishments work.
You do realize that being an actor is being in the public eye and how you behave can affect a show, right?
So, you were outraged when they forced Colin out of the NFL? Should we go look for that thread? Did you give this much thought and concern for Colin Kaepernick when he was pushed out for protesting against police brutality?
The rights of racists and bigots, the rights of idiots posting incredibly insensitive jokes aren't being taken away. The government isn't swooping in and locking them up. The culture is pushing back against behavior it no longer finds acceptable.
If it was beyond the pale stuff like he was spotted at a Klan meeting then yes I would understand but what he did was not nearly on that level.
I understand that, but the concept doesn't change no matter who does that. Of course, you're also finding it in schools, which take government funds, and could be construed as state actors.
He wasn't doing that. That wasn't happening. But by your logic, Target then is free to kick you out if you walk around saying racism is bad.
In the absence of knowledge, innocence must be presumed.
Ok, let's take that further.
That's the wrong take. Have you ever seen The Producers? Or Mel Brooks' To Be Or Not To Be? Or hell, pretty much every Mel Brooks movie? Lots of Hitler jokes. I'm Jewish. He's Jewish. They're funny.
That wasn't my question. Look at the example again and you be the boss. The employee is the black face wearing guy.
Of course, but we have seen many examples where actors slide for far worse than a tweet from years earlier. Do you really think that there are a lot of people that will magically stop watching Flash because of tweets made by Sawyer years ago?
That's not a bad question. The answer is no. And there's a distinction between Sawyer and Kaepernick.
1. Kaepernick engaged in a political protest during the national anthem while he was the equivalent to being on the clock. He brought down the entire league, and cost the league millions in lost revenue as the ratings went down. He disrupted the whole league.
2. Kaepernick was doing it in the present, while employed. An equal to Sawyer would be footage of Kaepernick in high school kneeling, where it never happened in the NFL and then he got released. THAT would be wrong.
3. Probably the most important--he wasn't a good quarterback. At best, he was a marginal football player who would never get in the game because he just wasn't talented enough to be in the league, and he used his kneeling to try to force the league to keep him. Evidence of that is in the fact that as soon as contract time came about, he publicly decided to end his kneeling. Also, he had no problem taking the $60 million settlement and the Nike contract. He profited a lot more from kneeling than he ever could have playing football. But let's get real--the NFL didn't get rid of him because just the kneeling--he wasn't an NFL level QB. Add that to the distraction and toxicity he brings to the game, no team would want him. Even without the kneeling, he likely wouldn't be in the NFL today.
Sawyer is different. There is no evidence that he wasn't a good enough actor to play Ralph Dibney.
And I don't have that much of a problem with the above. Where I draw the line is that there are some things that are not reasonable. This didn't happen on the job. He didn't do a racist interview for Variety as an employee on the show. It was a couple of tweets from YEARS ago. The punishment didn't fit the crime. It's overkill. CAN they do that? Maybe. But SHOULD they have? No. And it's horrible that his cast-mates turned on him.
Kaepernick should have been hired. The only wrinkle with that is his contract was up were as Sawyer was still employed. It's actually bit harder in figuring out what to do in that situation. So technically if firing him is okay because it's a business decision then not hiring him is also okay because of it being a business decision because I remember the reasons people used was that he would be a distraction to their teams because of the media attention it would bring.
Jason
"Everybody's got something to hide, 'cept for me and my monkey." - John LennonIt's a domino effect Jason.
Even if Hartley is 70 percent innocent, the last 4000 white guys were a little less innocent than he was, and most of them deserved a good smiting.
Sooner or later, all the white guys with something to hide are going to die off, and the playing field will level.
I don't agree with the vast vast majority of what you @Kirk Prime, there is one point I do agree with that I have not seen you address @Professor Zoom, the amount of time since the posts. That is my one and only issue with what happened, and I haven't seen you address it.
Hartley is a public figure. He is a public figure on a TV show that does press events, red carpets, etc. He will get the question every event. If you were in charge of the show, would you want this to keep dragging out? If you were in charge of the show, would you want this to be the headline rather than what new super villain the Flash is facing? Public Relations is a big part of the business, Hartley made it harder to sell the show. He did the right thing by accepting the consequences and parting ways with the show. In two months, only the crazies will give a shit.
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