There is another thing called consequences. You can’t say that you want to burn down a house for the fun of it.
Do you have any examples of someone saying “burn down the house” for fun?
There is another thing called consequences. You can’t say that you want to burn down a house for the fun of it.
Actually, you can. What you can't do is falsely holler "Fire!" in a crowded movie house. (The jury is still out on falsely hollering "Movie!" in a crowded firehouse.)You can’t say that you want to burn down a house for the fun of it.
Has Star Trek always been politically informed? Sure. Has it always been partisan to a very specific point of view though? No.Hey fellow Trekkies, I don’t know about you but I feel like that most modern Trek celebrities use the excuse of Star Trek has ways been political as a way to post overly extreme takes on their profiles online when most fans are there for their Trek stuff. To me this seems rather arrogant and once someone responds with this question at hand the host’s fans would come at you for daring to criticize them. As someone who is politically moderate and tries to be nuanced about how I approach things it feels rather unsafe to be in fandoms that are supposedly inclusive to anyone.
I’d like to hear anyone’s opinions and reports of similar events to see how this is affecting the Trek community as a whole. Thanks for your time in advance.
Many BBSes have moderation. How rules are actually enforced can very. Whereas Twitter wise, that space had a bit of a polaric inversion over the last few years...Letting them post whatever they want is the issue. There needs to be controls and basic guidelines and not just the ToS.
There are consequences, on this board you do have moderators that overlook things, and if you go beyond the pale, then you can get suspended or banned.There is another thing called consequences. You can’t say that you want to burn down a house for the fun of it.
People have a right to express their opinions on social media, even celebrities.Letting them post whatever they want is the issue.
There is quite a difference between expressing one's political beliefs and discussing destruction of someone else's property.You can’t say that you want to burn down a house for the fun of it.
And even then, such discussion will result in a further discussion around safety, not banning your right to speech.There is quite a difference between expressing one's political beliefs and discussing destruction of someone else's property.
Yes, people will be political. Even Star Trek fans.
What's way more annoying is when people make political comments in a discussion that has absolutely nothing to do with politics. Never be that guy. Nobody likes that guy.
Now Gina was a whole another thing, she was posting stuff on X, her personal beliefs etc, and was fired. Do I in my opinion think that was right? No. She was speaking her mind like any other actor or actress, some even worse, but because we have this Left or Right problem, since she was "right wing" she was cancelled, but somebody who I think says worse things keeps there job.
Okay, lets inch down to cancel culture a bit..
2 examples, Jonathan Majors, Gina Carano
Now Gina was a whole another thing, she was posting stuff on X, her personal beliefs etc, and was fired. Do I in my opinion think that was right? No. She was speaking her mind like any other actor or actress, some even worse, but because we have this Left or Right problem, since she was "right wing" she was cancelled, but somebody who I think says worse things keeps there job.
Exactly. It's not a government agency (at the least in the US) so the private entities can restrict and have consequences as they want. And people can go to other platforms to share their views.So that comes down to Who Judges? or Who watches the Watchers?? Its never going to be equal justice.
But in these instances, its a private company, and if they don't want X or Y working for them because of almost whatever reason, today were talking about Social media posts, then they can do whatever they want.
Your mask is slipping.Letting them post whatever they want is the issue. There needs to be controls and basic guidelines and not just the ToS.
Thanks for the response. The main issue at least for me is how the algorithm works that amplifies these views. While I don’t intentionally follow these accounts it’s made worse when some trek celebrities go that route and I have to change my feed to fix it. Look at Sean Ferrick for example. He recently posted his take on the current middle east conflict which his first post was so so, but then his reply was more outrage gotcha style.Has Star Trek always been politically informed? Sure. Has it always been partisan to a very specific point of view though? No.
Most celebrates probably care more about sharing their politics than whatever project they're currently involved in. So "performing politics" gets amplified in that type of environment.
Civil discourse has greatly declined in the last decade. Interacting pseuodo-anonomously with masses of people on social media can be unsafe in an era of doxxing attempts, attempted cancelations to destroy livelihoods, swatting incidents, lastword-itas, and people wanting their dopamine hits. Narcissistic behaviors are greatly overdetermined online. So protect yourself by not sharing personal information or using common usernames across multiple locations.
Many BBSes have moderation. How rules are actually enforced can very. Whereas Twitter wise, that space had a bit of a polaric inversion over the last few years...
Yeah if actors choose to say something then that’s ok and within their obligation since it’s their personal account. The problem arises when people don’t balance their personal account with their social account when they should know it’s public to everyone.View attachment 38162 View attachment 38163 View attachment 38164 View attachment 38165
This could probably have been seen as a political statement by those so inclined.
However, if Star Trek actors choose to make public statements along the lines of "Don't be in such a rush to read in a lot of stuff which was never there, just to suit your own prejudices and preconceptions," then I'm pretty much OK with that.
They shouldn't have to balance it. It's their views.Yeah if actors choose to say something then that’s ok and within their obligation since it’s their personal account. The problem arises when people don’t balance their personal account with their social account when they should know it’s public to everyone.
This is what I’m talking about. Not only this but public perception and pr. This is also from personal experience from an ex Twitter user.She was not "cancelled" for being right-wing. Her employer declined to hire her for future productions because she made antisemitic remarks on social media. This is an example of someone having consequences for free speech, and is also an example of the right to freedom of association in action -- her employer deciding that it no longer wanted to associate with her.
At no point was Carano censored. She had the right to make whatever antisemitic remarks she wanted, and still has that right.
Yeah but then job opportunities and political limitations for x reasons. Yeah as a consumer we can choose to do whatever but my problem is not the actors themselves but mainly the people who host giant Trek channels on places like Youtube who’s audience are mostly there for the Trek stuff.They shouldn't have to balance it. It's their views.
Our choice to read or ignore.
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