I'd like to see evidence of the devastating financial impact online shaming has had, because I repeatedly see the same people get shamed and many of them seem to still have their jobs.
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Loss of earnings through missed progression opportunities, lack of trust from management, missing out on 3rs party opportunities, potential HR involvement.
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Happened to me without the dude in question nyit even reading article he was shaming me over. Didn't matter for him he got his interactions and moved on. My career however.....
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Shaming alt-right trolls is functionally equivalent to going to a taping of Jerry Springer in the 90s to engage in the public shaming of the guy who slept with his girlfriend's mother. It's mostly idiotic fun that reinforces social norms. Twitter is a perfect platform for this.
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Sure thing, but shaming non-nazis about other things just to get likes is a major issue. Some people just like to s**** on other people's work just to flex.
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No, it is not universally bad - but the reality is, we are all humans with different views and the capability of making mistakes. It is certainly bad when shame gets used as a tool to viciously assault someone they don't know, over being human, for the sake of internet followers.
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I'd say that shaming is likely to function as punishment and generate an aggressive response so it is close to universally bad, in terms of usefulness, as a consequence of misbehaving.
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Haha! We coulda told you that shit!
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