1. in terms of these "should they be fired for their tweets & bad opinions" controversies, the one I remain most conflicted about -- I mean genuinely torn -- is Quinn Norton.
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4. Her crackpot idea is that Nazis should be befriended by non-Nazis & also it's possible for Nazi to be otherwise a good person. Also it's okay to throw around racist & homophobic slurs as part of internet engaging with people on internet.
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5. I think the most charitable possible view of Norton's thinking on Nazis is that it is super-naive. It comes from a place of extreme, radical innocence.
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6. Being charitable, we can say that Norton thought it was possible to befriend Nazis & talk with them in their own language without being effected. Her assumption was she could pull them to her, not that they would drag her down. Which is naive & wrong but not vile.
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7. The question then becomes (if we accept the most charitable possible view of Norton) whether being super-naive is firing offense. When you're job includes writing on politics (as she was going to) I think it is.
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She defended her public use of "fag" as a means of ingratiating herself with a loathsome community, as though any gay person should find that excuse worthwhile.
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You cannot patiently love Nazis into goodness. Weev is a termite.
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Also it’s worth asking where those ideas, and the other context, came from in the first place, because the answer is that they came from prolonged engagement and mutual acclimatization with the Nazis
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