(oh, that's fine.) who would stop them? their fans? the people who aren't their fans catch the cultural impact via fans.
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Replying to @chaosprime
Well, take something like women in tech. Ideally, colleagues would be stepping up and really speaking out against misogynists.
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Replying to @slambister
there's a wave of that with each public incident, but i assume you mean earlier, implicating a don't-rock-the-boat culture
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Replying to @chaosprime @slambister
that sort of dynamic must be operating in gaming, like who wants to get pewdiepie mad at you before it becomes popular to
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Replying to @chaosprime @slambister
i mean, i've always viscerally loathed pewdiepie and would say so to anybody who cared, but why would anybody care?
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Replying to @chaosprime
There's a lot of cult of personality on the Internet. If pewdiepie were a diff person and condemned someone being racist, it
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Replying to @slambister
i imagine. so it's more the PDPs and JonTrons that you'd be asking to rein each other in. hm.
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Replying to @chaosprime @slambister
probably the narcissistic supply issues that lead to heading up an internet personality cult don't mesh well with empathy.
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Replying to @chaosprime
Lol, it's true. Anyway, the originator of this thread is making the points I'd like to make but better, and I have to step out
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