what if we do a terrible thing and create a world where there's more respect and care given to each other? wouldn't that just be awful? i don't want to live in that world. i want men to be able to do and say whatever they want, whenever they want, without having to regard other people at all.
all I wanted to see was for Taubman to be a mensch and own up to what he did...still waiting btw
lol god forbid we start demanding that everyone be treated with respect in the workplace. these days are so rough! can't even target, yell at, and cuss at female reporters anymore.
you can stay in your old times, little man.
what if we do a terrible thing and create a world where there's more respect and care given to each other? wouldn't that just be awful? i don't want to live in that world. i want men to be able to do and say whatever they want, whenever they want, without having to regard other people at all.
all I wanted to see was for Taubman to be a mensch and own up to what he did...still waiting btw
not owning up to your **** behavior is a trend these days.
I don't agree with Coredor in the sense that this was a bad incident and one that he probably needed to be fired for. Obviously encouraging respect and politeness in the workplace is a good thing. But I do think that Coredor has a point in the sense that the public shaming machine is a pretty terrible thing and can have long lasting impacts on a person's psyche.
If you make a mistake like this, you should face consequences that are suitable for whatever mistake you made. Having literally millions of people on social media berate you, drag your name through the mud, and, in some ways, bully you is not proportional to this particular mistake. Not only does it severely harm future job prospects and your social life, but it can have serious psychology ramifications that can take years to heal.
What he did was worse than what Justine Sacco did for sure, but the response to both of them was way out of proportion and its not hard to sympathize with them in that regard, while also maybe condemning what they have done (and I'm not condemning Justine for what she did. It wasn't that bad).
This is a pretty cut and dried issue. Taubman is a moron who couldn't shut his mouth for one night and felt like he just had to rub it into these female journalists' faces. I think anyone can understand his temptation to do that; I'm sure he knew they were opening themselves up to some backlash when they signed Osuna, he hated that the domestic violence was brought up over and over by the same people, and so he vented in a really dumb and hurtful way in what he felt was a moment of some sort of vindication.
He should have owned up to it and apologized, and the Astros should have acknowledged it from the beginning. I definitely don't see it as a mistake clearly worthy of being fired, but that is the Astros' call to make, and they made it. I don't think anyone should have demanded he be fired, and I don't think anyone should be upset that he ultimately was.
I mean, he did apologize. It may have been perceived as a weak apology, and maybe it was. But I'm not sure it would help if he came out and unequivocally apologized for the entire incident, accepting total responsibility. It may satisfy you personally, but my experience with the social media mob is that apologies aren't accepted and often just make things worse. Morally it might be the right thing to do. But strategically, the best option is often to double down on whatever you did. That's not right, but that is the world we are creating.
what social media seems to do is compress the time available for reflection and atonement...in the pre-social media world Taubman would have had more time to own up to his actions and to make amends before facing the risk of losing his job
I don't think I would call that an apology. It was more an evasion. But I have a jaundiced view of apologies in general. More often than not they serve as a means for perpetuating the behavior for which the apology is offered. In my book it is always better to engage in sincere reflection than to offer an apology. Of course if you can do both you should (keeping in mind that apologies mainly work to the benefit of the people offering them). In Taubman's situation though there was the practical reality that his job was at stake. So he needed to own up to his actions in a better way. Maybe he didn't realize that. Maybe he is incapable in his current state of doing it.
imagine reading this story
and your big take away/issue is social media
lol
we should stop making them so angry...otherwise they might just snap
yelling "I'm so glad we got Osuna. So F.ucking glad we got him!!!!" at a female reporter who has written articles about domestic violence during a celebration for no reason other than to berate and intimidate is obvious
he went out of his way to do so
this guy should have been fired the next day
and whomever put out saying the initial report was fake news should be fired too.