No, I think you got it.Lagmonster wrote:I don't think I need to address your back-story and explanation for her situation, as it's reasonably point-of-fact. Tell me if I missed something important.
I think we're setting the bar too low for a revolutionary or even for a reformer. Reformers really should have an objective they want to work towards, a list of things they want to do in order to get there, and the willingness to take the lead in working towards those changes. Anita is really only pointing out things and saying "this is not great" without pushing for anything you could call a "reform" at all.Lagmonster wrote:I think she's absolutely agitating for change; that's been part of the message I'm getting in her videos. And it's much needed change.
The way I see it, to use a different situation, a reformer for campaign finance would say we need to put a stop to anonymous SuperPAC groups and put forth a bill to that effect. Revolutionaries might say we need to enforce public-funding of elections and ban political TV-spots paid for by secondary groups, and take that message directly to the people at large. Critics would say that money in politics causes problems, identify those problems, but publish these thoughts mostly within a confined newsletter to similarly concerned citizens and not advocate for any specific legislation or recommend any specific candidates for election.
Of these three I see Anita as the last. She is not in the power structure, and is not trying to insert herself there (she gets invited to talks but isn't organizing protests or counter-conventions or anything) and mostly wants people who also care about these things to hear her examination, as well as to provide people in a position of power to change things (developers) an opportunity to hear an outside critique in a calm and rational way so they can make choices that are less problematic.
Perhaps I am setting the bar too high on this, but I think her commentary is basically around the same level of critical commentary we see from other game industry critics (Extra Credits, Jimquisition, Totalbiscuit) except that the advocacy she focuses on is constrained to one broad issue (depictions of women in gaming) and that her gender and topic combine to make her extra controversial. I wouldn't call these people reformers either. I think we're calling her a reformer here mostly because she is being supported by others and because she has controversial views.
And just to be as clear as I can be, I am not saying any of this to put her down or sideline her in any way. I think she's already on the sideline, really. I just see her activity as benign, non-pushy, non-revolutionary and basically non-controversial stuff in general, and yet all of the anger is focused on her? There's no good reason for this other than a vendetta.
I'm not saying that's better. I am not advocating it. I'm just saying that this is essentially the position that she, and a few others, do actually take. I don't say she's just a critic to deflect an attack, I say she's just a critic in order to highlight how absurd the level of attack on her is, in order to highlight the absurdity of the situation. This is why I say the attacks on her have so obvious an agenda: she is a minor voice in a big fight and she does not even make the loudest or most sweeping proposals, and yet she remains the target for harassment.Lagmonster wrote:And either way I don't see how hiding in the mantle of the critic could help. "Oh, I'm not out to change anything, I'm just a critic". Okay, then, come see me when you are ready to accomplish something. I'll just keep enjoying my power and privilege while you think it over.
Well, those people are really no good for anyone anyway. Since the level of discourse is in the tank as is, we can be sure they also won't get off their ass to enter a turbulent unacademic trolling shit-storm either. If someone is too lazy (intellectually or literally) to form their own ideas, and also too lazy (not accusing you) to "follow the message" of anyone who is controversial then all we have is a de-facto mushy middle once again, by merit of moral absolutism and a desire to avoid controversy. These people are useless for any kind of social change.Lagmonster wrote:Because it's easier to agree with a human than an idea. And I think that's really important in this issue, because the people who have to change the most are generally contented, well-meaning people, more akin to cats in a sunbeam than whip-masters in a palace. That kind of person doesn't get off their ass to be part of a turbulent academic discussion.
Plus, agreeing with a human is pointless. As soon as that person does something you may not approve of ("ermagerhd, Anita said women cannot be sexists? I can no longer listen to her!") or becomes controversial for any reason, the "agree with people, not with ideas" thing collapses inward. It becomes an infinite regress towards less and less controversial people, not even less controversial ideas. Given how (understandable, forgivably) falliable people are it becomes an argument for intellectual nihilism.