sheppie said:Sometimes, true. But the current SJW threat is causing some seriously unwanted effects here and there. People have been attacked, persecuted, arrested and had their lives destroyed because they offended professional victims.Pluvia said:Basically society doomsday predictions based around bitching about the younger generation. Welcome to the same thing that happens in every generation ever.
Like that Canadian who lost his freedom, his job and his life savings because a Twitter comment of his offended a feminist and professional victim. It's been three years and he's still fighting this blatant persecution.
I'm all for laughing about people who complain about the youth of today, but it's not funny anymore when it becomes a real threat.
Huh? We're talking about SJW-induced safe spaces right? The kind you find on American universities. Areas where normal people are not welcome because of their race or gender, to keep hyper-sensitive privileged people from being butthurt by someone's mere presence.Something Amyss said:No, safe places as in the sort of place where it's a social faux pas to call (for example) a homosexual a "******." The fact that people who are intolerant or outright hostile to a certain group might not be welcome is apparently quite devastating for some reason.
Kinda like some stores used to have signs that said 'no niggers allowed' in order for those poor white supremacists not to be offended.
Pluvia said:Yeah thought it was him.sheppie said:Gregory Allen Elliot. It involves this campaign [http://www.freedomoftweets.ca/].
I still except it's feminist opression though. Have you ever seen a harassment case take over 3 years and cost in excess of a ton? Those tend to be settled in a few weeks. Also never seen bail conditions that draconian before. I simply can't explain the proceedings as they happened without it involving persecution.
A quick Google check reveals he met a woman, Stephanie Guthrie, in April 2012 [http://www.thestar.com/news/crime/2014/01/08/first_of_three_toronto_women_testifies_in_twitter_harassment_trial.html] for a professional meeting to design a poster and a logo. The meeting went fine but she found someone else to design it and informed Elliot. Then just over a month later she had a disagreement on Twitter with a different guy who had created a game where you beat up Sarkeesian, and then Elliot stepped in and got involved in the argument against Guthrie.
Sometime also in Spring or Summer he got involved with arguing with another woman, Heather Reilly, but she blocked him. After being blocked he then spent the next few months [http://www.thestar.com/news/crime/2014/07/24/twitter_harassment_trial_second_complainant_says_accused_wouldnt_leave_her_alone.html] monitoring and replying to her tweets by finding hashtags she'd have tweeted to so he could get around the block.
It was descrived that [http://www.metronews.ca/news/canada/2015/07/21/women-had-a-right-to-fight-back-crown-argues-in-toronto-twitter-harassment-trial.html]: "Mr. Elliot sent copious amounts of obsessive, harassing tweets where he tweeted 'at' the complainants, mentioned their handles, mentioned the hashtags created by Ms. Guthrie, sent subtweets at the complainants, monitored their feeds, etc. He did this knowing that they blocked him and that they did not want contact with him". He was apparently even monitoring where they were going in real life, as he tweeted in September [http://www.thestar.com/news/crime/2014/07/24/twitter_harassment_trial_second_complainant_says_accused_wouldnt_leave_her_alone.html]: "A whole lot of ugly at the Cadillac Lounge tonight," on the same night Reilly went to meet with friends there, causing her to fear he was there and search the bar to make sure he wasn't.
Finally in November 2012, after months of him doing this, Guthrie went to the police and he was charged with criminal harrassment. Reilly and another woman, Paisley Rae, came forward after learning Guthrie went to the police and he was charged with two more counts of criminal harrassment in January 2013.
So yeah, there's "a Twitter comment of his offended a feminist", and then there's "harrassing people for months until they go to the police".
If you take into consideration that the Canadian justice system is functional though far from perfect, it seems highly unlikely that either of these scenarios would result in a three year legal battle, as they are both pretty black and white in nature. It is more likely that both parties are trying to paint themselves as "victims" in the media here, and that anything described is either grossly misrepresented or outright fabricated.