altnameJag said:
Anybody who wanted a vote for who won could've ponied up the $40, and if there were enough of them, they could've beat out the "No Award" votes.
It's just that most of the Internet Randos that got really into the Hugos last year, regardless which puppy they backed, weren't willing to put their money where their mouth was.
Untrue. To be able to nominate you had to pony up the money. What happened is when Puppies swept a category for nominations, their votes for the actual award were dispersed across the options while the "NO PUPPY NOMINATION CAN BE PERMITTED TO WIN, NO AWARD OVER ANY PUPPY CHOICE GETTING ANY AWARD" crowd were all voting No Award (there were literally more no award votes for the 2015 Hugos than cumulatively for the entire history of the awards prior to 2015). It's basically the spoiler effect in action -- a diffuse voting pattern for the Puppies versus the "anti-puppies" voting no award specifically to prevent any work associated with the puppies from winning. Better no award than someone with wrongthink get an award (it's almost shocking how often people talking about the Hugos that year were talking less about the nominated works and more about the author's politics, almost as though they felt that was more important or something).
What's interesting is that they're changing the nomination rules to weaken slate voting (which likewise lessens the hold the previous old guard can maintain because all sides were slate voting, the Puppies were just more overt about it). While it makes a slate weaker, it makes promoting a single work much more effective. Look for the next iteration of Rabid Puppies to push one work per category, and be far more able to actually get a work to win (because they'll be a more concentrated voting block), presuming they can get the numbers. They won't be able to sweep a category without doing something radically different, but that goes for everyone else too. So instead of seeing the Puppies hold a category, or the leading nominee be a short story about trying to stay in the closet in a world where water falls on your head whenever you lie, next time we'll likely see a Puppy, an overtly SJW choice and a couple of probably more reasonable choices.
I'd argue that Sad Puppies biggest mistake was made the first time they tried to make their point -- the first time they pushed a single nomination through, nominating the qualifying author they felt would be the most utterly offensive to the people controlling the noms previously -- Vox Day. Thus they drew the attention of the Eye of Sauron and he unleashed his Uruk-hai hordes in the Rabid Puppies.
Fox12 said:
Also, whose gaming the awards? The entire sci-fi community at large? Again, your claim makes no sense when the vote is open to the public.
Not completely open to the public, but you keep trying to ignore the very simple matter that pre-Puppies actual voter turnout was incredibly low.
Much like the POTUS, if you can get virtually any demographic group that can vote to actually mobilize and vote for you consistently you will win the nomination and potentially win the race, because overall turnout is so very, very poor. The Hugos are the same way, a handful of people with a handful of followers each is all it would take to swing the awards because so few bothered to vote. The number of votes for the 2015 Hugos was unprecedented, and was a result of both Puppies and anti-Puppies pulling for more people to get involved.
The argument made by the Puppies is essentially that someone like Heinlein or Card wouldn't be "allowed" to win nowadays. Mind you Card is still writing, and used to get at least nominated with some regularity but apparently his last 40-odd works just don't have that certain something that is totally unrelated to his views on homosexuality.
On a personal level, I'd love to see more stuff like Ra, Worm or Three Worlds Collide written and recognized, but I have atypical taste.