Segata Sanshiro
Member
For every extra copy someone buys, I will purchase and void the contents of an aerosol spray can.
MWUUUAAHAHHAHA
MWUUUAAHAHHAHA
MightyHedgehog said:I thought it was good of Nutt to do so. I also liked that Peter David, the writer for Shadow Complex, the game, chimed in with an opinion on the article/controversy and that another fellow, Russell Carroll, stepped in to respond with a bit I highly agree with.
With a lighter in front of it, and pretend you're making liking Ripley!Segata Sanshiro said:For every extra copy someone buys, I will purchase and void the contents of an aerosol spray can.
MWUUUAAHAHHAHA
Ogrekiller said:Not really, he probably gets paid too little, if at all. He wants to hype up the next book in the franchise. That's what he's invested into.
An analogy would be a small car company. They hire a controversial engineer to design the latest model in their brand of motorcycles. They then decide to make a line of cars in the same brand. This engineer may or may not have contributed design input, may or may not have been paid for his work- we don't know. People then boycott the cars because the engineer was involved in the brand. One guy even smashes his car by the small car company's parent company.
To continue the analogy, said engineer is contracted to produce model 09 and 10 in the motorcycle line. Of course he wants to sweet talk the car line because it helps raise awareness for the motorcycle line.
Yes. You did misunderstand. Choosing not to purchase something out of principle is making a personal stand; it is not a boycott. Everyone of course is free to make personal stands out of principle. I do it without trying to force my views on others.Sneds said:The quote by Peter David seems pretty ridiculous to me. To boycott something is just to choose not to buy something. The way he words it, any non-purchase is therefore a hindrance on free artistic expression.
So am I right in thinking that Peter David would have a problem with someone not buying a t-shirt from a white supremacy rock group because of the band's lyrics? Please tell me if I've misunderstood his position.
Boycott is not a private choice, a boycott is an organized protest meant to bring about change through financial hardship, it isn't just choosing to not buy something. Any systematic campaign to prevent purchases of an artistic piece that is driven by the personal opinions or actions of the artist when the piece does not express or further those opinions is a hindrance to artistic expression.Sneds said:The quote by Peter David seems pretty ridiculous to me. To boycott something is just to choose not to buy something. The way he words it, any non-purchase is therefore a hindrance on free artistic expression.
So am I right in thinking that Peter David would have a problem with someone not buying a t-shirt from a white supremacy rock group because of the band's lyrics? Please tell me if I've misunderstood his position.
Red Nightmare said:Yes. You did misunderstand. Choosing not to purchase something out of principle is making a personal stand; it is not a boycott. Everyone of course is free to make personal stands out of principle. I do it without trying to force my views on others.
A boycott is a different animal entirely. It is an organized movement designed to punish or force change through financial intimidation. It is far better to force change via persuasion. Win the battle of ideas, if you can.
What Peter David wrote is by far the most sensible thing I've read in this thread.
poppabk said:Boycott is not a private choice, a boycott is an organized protest meant to bring about change through financial hardship, it isn't just choosing to not buy something. Any systematic campaign to prevent purchases of an artistic piece that is driven by the personal opinions or actions of the artist when the piece does not express or further those opinions is a hindrance to artistic expression.
dark10x said:You know, I never realized that the Mustard brothers were also involved in the creation of Advent Rising. I always wondered what had happened to those creators...
At least we know that demi is on our side with this one.
He didn't create the "universe" on which Empire was based, by the way.
Furthermore, any PR he may be doing for the game is likely designed to help push his next book.
So who all decided to boycott the game?
"Artistic piece?" Isn't this equally, if not more so, a commercial product? I'm not trying to be nitpicky, just trying to keep things grounded.poppabk said:Boycott is not a private choice, a boycott is an organized protest meant to bring about change through financial hardship, it isn't just choosing to not buy something. Any systematic campaign to prevent purchases of an artistic piece that is driven by the personal opinions or actions of the artist when the piece does not express or further those opinions is a hindrance to artistic expression.
http://www.amazon.com/dp/B002LIT3F2/?tag=neogaf0e-20BlackTyrano said:I'm considering not buying the game, but probably more because I don't want to spend $25 on points for a $15 game.
Costanza said:
SmokyDave said:I really wanted to stay out of this thread but I have to ask, what is the point of posts like this?
I honestly don't get it? Is it to say 'fuck you' to the op? is it to say 'I understand this guy is vehemently homophobic and I dig that so much I had to buy two copies'? is it a 'fuck you' to the general concept of civil rights?
Anyone pretending to be buying more than one copy of this game thanks to this thread, can you explain why to me? What image are you trying to portray?
soldat7 said:If you boycott Kevin Bacon, would you then boycott humanity?
truly101 said:Quick question, is OSC firmly against gay marriage or gay rights across the board? A couple of the links provided here on views that I clicked on seemed to focus pretty much on legalizing gay marriage.
Yes, he actually is calling for gay-rights supporters to give money to OSC because of his anti-gay views.How refreshing would it be for a massive call that said, "Instead of having a boycott, let's support this person financially because we want to show that we're bigger and better and more tolerant and more accepting than he is, and our business is with the type of material he produces rather than his opinions. Let's demonstrate by our actions what it's like to understand and accept that different people have different ways of life and shouldn't be attacked for it."
"Skip buying" = boycott? And I doubt someone like David would actually buy from an avowed white supremacist, for instance.And Christian: Yes. You advocated boycotts. Right here: "That's why it's okay to skip buying Dragon Quest IX or Shadow Complex." Because if you didn't advocate boycotts, you would have said, "It's not okay to skip buying Shadow Complex purely because you don't like Orson Scott Card's opinions. It's not okay that Epic or Chair or Peter David wind up as part of collateral damage when not only have they said and done nothing to warrant it, but Peter David has been an outspoken supporter of gay causes."
All gay rights.truly101 said:Quick question, is OSC firmly against gay marriage or gay rights across the board? A couple of the links provided here on views that I clicked on seemed to focus pretty much on legalizing gay marriage.
OSC said:Within the Church, the young person who experiments with homosexual behavior should be counseled with, not excommunicated. But as the adolescent moves into adulthood and continues to engage in sinful practices far beyond the level of experimentation, then the consequences within the Church must grow more severe and more long-lasting; unfortunately, they may also be more public as well.
This applies also to the polity, the citizens at large. Laws against homosexual behavior should remain on the books, not to be indiscriminately enforced against anyone who happens to be caught violating them, but to be used when necessary to send a clear message that those who flagrantly violate society's regulation of sexual behavior cannot be permitted to remain as acceptable, equal citizens within that society.
The goal of the polity is not to put homosexuals in jail. The goal is to discourage people from engaging in homosexual practices in the first place, and, when they nevertheless proceed in their homosexual behavior, to encourage them to do so discreetly, so as not to shake the confidence of the community in the polity's ability to provide rules for safe, stable, dependable marriage and family relationships.
OSC said:The repentant homosexual must be met with forgiveness. Even hypocritical homosexuals must be treated individually with compassion. But the collective behavior of the hypocrites of homosexuality must be met with our most forceful arguments and our complete intolerance of their lies. To act otherwise is to give more respect to the opinions of men than to the judgments of God.
FoneBone said:Wow, Peter David's argument is incredibly sloppy.
Yes, he actually is calling for gay-rights supporters to give money to OSC because of his anti-gay views.
"Skip buying" = boycott? And I doubt someone like David would actually buy from an avowed white supremacist, for instance.
And this thread has convinced me that should I encounter an opposing viewpoint to my own, I should buy things. It makes me feel better to have my purchasing habits dictated by a contrarian response. Makes me feel in control of myself.Woo-Fu said:This thread has convinced me, convinced me to buy two copies of Shadow Complex.
Not because I wish to support bigotry, but because I wish to support great games, particularly in the face of people trying to make them the poster child for a completely unrelated cause.
If you boycott Liverpool, how are you going to get your five pound Primark dress clothes?!painey said:John Lennon once beat up a guy for calling him gay, so i'm boycotting Rock Band Beatles, Liverpool, and Anti-War protests.
OSC said:The average fifteen-year-old teenage boy is genetically predisposed to copulate with anything that moves.
Don't get me started. Finding out OSC is such a repugnant person made me feel kind of...betrayed, I guess.mugwhump said:Aw, man
You just ruined orson scott card for me dude![]()
I wonder what he think think about the role of a whites only democratic vote to continue negotiations to end apartheid.Clipjoint said:I wonder what Peter David thinks about the role organized divestment played in ending apartheid in South Africa.
stupei said:What Peter David had to say was interesting, but I can never understand people who suggest that boycotting products is somehow opposed to the freedom of speech and expression. I cannot begin to understand his argument that boycotts are about the person and not their ideals or ideas. What reason exactly is there to dislike Card other than his ideas and ideals? Does he also cheat at cards? (Though I suppose that too would have something to do with his ideals and ethics.) Freedom of speech and expression is not the same thing as freedom from disapproval. What exactly is he suggesting we do to show our disapproval instead? That everyone who disagrees with Card should fund a video game of their own and use the profits to oppose him?
It has nothing to do with instilling "fear of financial ruin." Nobody is naive enough to think OSC is going to go bankrupt because of this or any of his opinions. It's about not wanting to finance active attempts at bigotry.
sonicmj1 said:Their target is no longer the ideology that Card advocates and supports monetarily, it is Card himself. Those in favor of a boycott (in the true sense of the word) seek to financially damage him by removing him from his business associates, and to financially damage those who have associated with him ... If a boycott targets individuals instead of the policies it claims to oppose, I believe it is misguided and doomed to fail in its aims.
Yes, the "victim card". Where a the victim(s) grievances are used against them as a weapon. Thus demonizing them as well as dismissing their actual grievances that they wished to be addressed in the first place. As well as causing more hatred to said people/person unless they just shut up and learn to live with said grievance. Well played my intellectually and morally bankrupt friend.truly101 said:It doesn't quite apply to this issue, but there is some merit to the idea Peter David is trying to convey. I think there are times where people are too quick to play the victim card because either that's whats expected or its the best way to advance their agenda.
Case in point. Kids here in the states may remember Don Imus getting into hot water for calling the Rutgers women's basketball team "nappy headed hos" as his poor attempt at a joke. No doubt it was racially insensitive and Imus deserved ridicule for making the statement. However I was far more disgusted with Rutgers coach C Vivian Stringer who quickly played the victim card, said the comments ruined her players selft esteem, their season, and God knows what else. She basically milked it for all the exposure she could get. She also gave those words that Imus said all the power in the world. Why not instead admonish him for his idiocy but reaffirm that there is nothing he or anyone else could say that would take away from their pride or their accomplishments. Instead she pandered for attention. I've grown tired of people playing the victim to see what they can get out of it.
Again, what I've stated doesn't quite apply here, but there are other stronger ways to voice your convictions or believes than crying "I have been wronged, someone give me something!"
Sneds said:I think an important point with Card though, is that from what I have been led to believe, he personally funds a homophobic/SSM campaign. Therefore, if Card does (and we don't know this) benefit from sales of Shadow Complex, by buying the game the purchaser is quite directly funding this campaign.
Therefore, financially damaging Card isn't necessarily an act of vengeance due to conflicting viewpoints, but actually preventing your own money being used to aid a cause you vehemently disagree with. Now I don't know the agreement Card has in terms of moneys received for SC but if the above is accurate then I think people's decision not to buy the game in order to prevent Card gaining their money is fair enough.
ShockingAlberto said:Don't get me started. Finding out OSC is such a repugnant person made me feel kind of...betrayed, I guess.
I think because Ender's Game was about being different, and how if you're different, the people ostracizing you are the ones who need to change, not you. There's nothing wrong with being unique. That was a good lesson as a kid.
Now it's fifteen years later and I discover my interpretation of the book is very different from what Card intended.
painey said:John Lennon once beat up a guy for calling him gay, so i'm boycotting Rock Band Beatles, Liverpool, and Anti-War protests.
deadatom said:Yes, the "victim card". Where a the victim(s) grievances are used against them as a weapon. Thus demonizing them as well as dismissing their actual grievances that they wished to be addressed in the first place. As well as causing more hatred to said people/person unless they just shut up and learn to live with said grievance. Well played my intellectually and morally bankrupt friend.
Please don't use that term again in civl discourse. It ony outs you as a talk-radio listening fool to everyone in the thread.
Freedom of conscious is freedom for wallet...sonicmj1 said:That's why I can understand it as a personal decision, as opposed to an organized boycott.
Boycotting Shadow Complex in a large way and denying money to Chair as a whole solely because of funds Card may or may not be receiving, sends the wrong message. Since Chair (and Epic, and Microsoft Game Studios) have shown no indication of supporting Card in his views, and since Shadow Complex, as a media product, does not support Card in his views, attempting to financially impact Shadow Complex and all those who have worked on it solely because Card may or may not use money from it to fund his anti-homosexual agenda seems, to me, far removed from any opposition to Card's agenda in particular.
The process that would support a mass boycott would logically lead to a boycott on anything Card does, ever, since allowing him to earn any money could possibly allow him to use those funds for his politics. As an individual, not giving him your money is one thing. Applying that to a wider boycott with the goal of preventing him from earning money from anyone for anything he does goes beyond targeting his policies, and targets him.
I don't think most posters here who have chosen not to purchase the game because of its affiliation with Card support a wider boycott against the game. Considering that the possibility of a boycott is in the thread's subject, though, I think it's worth addressing.
sonicmj1 said:The process that would support a mass boycott would logically lead to a boycott on anything Card does, ever, since allowing him to earn any money could possibly allow him to use those funds for his politics. As an individual, not giving him your money is one thing. Applying that to a wider boycott with the goal of preventing him from earning money from anyone for anything he does goes beyond targeting his policies, and targets him.
sonicmj1 said:I don't think most posters here who have chosen not to purchase the game because of its affiliation with Card support a wider boycott against the game. Considering that the possibility of a boycott is in the thread's subject, though, I think it's worth addressing.