At Writercon 2009 this last weekend, I was on a panel entitled "Evil In Our Midst: Racism, Sexism, and Homophobia in Fandom." And before I start talking about it, I want to give some background, because as I discovered through some conversations at the con, some of the people who attended weren't aware of why the convention decided to host this
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She didn't just "call them on it" - she interrupted to ask if the speaker was "nuts" and declared, "You don't get to say that at this panel." I was shocked at the way the conversation was shut down, after an hour and a half of discussing the importance of communication and dialogue.
I agree with you that it was not the right venue for Group A discussion, but I had expected it to be a venue that treated all members with respect. That's what was disappointing to me in the end. I understand the importance of not derailing the discussion, but I hope we can deal with it a little differently next time.
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I agree. But I think the point I'm trying to make here is that whether she realized it or not, the first speaker was perceived as being disrespectful, too. I'm not trying to pass judgement on what anyone should have done, but to provide some context and shed some light (I hope) on why people reacted as they did.
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Thank you!
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For the people that have been following Facefail, or more importantly participating in it, a statement that basically screamed derailment was not something to be respected. They have been dealing with derailment on a regular basis for months. Derailment doesn't need to be discussed. Derailment needs to be shot down and the conversation brought back to the point. It's called derailment for a reason.
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As for nothing being discussed - I have a sore throat to attest to the fact that we discussed something for an hour and a half. *g* And we're still discussing it here - that's why I made this post, because there wasn't time to go into this at the panel, and in retrospect I think we made an error in assuming that the majority of the audience would be familiar with the basics of this stuff. This really isn't a subject that can be boxed into an hour and a half at a convention. This is a conversation that needs to keep happening every day, in all our lives, until the day that things change. And if we don't keep having it, that day won't come.
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http://rm.livejournal.com/1680386.html
I also see from the other comments that someone is going to have to sit down and explain the problem with the tone argument.
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