Anonymous wrote:
White (and white presenting) women invoking authority because they assume they will be taken seriously by virtue of their whiteness (or the way that they present as white) is very much the issue here.
The reason this has blown up, and Tynes should have known this, is that Black men and women have their bodies policed by white strangers from dawn to dusk. So this is stacked on all of those other incidents. It is not identical, but it clearly resonates in the same context.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree that it's entitled behavior. But should her BOOK be cancelled as a result?
She used her minority status to book interviews talking about being marginalized and discriminated against. Yet she called out another minority woman on the train and tagged her employer at the same time. Did she out any of the white commuters regularly drinking starbucks on the train?
The Complicated Reality of a Minority Writer
A writer of color is the label that currently defines my literary persona. Whether I like it or not, that’s who I am in the eyes of many in the writing community. Am I a writer of color? What color exactly?
Born in Amman, Jordan, a fairly homogeneous city where we called ourselves Jordanians, Arabs, I never thought of myself as any color. I’m not white, brown or black. I was what I was. I had to fly thousands of miles to the U.S. to discover my brownness. To describe my skin color as olive, and my eyes as almond. To explain my ethnicity every time I opened my mouth and people heard my accent.
As I embarked on writing They Called Me Wyatt, a novel set between Jordan and the U.S., which explores societal challenges faced by women and what it means to defy your cultural norms, I slowly started to embrace my label as a writer of color.
https://www.writersdigest.com/online-editor/damned-if-i-do-damned-if-i-dont-the-complicated-reality-of-a-minority-writer
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is political correctness run amok. All the woman did is tweet a picture of an employee flouting Metro's own rules. And now the employee is the victim? Ridiculous.
Welcome to cancel culture!!
But why did she do it? Is she going around the city taking pictures of everyone who flouts the rules? Maybe she was annoyed about the worker eating, but most normal people (I hope) don’t take pictures of others without permission and then post them online. What did she hope to achieve?
Agree. I don’t care about their race, taking a candid picture of a stranger and posting it on the internet for the whole world to see is awful. I see it all the time in memes, viral fb posts and so on. It’s rude and I’m glad she was fired from her publisher. Enough is enough.
This. Social media shaming is awful, immature and low class. This is why she should lose the book deal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those of you who think the employee was the problem:
Barry Hobson, the chief of staff for the Metro workers union — Amalgamated Transit Union Local 689 — said in a statement the Metro employee was taking her meal break while in transit from one assignment to another. The statement notes operators have "an average of 20 minutes to consume a meal and get to their next access point to ensure all buses and trains are on time, safe, and ready to serve the riding public.”
From the article posted by OP.
Then Metro should alter their rules so that all passengers who are in similar situations get to eat on Metro if they choose.
From the same article. I assume it includes passengers?
Though the union acknowledged it is against Metro rules to eat on a train or in a station, Hobson’s statement also referenced an email from Metro Transit Police Chief Ron Pavlik sent May 8, ordering officers to “cease and desist from issuing criminal citations in the District of Columbia for fare evasion; eating; drinking; spitting, and playing musical instruments without headphones until further advised.”
Anonymous wrote:I’m glad this happened. A snitch tried to get someone’s job because the woman told her to worry about herself, which she should. This author identifies as a POC when it benefits her but then attacks a black woman by dragging in her boss on Twitter. She got the smoke she wanted m!
Anonymous wrote:Oh but they’ve given the author a nickname
Metro Molly
Anonymous wrote:PSA:
Metro workers are NOT low wage workers. jobs at Metro are great jobs for often low/unskilled workers.
Anonymous wrote:Her tweet just seemed mean-spirited and vindictive. Yes, the employee was eating on the train, but is it necessary to report her to her boss and try to get her fired? How would that help or serve anyone?
I don’t blame her publishers for declining to associate with someone like that. No one is obligated to publish her work. She should have just sat there and looked at her phone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is political correctness run amok. All the woman did is tweet a picture of an employee flouting Metro's own rules. And now the employee is the victim? Ridiculous.
Welcome to cancel culture!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I travel with my 3yo by metro every day and feel guilty about discreetly feeding him snacks, but now plan to just do it in the open. The rules are over.
Total FREE PASS. Keeping little people fed needs no explanation..
Anonymous wrote:Talk about racism and the soft bigotry of low expectations - that it’s somehow unreasonable to expect a black person to obey the law. Wow!
Anonymous wrote:Her tweet just seemed mean-spirited and vindictive. Yes, the employee was eating on the train, but is it necessary to report her to her boss and try to get her fired? How would that help or serve anyone?
I don’t blame her publishers for declining to associate with someone like that. No one is obligated to publish her work. She should have just sat there and looked at her phone.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Photography on Metro trains is forbidden.
I would sue Ms. Tynes for “defamation of character” and “invasion of privacy!”
The Metro employee defamed her own character (such as it is) by breaking the law while in uniform). Metro should toss her out on her ass.
Did you read the article? She did NOT break the law