Anonymous wrote:I don't get the pile-on here. I didn't see the original tweet, just the backlash for shaming a black woman for eating her breakfast. But the tweet was calling out a WMATA worker for violating WMATA rules that have been around for a long time and have been (apparently until recently) enforced by WMATA and mostly respected by passengers.
Is it really off-limits to point that out? I follow some of the Metro criticism accounts like Unsuck Metro and I think it's good that there is a way for the public to point out where the system is failing. Would the backlash here have been as bad if the tweet had tried to anonymize the WMATA employee? And why are people trying to ruin the woman's life - cancel her book deal, target her kids?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't get the pile-on here. I didn't see the original tweet, just the backlash for shaming a black woman for eating her breakfast. But the tweet was calling out a WMATA worker for violating WMATA rules that have been around for a long time and have been (apparently until recently) enforced by WMATA and mostly respected by passengers.
Is it really off-limits to point that out? I follow some of the Metro criticism accounts like Unsuck Metro and I think it's good that there is a way for the public to point out where the system is failing. Would the backlash here have been as bad if the tweet had tried to anonymize the WMATA employee? And why are people trying to ruin the woman's life - cancel her book deal, target her kids?
Because she tried to ruin another woman's life and get her fired. She knew what her actions would result in by not only tagging a hate account of WMATA (unsuckdcmetro) but also by tagging WMATA - the woman's employer and identifying the train plus train line the woman was on in addition to a very clear photo of her face.
She wanted to publicly mock and vilify the woman in order to get her fired.
Now the rest of twitter is doing the same to her.
I didn't see the tweet about her kids, but I imagine - trying to get an employee fired and getting her book deal canceled pretty much make them even.
Anonymous wrote:On the metro, there are theee white people with food/drink in my car (including me).
Anonymous wrote:I don't get the pile-on here. I didn't see the original tweet, just the backlash for shaming a black woman for eating her breakfast. But the tweet was calling out a WMATA worker for violating WMATA rules that have been around for a long time and have been (apparently until recently) enforced by WMATA and mostly respected by passengers.
Is it really off-limits to point that out? I follow some of the Metro criticism accounts like Unsuck Metro and I think it's good that there is a way for the public to point out where the system is failing. Would the backlash here have been as bad if the tweet had tried to anonymize the WMATA employee? And why are people trying to ruin the woman's life - cancel her book deal, target her kids?
Anonymous wrote:On the metro, there are theee white people with food/drink in my car (including me).
Anonymous wrote:PSA:
Metro workers are NOT low wage workers. jobs at Metro are great jobs for often low/unskilled workers.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There used to be a succinct response to your type of bile, which seems appropriate now:
“America - Love it or leave it!”
And this is why, boys and girls, you can never have a nuanced conversation about America with Americans if you're an immigrant. The only emotion you are allowed to display is unadulterated adoration. I've gone through this hundreds of times and no matter how liberal or sophisticated the crowd, it always comes back to this. Always.
Yes, I always try to start nuanced conversations with lines like "First, fk your dumb ass, racist post"; it always helps to establish rapport first.
I wasn’t trying to have a nuanced conversation. I am beyond sick and tired of all of you self-important, self-professed Middle East experts and your constant racist, condescending generalizations. What I was doing is cussing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:In the drama of intersectionality, I guess being Jordanian-American doesn’t carry much weight.
She would be considered as white.
I thought what she considers herself, how she self identifies, is what she is. She says she is a POC, and so she is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
There used to be a succinct response to your type of bile, which seems appropriate now:
“America - Love it or leave it!”
And this is why, boys and girls, you can never have a nuanced conversation about America with Americans if you're an immigrant. The only emotion you are allowed to display is unadulterated adoration. I've gone through this hundreds of times and no matter how liberal or sophisticated the crowd, it always comes back to this. Always.
Yes, I always try to start nuanced conversations with lines like "First, fk your dumb ass, racist post"; it always helps to establish rapport first.
Anonymous wrote:In the drama of intersectionality, I guess being Jordanian-American doesn’t carry much weight.
Anonymous wrote:I really wanna know what she was eating.