Posted April 12, 2015
low rated
htown1980: Again, I'm not really sure what you're on about here. I thought the article was discussing how some people in the sic fi community were recruiting people from outside of the sci fi community to vote for particular authors because they didn't like the previous winners of the Hugo awards as they felt they were too "progressive". What did you think it was about?
RWarehall: No, what the article is really about is how certain "pro-diversity" groups had managed to co-opt the Hugo awards in such a way that almost all recent winners have been minorities. My guess is they used their agenda and clout to do the same thing they accuse the other side of now doing, namely stuffing the ballot box. Now that a group of white male sci-fi writers have grouped up to counter this agenda-based co-option and get some white male authors on the ballot, the "pro-deversity" group is crying foul.
1. I wonder who comprises this "pro-diversity" group.
2. If there is a pro-diversity group, does that make the other group an anti-diversity group?
3. I wonder who are the minorities. I assume non-whites and non-males? I didn't realise non-whites and non-males were a minority. I'm actually fairly sure they both are not. Would it be better to describe the minority group as "white males who don't like diversity"?
4. I wonder how it could be suggested that almost all recent winners are minorities, given, for example this. Whilst some winners are certainly female and non-white, the facts don't seem to support that allegation. is that some evidence of bias?
5. Why does it matter what gender and race the winners are, anyway?
6. Why would a group of any particular race or gender want to band together to have their gender or race represented in the awards? Wouldn't they just say, this particular author (who is universally considered to be quite good, although maybe not the best) is deserving of winning, rather than encouraging people to vote for a number of really strange (and in some cases really bad) authors?
RWarehall: Quite frankly, this is a rather close parallel to what is happening with video games. Here, "pro-diversity" groups are pushing their agenda through co-option of gaming journalism affecting the scores on Metacritic and pushing their agenda in gaming. And just like with sci-fi, where they are claiming that the old writers are "so boring" and not diverse. Notice how they try to say the same about video games and Call of Duty or other top-selling FPS franchises.
To me, what is happening with sci-fi awards is what similar groups (with likely overlapping memberships) are trying to do with video games.
So your theory is something like this?: To me, what is happening with sci-fi awards is what similar groups (with likely overlapping memberships) are trying to do with video games.
1. "pro-diversity" groups co-opted gaming journalism, by inserting SJW journalists into the gaming journalism industry.
2. These people entered the industry together with the intention of pushing their agendas.
3. These people are giving bad meteoritic scores to particular goes with the intention of affecting the sales of those games.
4. In the end, games that "real gamers" like may stop being made, unless you draw everyone's attention to this conspiracy.
5. Thereby SJWs win.
Is this a common theory?