GamerGaters sometimes try to rebut charges of misogyny by pointing out that the targets of their wrath aren’t only women. And that’s true. They also target men … who stand up for women.
Mike Stuchbery, a writer and teacher in England, recently aroused the wrath of the Gaters by posting a brief essay titled “A Letter To The Gamerdudes In My Classes” on his blog. In the essay, he wrote “[d]on’t be part of the mob that attacks whichever target GamerGate is going after this week.”
So now he’s become “the target GamerGate is going after this week.” Or one of them, anyway.
The essay that so angered the Gaters is about as mild a criticism of their movement as you can imagine.
Stuchbery, after noting his own love of video games like Skyrim and Assassin’s Creed, simply suggested to his male students that they “stay away” from GamerGate.
He noted that the whole thing started with a blog post by Eron Gjoni,the angry ex-boyfriend of game developer Zoe Quinn – something Stuchbery said he thought was “a bit of a jerk move” on Gjoni ‘s part.
He then went on to describe the harassment and threats directed at Quinn and other women involved in the gaming world, threats that have forced many of the targeted women out of their homes. “Now, it might just be me, but don’t you think that there is something very, very wrong here?” he asked.
The movement that arose in the wake of these events, #GamerGate, claims that it’s not about sexism.They claim that their movement is about journalistic ethics, keeping games magazines about games and not preaching any particular message. …
However, every time a woman speaks up to say ‘Hey, maybe we could change things, make gaming more friendly for women!’, she gets threatened with murder and rape. …
[E]very time a woman speaks up about abuse or harassment she’s received within the gaming scene, she’s forced to leave her home for fear of attack.
There’s a word for the kinds of people who make the kinds of threats that Quinn, Wu and Sarkeesian have received: Creeps.
Hateful, misogynist creeps.
Uh oh. The c-word. If there’s one thing misogynistic assholes hate more than women, it’s being called creeps.
Actually, I think I’ve got that backwards. But trust me, they hate it.
Stuchbery went on to make these radical suggestions:
Guys, I urge you, if you see this stuff online, don’t join in. …
Don’t be a creep.
Embrace women in gaming.
Apparently, to the assembled masses over on 8chan, these were fighting words. And so the angry mob began to form, in the thread archived here.
The angry and not-very-well-infomed mob, that is. Though Stuchbery has an unequivocally male name, and identifies himself as Mr. Mike Stuchbery on Twitter, many of the angry mobsters assumed he was a she. (Each of these posts are taken from different parts of the thread; see the link above for full context. Also note that all commenters are automatically assigned the name “The Leader of Gamergate.”)
Oh, but GamerGate isn’t about women!
Here’s how one of the commenters responded to the news that Mr. Mike Stuchbery was in fact a Mr.
Even those who did manage to get Mr. Mike Stuchbery’s gender correct, and managed to avoid making grotesquely transphobic jokes about it, didn’t take their fact-checking much beyond that. The commenters simply assumed that Stuchbery had presented his essay to his class in an attempt to “indoctrinate” them, though there’s nothing on Stuchbery’s site that would suggest this.
Indeed, when I asked him directly, this is what he wrote to me:
I simply posted it on my blog in response to chatter I hear in the corridors. It was kind of an open letter. There was no reading it out in class
But apparently getting basic facts right doesn’t matter much to a GamerGate mob intent on exacting “justice” upon a man they described variously as a “dipshit,” a “cunt,” a “faggot,” and “a shill that cannot be redpilled.”
So this is how it works now.
If you’re a teacher, and you post an open letter on your blog in which you suggest to your male students that they not join up with an online mob that actively harasses and threatens women … that mob will harass you, and doxx you, and try to get you fired. Or at least, as one of the mob put it, “[r]emoved: transferred to another class or whatever, but he can’t keep teaching those kids, not after what he done.”
Or at least after what they think “he done.”
Another one of the mobsters added this ominous note: “as it says in the Book of Gamergate: ‘He who breaks the law goes back to the House of Pain.'”
Now, I should add that some people in the thread — more than a few — suggested that doxxing was bad, and that maybe trying to get a dude fired wasn’t the way to go. One commenter urged fellow Gaters to get back to targeting advertisers instead of, and I kid you not, “going off on sidequests that wont get us any xp.” (That is, “Experience Points.”)
Others thought it would make their side look bad.
STARTING this line of actions? GamerGate has been about harassment from the very start, even before it was called GamerGate.
Other commenters responded to the calls for “moderation” with open hostility:
I actually agree with that last bit. If you’re involved in GamerGate and this kind of witchhunt disturbs you, take the hint and get out.
At this point, after all the revelations about what this online mob has done and is doing to fuck up people’s lives, you should realize just what it is you are a part of. You are, as Stuchbery has pointed out, part of a hate group.
Even if you aren’t personally harassing anyone, you are part of an online mob that is. And if you’re on 8chan’s /gg/ board, you’re on a board that is proving to be one of the central organizing hubs of this harassment.
Don’t worry about LOOKING bad. You ARE BAD.
If you have a decent bone left in your body, you need to do everything in your power to shut down this angry mob, end the harassment and threats and witchhunts, and bring an end to GamerGate.
Seconding pallygirl.
Even if some group uses the f-word to describe people they don’t like, no need to go using it when talking about what they would say.
If Argenti were around, hir stable would be bursting.
Seconding pallygirl and anarchonist. Homophobia and ableism are not welcome in this space.
Read update #4 in the welcome package for more info: http://artistryforfeminismandkittens.wordpress.com/the-official-man-boobz-complimentary-welcome-package/
double ninja’d…
Regarding the actual post – this is the kind of stuff that makes me second-guess calling out GG stuff on twitter or elsewhere. I don’t game (although I did when I was younger) but I do recognize harassment and misogyny. I guess if you get unlucky enough for the “movement” to hold you up as a bad example, that’s just how it goes. Yikes.
What gross, awful people.
Why can’t they put all this effort into planning a surprise birthday party for their mom or something?
LOL. Great work, David. I was watching that 8chan/gg/ thread from the start, & contacted Mike when it started getting ugly. I’m so glad you got on this one so quickly. The actual thread is still live, believe it or not, & I’ve just posted a mocking comment there that links to this article.
Why would a school fire a teacher because they got some emails from people who not parents, members of the community the school is in, and in many cases people who are in different countries? Why would they care about what a bunch of angry twitter trolls think?
I also wasn’t aware that writing a blog post about harassment and threats being wrong is indoctrination. These guys really are like tea party Republicans. They also think teaching entirely reasonable and true things like evolutionary theory and our government being secular is liberal indoctrination.
Um yeah, what’s with the influx of ableism in this thread. I know the gamergate stuff is upsetting to people and inspiring impassioned opposition, but lets not stoop to their level here.
Some more optimistic thoughts here, nobody I know heard of the GG in any other way than a tantrum of angry gamebabies with too much violence and free time. I don’t have a huge online presence but I’m active in a few geek circles that include lots of male nerds, with varying political positions and even people who defended Dick Dawkins in his misogynistic rants. Now I connect with these people through old-school geek media like email and irc, so I think it is ok to assume that the hardcore GG-ers have decided to focus their socks in flooding twitter so they’re giving the impression of a massiveness they don’t have. On the other hand, I don’t live in the US.
I imagine the reaction of teachers and parents of the school if those dumbasses get to send them such requests would be the same as the epic opening in the cracked article:
@princessmathonwy ~
It’s likely that some of the students Mike Stuchbery was more directly addressing are sympathizers of/participants in the GG mob, themselves, petulant enfants terribles who feel that any attempt to get them to think about what they’re doing and question the stuff bouncing off the walls of their own online echo chamber is the very definition of “oppression,” and who, therefore, think Mr. Stuchbery deserves the sack.
My mistake. If I’m not mistaken, “crazy” is used to tar people with mental illness or disability but I’m far too used to the context in which it’s used to refer to people who have those kinds of conspiratorial, paranoid mindsets.
Was not my intent to be ableist, so I’ll try to use a different word to get across my point.
Owl Cake,
Do I know you from a mumble gaming server?
The problem is we don’t have a nice simple word for “may not actually be diagnosed with a mental illness but don’t exactly seem mentally/emotionally healthy.”
And no, asshole doesn’t really have the connotation I’m looking for here.
No, the problem is that you want a way to equate horrible people with mentally ill people without using any of the current English words for this, because you recognize that doing this is not acceptable but you still want to do it anyway.
@Nequam:
The question you should be asking yourself is why you’re bothering to try to diagnose mental issues in the first place. Bad behavior and mental illness are not synonymous; if you’re trying to criticize the former, you don’t need to do it by invoking the latter.
Darn, ninja’d.
Describing the behavior is indictment enough. Srsly. It is.
To be honest, I don’t even associate the word “crazy” with its original definition of “mentally ill”. I guess the “irrationals” would have been a better word? If I use that word where I used “crazy” it would have conveyed the same idea, right?
I know people who do struggle with mental illness and I would never, ever want to associate them with the GamerGate crowd.
Well this is the most reasoned comment thread I’ve seen about the subject. Bravo, all.
The issue is that other people do associate “crazy” with “mentally ill,” and this is not an uncommon response given that this is primary definition of the fucking word. Intentions are important, but they aren’t magic.
Folks, please let’s not parse whether x word has y problematic connotations ‘for me’ when someone says ‘please don’t use that word, it hurts me.’ We’re all reasonably intelligent people. Expand your insult vocabulary to use a word that doesn’t hurt unintended targets.
Also, did anyone notice that Mike Stuchbery commented? It seems really telling that he’s called out facist groups without facing this kind of vitriol as he is now from Gamer Gaters. Yikes.
Tells you everything you ever needed to know about their stance on “ethics”.
Hi Mike! Almost missed your comment here.
All the internet hugs to you if you need them, and I apologize on behalf of some of the nicer denizens.
You totally did not deserve this, at all.
I’m not sure if I’m brave enough to visit your blog for support, but I might have too.
You know, I’ve been hyped up since yesterday about the new Five Nights at Freddy’s 2 trailer, and these idiots scare me more.
What does it say when real people act creepier and less human than murderous animatronic pizzeria mascots in a horror game?