Guilty by associationā¦ or not
By Rebecca Peterson, Humour Editor
Hereās something Iāve been thinking a lot about recently: Itās really easy to get annoyed when people you like donāt hate the same people you do.
I remember this used to really bother me as a kid, because honestly, everything bothered me when I was a kid. Itās part of why Iām on medication now. Even so; as with most decent writers and comedians, Iāve had my share of bullies, and I couldnāt understand why other kids in the class who werenāt bullies were friends with such assholes. Could they not see that the eight-year-old girl that called me a freak was filled with unspeakable evil? Were they blind to the hellfire burning deep within that third-graderās eyes?
I read a lot of booksāspecifically, a lot of Lord of the Rings and Harry Potter, over and overāso I had a pretty clear-cut sense of good and evil. I figured good people were good people and evil people were evil people. So when good people went to evil peopleās slumber parties and signed their grade seven yearbook, my worldview was thrown entirely for a loop.
Thankfully, I became older, wiser, andāas previously mentionedāmedicated, and I developed a healthy zen about the whole thing. āOne manās asshole is another manās bestie,ā I mused. After all, Iāve had friends with asshole friends, and I have, arguably, been that asshole friend. In all our interconnected social networks, it just doesnāt make sense to drop good people out of your life because they occasionally have bad taste.
I think this is a principle most of us can get behind, so hereās where it gets tricky: applying it to public figures.
I was recently disappointed by a YouTuber I like after she posted a video in which she called herself a āhuge fanā of YouTuber PewDiePie in response to public criticism for an absurdly racist āpractical jokeā he played in January. Iām not here to argue over PewDiePieās actions, whether they were racist (they were) or if he deserved to be cut from his deal with Disney because of them (he did). I have never been a fan of PewDiePie, but I have been a long-time fan of the YouTuber supporting him, and it hurt that she didnāt seem to understand the very real pain that people suffered because of his ājoke,ā especially in such a turbulent time. She received a lot of criticism for her comments, criticism that she joked about and brushed off instead of taking seriously, which was also frustrating to watch.
On Twitter, however, I saw another favourite YouTuber of mine talk about the matter, someone whoād met PewDiePie a few times. All he said was that he didnāt support PewDiePieās actions, but that when heād met the man in person he seemed like a ānice guy.ā Suddenly this YouTuber was inundated with messages from various anonymous internet people calling him a āliteral Nazi,ā among other things, for essentially saying something kind about a friend. A shitty friend, but a friend, nonetheless.
Do I think PewDiePie is a nice guy? No. I also havenāt met him, but I doubt meeting him would change my opinion.
Iām certain some of the messages sent to the YouTubers who didnāt indict PewDiePie for his actions were well thought-out and appropriate arguments attempting to educate rather than lambast and attack. However, I also recognize that these YouTubers get millions of comments every day, ranging from sweet to bat-shit insane. Itās much more likely that theyād stand with a fellow YouTuber, rather than change an opinion theyāve formed from their own experiences based on the words from millions of anonymous voices.
Iām still disappointed, of course, just like I was back when everyone thought one of my bullies was the coolest girl on the playground, even as she mocked my (admittedly horrible) dancing in front of everyone and tried to convince the other girls not to shop at the same stores I got my clothes from. That, of course, isnāt on the same level as posting a video using people of colour to display an anti-Semitic message worldwide, and as I am neither Jewish nor a person of colour I know I have quite a lot of privilege coming in on this issue. Itās easier for me to try to shrug off my disappointment and still enjoy watching videos by YouTubers who do not actively condemn his actions.
The problem with seeing people as objectively good or objectively evil is that very few truly evil people exist. The world is largely made up of decent people and less-decent people who do horrible things sometimes. It doesnāt excuse these things, or the people who do themāfar fromābut maybe we can cut their friends a break if they seem, for the most part, to be relatively okay.