Social media offered many opportunities for (quite justified) outrage this year. But did they come at a price?
PR
executive Justine Sacco wrote an offensive tweet before boarding a flight from
London to Cape Town, South Africa. “Going to Africa. Hope I don’t get AIDS.
Just kidding. I’m white!” she said. Between the time Sacco tweeted and when she
landed in South Africa twelve hours later, the hashtag #HasJustineLandedYet
trended worldwide.
A
great many of the tweets including the hashtag were downright hilarious. Even
Donald Trump, a paragon of ignorance, chastised Sacco on Twitter, saying,
“Justine, what the hell are you doing, are you crazy? Not nice or fair! I will
support @AidforAfrica. Justine is FIRED!”
Internet
sleuths figured out which flight Sacco was on and when she would land. Her work
and cell phone numbers were uncovered. Her entire online footprint was
revealed. She had made inappropriate tweets before. She had Instagram and
Facebook accounts.
These
have all been deleted but nothing on the Internet really disappears. The
digital echoes of her mistakes will endure. Sacco’s former employer,
InterActiveCorp, immediately distanced themselves, condemned her words and she
was fired.
During her flight, Sacco gained thousands of Twitter followers, an
audience raptly waiting, somewhat gleefully, to see what would happen next.
Justine Sacco unwittingly scripted a gripping, real-life soap opera and she
wasn’t even there to watch it unfold.
Here
was instant comeuppance for someone who said something terrible. Here was
comeuppance for a white person generalizing shallowly about Africa, the
continent, as if it were one large country with only one story to tell. Here
was a woman reveling in her whiteness and assuming that her whiteness was some
kind of shield against a disease that does not discriminate.
I was amused by
the spectacle. I followed along even though something in my stomach twisted as
the hours passed. It was a bit surreal, knowing this drama was playing out
while Sacco was at 38,000 feet.
At
the same time, I was horrified. It all felt a bit frenzied and out of control,
as interest in the story mounted and the death threats and gendered insults
began. The online outrage and Sacco’s comeuppance seemed disproportionate. The
amount of joy some people expressed as they engaged with the
#HasJustineLandedYet hashtag gave me pause.
Somewhere
along the line, we forgot that this drama concerned an actual human being.
Justine Sacco did not express empathy for her fellow human beings with her
insensitive tweet. It is something, though, that the Internet responded in
kind, with an equal lack of empathy. We expressed some of the very attitude we
claimed to condemn.
To be clear, Sacco’s tweet was racist,
ignorant and unacceptable. Her cavalier disregard for the global impact of AIDS
was offensive. In that regard, it was heartening to see that someone purchased
the domain www.justinesacco.com
and redirected it to Aid for Africa so that some good might come out of such a
crass and careless remark.
Justine Sacco’s actions should not have gone without
consequences. In her case, though, the consequences were severe and swift. She
made a cheap joke and paid a steep price. She has since apologized, though it
is hard to take the apology seriously because we have become so accustomed to
this cycle of public misstep, castigation, apology. Nothing really changes.
We can excoriate Justine Sacco but we
need to interrogate white privilege and the relative comfort Sacco felt in
demonstrating such poor judgment. It seemingly did not cross her mind that it
would be inappropriate to make that joke in such a public forum.
We also need
interrogate the corporate culture where an attitude like Sacco’s was clearly
not a deterrent to her success. As Anil Dash noted on Twitter, “That @Justine
Sacco is offensive is obvious. The bigger problem is that her mindset is no
barrier to corporate success.”
At the same time, we are only outraged
about Justine Sacco because we happened to hear about her tweet. She was,
before this debacle, someone with only two hundred Twitter followers. She made
her comments in public, but her public was quite limited. If someone hadn’t tipped off Gawker, if thousands of people
hadn’t shared Sacco’s tweet, if Buzzfeed hadn’t latched onto the story, making
it go ever more viral, we would have never known about Sacco’s racism and
ignorance.
This does not excuse her words, but is Justine Sacco different from
any of us? We like to think the best of ourselves. We like to believe we always
say and do the right things. We like to believe our humor is always politic. We
like to believe we harbor no prejudices. At least, that’s the impression we
give when we are so quick to condemn those whose weaknesses and failures are
subjected to the harsh light of the Internet.
The world is full of unanswered
injustice and more often than not we choke on it. When you consider everything
we have to fight, it makes sense that so many people rally around something
like the hashtag #HasJustineLandedYet. In this one small way, we are, for a
moment, less impotent.
In many ways, 2013, particularly
online, was a year of reckoning. More than ever, people were held accountable
for their words and actions. Outrage was spoken, not swallowed.
After the Boston Marathon bombings,
people shared grief and outrage on social media. From all around the world they
stood with the people of Boston, often using the hashtag #BostonStrong. Some
became amateur detectives, sifting through the images and other information law
enforcement officials released to the public, as if they, too, could play a
role in bringing the responsible culprits to justice.
In June, Texas senator Wendy Davis rose
to national prominence during a 13-hour filibuster protesting SB5, a bill
further restricting abortion laws in Texas. People from all around the United
States watched the live video feed provided by the Texas Tribune.
The hashtag
#standwithwendy allowed people to voice their support for Davis’s efforts and
their disdain, and to a lesser extent, their support for legislative attempts
to curtail reproductive freedom. The legislation ultimately passed but a
vigorous protest was heard and will be remembered.
Paula Deen’s racism was revealed in the
contents of a deposition. Before long, most of Deen’s business relationships
had shattered, including those with Food Network, WalMart, Target, Walgreens,
JCPenny, Sears, QVC, Smithfield Foods and others. Black Twitter responded with
the #paulasbestdishes hashtag, using humor as a means of coping with the
painful reality that Paula Deen is but one of many people who harbor racial
prejudices. Deen’s comeuppance seemed more appropriate than Sacco’s because she
was a far more prominent and powerful figure.
Hanna Rosin declared the patriarchy
dead, which gave rise to the #RIPPatriarchy hashtag, used by feminists to mock
the incorrect notion that somehow all was right in the world for women. The GOP
made an ill-advised attempt at honoring Rosa Parks, implying that her efforts
had ended racism, which led to the #whenracismended hashtag.
Russell Simmons’s
All Def Digital released the “Harriet Tubman Sex Tape,” and was quickly forced
to take down the video and offer an apology. People were not going to stand
silently by as the legacy of Harriet Tubman was diminished so recklessly.
Mikki Kendall started the hashtag
#solidarityisforwhitewomen to challenge the exclusion of feminists of color
from mainstream feminism. Jamilah Lemieux started the hashtag #blackpowerisforblackmen soon after, to
challenge sexism within the black community. After Renisha McBride was murdered
in Detroit, dream hampton brought much-needed national attention to the tragedy
with the #RenishaMcBride hashtag.
People began sharing their stories and
demanding justice. Theodore Wafer, the homeowner who shot and killed McBride, will
now face trial. For once, perhaps, there will be actual justice for the death
of a young black woman.
As R. Kelly released his latest album,
some people refused to forget that R. Kelly is an unabashed pedophile. During
an online Q & A, R. Kelly tried to use the hashtag #AskRKelly and quickly
lost control of it as people used the hashtag to mock and rightly shame R.
Kelly for his crimes.
Mikki Kendall and Jamie Nesbitt Golden created the
hashtag #fasttailedgirls to address the sexual violations black girls face and
the fact that all too often, the responsibility for these violations is placed
on the backs of black girls and not the perpetrators.
Writer and activist Suey
Park created the hashtag #notyourAsiansidekick to, in her
words, create “a space for [Asian-American, Pacific Islander and Native
Hawaiian women] to use our voices, build community, and be heard.”
A common thread between the most
powerful hashtags this year is that many were created by women and/or people of
color, people whose voices are all too often marginalized in the forums where
they most need to be heard. These hashtags not only inspired necessary
conversations, they were the catalyst for all manner of activism.
Social media is something of a
double-edged sword. At its best, social media offers unprecedented
opportunities for marginalized people to speak and bring much needed attention
to the issues they face. At its worst, social media also offers everyone an
unprecedented opportunity to share in collective outrage without reflection. In
the heat of the moment, it encourages us to forego empathy.
It is, perhaps, fitting that 2013 has come
to an end with the story of Justine Sacco. I confess I do harbor a certain
amount of empathy for her and honestly, this empathy makes me uncomfortable. I
don’t want to feel sorry for Sacco. I don’t even know if I feel sorry for her,
exactly. Instead, I recognize that I’m human and the older I get, the more I
realize how fallible I am, how fallible we all are.
I recognize that Justine
Sacco is human. She should have known better and done better, but most of us
can look at poor choices we’ve made, critical moments when we did not do
better.
As I watched the online response to
Justine Sacco’s tweet, I thought of Shirley Jackson’s short story, “The
Lottery,” first published in 1948 but quite prescient. In a village
there is a ritual that has gone largely unquestioned for generations. There is
a box and in the box are slips of paper.
Each year, the heads of each family
draw slips of paper. One will be marked and then the members of that person’s
family draw slips again. Whoever selects the slip with a black mark is the
sacrifice. Everyone takes up stones and sets upon the unlucky victim. Every
citizen is complicit in the murder of someone who, just moments before he or
she was chosen, was a friend, a neighbor, a loved one.
Justine Sacco was not sacrificed. Her life
will go on. We will likely never know if she learned anything from this
unfortunate affair. In truth, I don’t worry so much about her. Instead, I worry
for those of us who were complicit in her spectacularly rapid fall from grace.
I worry about how comfortable we were holding the stones of outrage in the
palms of our hands and the price we paid for that comfort.
Roxane Gay's writing has appeared in
Best American Short Stories 2012, Oxford American, the Rumpus, the Wall Street
Journal and many other publications.
Source: http://www.salon.com

Thank you for this thoughtful article. Like yourself, I followed the Sacco incident with a sense of mounting horror. It hardly needs to be said that her tweet was stupid, callous, and awful. Yet ... far worse things are tweeted every day (see Yes, You're Racist) and in most instances those responsible do not become the objects of global hate fests. Why was Sacco different? Some say because of her job but I can't help thinking that being young, blonde, passably attractive and female played a big role. In the end, the scale and intensity of the outrage seemed less about her offence and more about what she was held to represent. It was also disturbing to see phrases like 'most hated person in the world' thrown at her, just because of a tweet. Have we really lost so much perspective that we think someone who posts a few offensive tweets is more worthy of our hatred than mass killers like Assad or the militias bloody ripping apart the CAR, Sudan, Nigeria, or repressive leaders like Putin? Perhaps the targeting of Sacco is indeed an expression of our impotence in the face of much more serious atrocities but we'll never get rid of the real sharks out there if we expend our energies and outrage shooting fish in a barrel like Sacco.
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