Really shows how things can get blown up from misunderstandings on the 'net. If this was someone smaller time than Colbert and someone more malicious was bent on causing some harm, a lot of lives and careers could be ruined from misunderstandings and the media picking up anything that smells of the smallest amount of controversy for coverage, views and so on.
What upsets me the most is, as Colbert mentions, in the end nobody could give two shits about the original story about the "Redskins Foundation." People were too busy looking for something to be upset about. Reading Suey Park's twitter feed was so upsetting. She couldn't, and can't, own up to the fact that she made a mistake and blew things out of proportion, instead using this as a moment to play victim because the internet is being mean to her.
This is an everyday reality for most people in Texas. When will everyone realize that being quick to take offense not only puts you at a social disadvantage, it actually makes you psychologically weak/vulnerable? I'm not saying "don't give a fuck about anything!", just... chill out a bit, mannnnn. :)People were too busy looking for something to be upset about.
Yeah that was the most poignant statement. What about what the satire was actually poking fun at originally? "I'm donating all the proceeds to the Redskins Foundation, because I haven't heard shit about that". Classic Colbert though. I really enjoyed this episode.
But you know they can't seriously all be into that stuff. I genuinely believe that a significant proportion of SJWs are trolls (probably quite vile, racist trolls) deliberately stirring up indignation to make black people seem "uppity" or feminists seem "irrational" etc. The problem is that the other half of them are deluded white knights and genuinely over-sensitive people with beta brains. They think they've found like-minds. In reality they are being played, by people who want to make the world even worse than it is.