0 Replies to “Dropbox Learns — Painfully — One Twitter Snafu and You Are Toast”

  1. While your point is well taken, Kellye (very well taken), it also highlights that most people are quick to judge diversity based on skin color and gender, both of which are (usually) visibly identifiable. There are many other, sometimes far more important, dimensions to diversity. So while your message about social media not being very forgiving is true, from my perspective, the most important message is that we all need to broaden our awareness of the “invisible” elements of diversity. Inclusion means all people, and implies not assuming you know everything about a person based on what you can see. Yes, photos are a visual medium. But we must train our brains to think critically about what we see and read on media of all kinds.

  2. There are tons of stupid overreactions in American society, thus I do not tread lightly when I say that this has to be one of the stupidest reactions by the public ever, and one that illustrates just how frightened we all should be that Millennials, AKA the “Shallow Hal” generation, soon will be in charge of our businesses and public institutions. This “story” is also just one other example of political correctness run amok, and yet another example of how our culture has set up a pantheon of false gods – diversity, the environment, sexual freedom – you name it. Shame on those who are persecuting Dropbox and many others for doing absolutely nothing wrong. Shame on those who have nothing better to do with their time. I feel sorry for this writer and her ilk that they have been completely socially and politically brainwashed to believe so many untruths and to worship at the idols of self-esteem, sensitivity, diversity, climate change, equality and “social justice.” I feel sorry for the Millennials who have been brainwashed into believing that they are somehow morally superior to all other generations, as though morality and ethics are in a constant state of evolution and they are farther down the road in their moral and ethical development than those who have gone before them when the reality is that they are by far the most devolved generation the world has thus far witnessed and a veritable blight upon the soul of mankind. Hang in there, Dropbox. It’s hard to fight institutionalized insanity; sometimes all you can do is wait and hope that the youngsters will grow up.

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