It feels like, more and more, we've abandoned our values of compassion, respect, and even tolerance for pure unfiltered anger. Anger when shaped in the service of justice can be a powerful tool to temper out corruption. But this...this is a wildfire. It just burns.
@jakebe At the risk of sparking its own wildfire, have you watched the Contrapoints episode on Canceling?
I think she covers this fairly thoroughly and, IMO, pretty well, including owning up to many of her own past failures.
@orrery I haven't! But I did listen to the Invisibilia episode about callout culture here:
https://www.npr.org/programs/invisibilia/601968934/invisibilia-for-april-13-2018
@jakebe https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OjMPJVmXxV8
Be warned: it's movie length, but IMO it was worthwhile.
I don't have answers about how to wield anger responsibly. I have my own problems with it, for sure.
But I also know how dangerous anger can be if you give it enough oxygen. I see way too many people in its grip without something to balance it, and that's scary.