Art credit: blog.asmartbear.com
In Mozilla Case, The Left's Intolerance Is Out Of The Closet
Intolerance: The left hounded a CEO from his job over a
2008 donation in favor of a California measure opposing gay marriage. So much
for free speech and job performance. This is a descent into mob tyranny and
mediocrity.
Here’s more on this chilling development at American Thinker.
There
are lots of ways to let the company know that they lost your support. If
you want to send Mozilla a message, uninstall their product. Go to your Control
Panel. Choose uninstall for Mozilla Firefox.
Before you do that, pick an alternative, perhaps Chrome, Opera, or Safari.
Newt Gingrich emailed
the following:
As the inventor one of the web’s
foundational technologies, JavaScript, and the co-founder of the organization
behind one of its most popular browsers, Firefox, Brendan Eich has done more
than most people to promote a free society and an unrestricted exchange of
ideas.
But that didn’t count for much when
various tech and gay rights publications reacted with outrage to his recent
appointment as CEO, on the basis that he had donated $1,000 six years ago to
support California’s ban on same-sex marriage.
Eich had never advocated his beliefs
on the issue publicly, and there was no question about his treatment of or
respect for gay employees and associates at Mozilla. Yet that donation,
indicating a sliver of difference with the left, was enough to force him out of
his own company. He resigned yesterday.
Mozilla’s executive chairwoman
actually took to the company’s blog to apologize, apparently for appointing
someone as chief executive who had not acceded to every tenet of social
liberalism. “Mozilla prides itself on being held to a different standard,” she
wrote, “and, this past week, we didn’t live up to it. We know why people are
hurt and angry, and they are right: it’s because we haven’t stayed true to
ourselves.”
She's right, they haven’t. Having
spent decades preaching diversity and tolerance of different beliefs, the left
now refuses to tolerate different beliefs itself.
As Andrew Sullivan, a gay man himself
and an advocate of same-sex marriage, points out about the
Mozilla case, “What we have here is a social pressure to keep your beliefs
deeply private for fear of retribution. We are enforcing another sort of closet
on others. I can barely believe the fanaticism.”
“If we cannot live and work alongside
people with whom we deeply disagree,” he argues “we are finished as a liberal
society.”
The new bigotry is on the left, and
as Sullivan points out, it isn’t liberal at all. It’s totalitarian. Consider
that the Mozilla Corporation and those who screamed for Eich’s resignation
assert that his deviation from social liberalism is not just a cause for
criticism, but a disqualification for employment. They are literally arguing
that his private thoughts about an issue like marriage should prevent him from
holding a job.
The ability to kill a man’s job, of
course, is devastating. Thousands of people donated to Proposition 8 and
similar efforts, and their names are listed in public databases. Are all of
their jobs now at risk? How about people who have contributed to candidates
supporting traditional marriage? Are all of them unfit as coworkers?
(And if, by the way, having opposed
same-sex marriage in 2008 is a disqualification for employment today, will the
enforcers of liberal toleration be going after President Obama or Hillary
Clinton as their next project?)
Perhaps most outrageous of all, these
people have called for Eich’s resignation, most likely, for his religious
beliefs. Anti-religious bigotry is as repulsive as any other form
of bigotry. Yet it is becoming more pronounced on the left all the time.
Freedom of thought and religious
liberty will be central issues of the next generation. Already both in
government and in civil society, there are movements devoted to forcing
Americans to renounce or to violate their consciences. Mozilla, along with the
Hobby Lobby and Little Sisters of the Poor cases before the Supreme Court, are
just a few of the most recent examples.
A lot rides on these cases. We can’t
afford to shrink from defending our civil liberties, or we won’t have any left
to defend. [end message from Newt]
# # #
Good reason to uninstall Mozilla Firefox.