@Snickerway
Can you really claim objectivity when you’re clearly touting one side as superior in every way to the other?
Yes, for example the American Civil War.
The Union was heavily authoritarian (habeas corpus suspended), corrupt (war profiteering was a massive problem), and more then a bit elitist ($100 gets you out of the draft).
But it was in all ways superior to the Confederacy, which was a totalitarian (habeas corpus suspended, summary executions standard practice, internal passports), utterly corrupt (war profiteering wasn't a problem, it was an opportunity), aristocratic (having enough slaves got you out of the draft) hellhole, built upon a cornerstone of slavery (Alexander Stephens' cornerstone speech).
Anyone trying to pretend there's moral parity there is fooling themselves.
The pulled advertisements definitely resulted from GG mass emails to the advertisers themselves. GGers on this site have said as much.
But boycotts aren't harassment! This is the problem, you can't claim boycotts are harassment and expect not to be call-out on that. If you're to claim GG's boycott is different, then you have to explain why, rather then just claim "[GG] harassed [the advertisers] into submission" and expect everyone to go with it.
GG has also raised money for their own causes, including $300 million from Intel towards industry diversity.
Um, I think you mean "Anti-GG", so I'm going to argue against that, if I'm wrong please clarify.
The difference is, GG gave money to charity (92% of Afterlife Empires profit's go to charity, so don't start with "TFYC aren't a charity") out of our own pockets, Anti-GG got Intel to give money for them, and Patreons aren't a charity.
It's easy to be generous on other people's dime, if a person wants to to donate to charity, they're going to have to pay for it themselves, getting someone else to isn't the same.
And that's leaving aside the fact that a lot of these "charities" are as sketchy as the Vitruvian Man
Is the $300 million pledge even mentioned in the GG article? No. In fact, not only does the article ignore that, it excludes anti-GG victories entirely. The whole article fixates on pro-GG victories and anti-GG failures. There’s no mention of anti-GG gaining support from major news outlets or supporting industry diversity. Someone reading the article would see pro-GGs as saints, and anti-GGs as do-nothing oppressors.
Question, have you put up a proposed section about this? Because it's not on this thread as far as I can see.
Question 2, if you did, what was the response? And what was your response to their response?
Because it's really not fair to complain about it not being in the article if you haven't tried to put it in yet.
As for the “seven figures” thing, I’m fine with it now that it has an actual source. The earlier source only discussed it in hypothetical terms, but these new sources show that it actually happened.
I'm glad we could come to an agreement.