Justine Sacco

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As Reality TV is the modern freak show, the anomalies now hurt psyches rather than hunched backs, the Twitter evisceration of the lunkheaded is the contemporary auto-de-fé, the collective sacrifice of a few to atone for all of our sins. It’s not that the racist and sexist and generally offensive tweets are being sent out by angels who deserve employment security despite their public stupidity, but the crowd condemnation that is supposedly righteousness may actually reveal some wrongheadedness, our process of socialization perhaps tainted by antisocial impulse. How else to explain the death threats that continue long after a career has been ruined? From “How One Stupid Tweet Blew Up Justine Sacco’s Life,” Jon Ronson’s New York Times Magazine article of one such lunkhead and the culture of condemnation:

In the early days of Twitter, I was a keen shamer. When newspaper columnists made racist or homophobic statements, I joined the pile-on. Sometimes I led it. The journalist A. A. Gill once wrote a column about shooting a baboon on safari in Tanzania: “I’m told they can be tricky to shoot. They run up trees, hang on for grim life. They die hard, baboons. But not this one. A soft-nosed .357 blew his lungs out.” Gill did the deed because he “wanted to get a sense of what it might be like to kill someone, a stranger.”

I was among the first people to alert social media. (This was because Gill always gave my television documentaries bad reviews, so I tended to keep a vigilant eye on things he could be got for.) Within minutes, it was everywhere. Amid the hundreds of congratulatory messages I received, one stuck out: “Were you a bully at school?”

Still, in those early days, the collective fury felt righteous, powerful and effective. It felt as if hierarchies were being dismantled, as if justice were being democratized. As time passed, though, I watched these shame campaigns multiply, to the point that they targeted not just powerful institutions and public figures but really anyone perceived to have done something offensive. I also began to marvel at the disconnect between the severity of the crime and the gleeful savagery of the punishment. It almost felt as if shamings were now happening for their own sake, as if they were following a script.

Eventually I started to wonder about the recipients of our shamings, the real humans who were the virtual targets of these campaigns. So for the past two years, I’ve been interviewing individuals like Justine Sacco: everyday people pilloried brutally, most often for posting some poorly considered joke on social media. Whenever possible, I have met them in person, to truly grasp the emotional toll at the other end of our screens. The people I met were mostly unemployed, fired for their transgressions, and they seemed broken somehow — deeply confused and traumatized.•

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