Quote from: my3guys on October 19, 2011, 09:55:43 AM
Interesting:
http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2011/10/17/the-missed-red-flags-on-groupon/?src=tp
QuoteGuess We Have Our Answer from Groupon
By Terri Mauro, About.com Guide October 13, 2011
Last week I wrote about a couple of essays on the Groupon site that made light of food allergies -- one advising kids to learn about their bullies' allergies and another suggesting they put up a "no peanut allergies" sign on their treehouse. Parents of kids with food allergies complained on Groupon's site and in a Facebook group urging the company to rethink its hurtful words.
And now, as reader Sharon has pointed out to me, another smug little article has gone up: "The Groupon Guide to Apologizing." It's written in the same sort of self-satisfied snarky tone as the others, not really funny so much as delighting in its incorrectness. And then we come to the last line, under the subheading "Atone": "Punish yourself by spending a day using only analog time tellers or depriving your body of satisfying nut products."
Well.
There will be many who say that it's oversensitive to believe that Groupon is responding here to readers who protested to its other essays on behalf of kids with peanut allergies. And that's fine. I am oversensitive. You bet I am. I'm oversensitive because people keep whopping kids with special needs with a two-by-four and then saying, "Oh, stop complaining. It's funny. Lighten up. What, can't you whop anybody with a two-by-four anymore? Sheesh!"
For once, you know what? I'd like us to have the two-by-four.
I don't know how many parents of children with food allergies belong to Groupon. I don't know how many in the extended family of people who don't care for disability concerns being openly mocked are members. Perhaps the membership of Groupon is entirely made up of the kind of people who write nasty comments on posts about peanut bans. In which case, Groupon is playing to its audience, and good for them.
But if you're not one of those people, and you are a Groupon member, it may be time to think about not being one. If you are not a Groupon member but regularly patronize businesses that do business with Groupon, it may be time to let them know where you will not be spending your money. Since our words don't seem to be having much of an impact, maybe our dollars will.
Does that make me a humorless, overreacting, politically correct censor? If so, I'll take Groupon's advice and hang that in my Badnesses Cabinet. With pride. How 'bout you?