General Discussion
In reply to the discussion: Doxxing Nazis: People in Charlottesville and surrounding areas should [View all]KitSileya
(4,035 posts)If you recognize someone from these pics - a relative, a friend, a neighbor, a co-worker, a customer - you know what you need to do. Not publicize their name, necessarily, but your nazi nephew shouldn't get to sit at the same Thanksgiving table as you, or get invited to important events. Your nazi friend should no longer be your friend. Your nazi neighbor should no longer get to borrow sugar or the lawnmower. Your nazi co-worker or nazi customer should get a professional treatment - but no more. No chit-chat, no extra help, nothing but cool politeness and only necessary interaction.
As Miss Conduct at the Boston Globe wrote recently, we get to draw the line at nazis, actually. We do get to cut them out of our lives, and "should [they] decide to de-Nazify [themselves] at some point, [they] can be welcomed back into the fellowship of the decent." If we trust them ever again, that is.