The white male ego and Twitter donât mix. The white male ego is a frozen raindrop falling on a bed of ice. Twitter is a flamethrower. The white male ego is freshly fallen snow. Twitter is dog piss. The white male ego is a snowflake. Twitter is hell.
On Monday, âLet me speak to your managerâ Twitter reached peak caucasity after a professor called a New York Times columnist a bedbug.
Suggested Reading
This is white-on-white violence and itâs rampant on Twitter. It basically works like this: A white guy (almost always a white guy) says something utterly harmless about another white guy, who then pulls out his phone or his computer (which is the white-guy superpower) and starts making calls or typing emails to see how quickly he can bring the full weight of his whiteness down on the offender. Think Thanosâ snap if Thanos was a fragile white man.
It all started with a report of bedbugs. An email sent to New York Times staffers noting that the newsroom was dealing with bedbugs was leaked online, and because itâs funny to all of us who donât work in the Times newsroom, people on Twitter began poking fun at the news.
David Karpf, an associate professor of media and public affairs at George Washington University, figured heâd tease his least favorite Times writer, conservative columnist Bret Stephens.
âThe bedbugs are a metaphor,â Karpf tweeted on Monday. âThe bedbugs are Bret Stephens,â the Washington Post reports.
Though funny, the tweet was a dud. It got nine likes and zero retweets, according to Karpf. Either Bret Stephens was searching his name on Twitter or Bret Stephens was searching his name on Twitter, because Stephens doesnât follow Karpf nor was he tagged in the tweet. But somehow he found the tweet and had time to send an email to Karpf and the provost at GWU.
âIâm often amazed about the things supposedly decent people are prepared to say about other peopleâpeople theyâve never metâon Twitter. I think youâve set a new standard,â Stephens wrote, the Post reports. âI would welcome the opportunity for you to come to my home, meet my wife and kids, talk to us for a few minutes, and then call me a âbedbugâ to my face. That would take some genuine courage and intellectual integrity on your part.â
Nothing says, âHey, look at me, Iâm a fucking bedbugâ like a passive-aggressive, sternly worded, correctly punctuated email.
Karpf, realizing that he had something here, took a moment to post Stephensâ full email to Twitter. For those not familiar with Stephensâ work, know this: Heâs a climate-change denier. This is the same man who, while working at the Wall Street Journal, called the campus rape epidemic an âimaginary enemyâ and suggested anti-Semitism was âthe disease of the Arab mind,â as the Post reports. Stephens also had this to say about the differences between Americans and Latinx immigrants:
Several of his columns have fueled a crusade to have readers cancel their New York Times subscriptions, and people wonder why the Grey Lady continues to employ such a heel, and yet, it was being called a bedbugâan insect who is basically so lazy, it hangs out in bed all day and waits at night to bite unsuspecting humansâthat got Stephensâ man panties (manties?) all in a bunch.
A bedbug is basically a mosquito without ambition. Stephens is totally a bedbug. But it was this exchange, this digital fisticuffs that proved too much for Stephens, who literally logged off Twitter permanently by deactivating his account. Stephens is no longer on Twitter because the medium has proven too harsh for his delicate sensibilities and his fragile ego; he had this to say about the whole ordeal:
I just got off the phone with Taylor Swift, who noted that Stephens is a punk. It might be time for Stephens to woman up. Stephens just sat on national TV in front of the entire bedbug community and sounded like the saddest snowflake in A Charlie Brown Christmas special. A delegation of white men is currently working the phones to see if any sub-human species will take his contract.
Twitter is an adult playground of all kind of nasty and hate-filled comments, but being called a bedbug might be the nicest comment a woman, LGBTQ+ person or any person of color who has an avatar photo has ever been called on the platform. Itâs time for Stephens to grow some ovaries. Especially after heâs tweeted this out:
And this:
And this:
And this:
This isnât the first time Stephens has gone full snowflake; he once chastised a writer at Splinter, our sister site, in an email (of course) for calling him âremarkably dumb,â a response that was also posted on the site, because awesome.
âHe tends to write pretty lightweight, poorly researched columns about things that I know something about,â Karpf said. âSo Iâve always seen him as this person that everyone complains about but we just canât get rid of. Heâs a bedbug.â
Karpf told the Post that he sent the tweet around 5 p.m. and thought it was a âsubtle but funny joke.â He didnât tag Stephens because he figured that would be rude. Stephens claimed in his email that âsomeone just pointed out a tweet you wrote about me,â but that is most likely bullshit. The tweet went nowhere and Stephens didnât want to admit that he was searching his name on Twitter again.
âYou need to work very hard to find a tweet that obscure, and then work harder to find the writerâs email and their provostâs email to CC them, too,â Karpf said.
Karpf told the Post that had the bedbug email not included his boss, he would have been willing to engage in a civil conversation with the lazy mosquito.
âI would have treated this as an opportunity for conversation and dialogue if he hadnât CCâd my provost,â he said, âwhich was clearly an attempt to threaten me with punishment.
âIâd be happy to have a dialogue, not just about the tenor of Twitter comments but also about power and how to appropriately use it,â he said. âBut I assume he wonât want to talk. He ought to be embarrassed.â
But the exchange wasnât a total waste for Karpf.
âI teach strategic political communication,â he said, âand we will certainly be talking about this case in my class on Wednesday.â
Hopefully, they will have a full discussion about the white male ego being akin to a Fabergé egg laying on a bed of feathers infested with bedbugs.
Updated: Tuesday, Aug. 27, 2019, 3:15 p.m. ET: GWU Provost Forrest Maltzman has responded to Stephensâ email, and for the TL;DR crowd, he states, itâs Twitter, grow up. Also come to campus and talk about your fragility, Mr. Glass.
Straight From
Sign up for our free daily newsletter.