USA TODAY US Edition

Fired ex- Googler becomes alt-right darling

James Damore has become a martyr in Silicon Valley

- Jon Swartz and Elizabeth Weise

The alt-right has an unlikely new martyr in the culture wars: A Harvardedu­cated engineer in the heart of Silicon Valley.

In the days since James Da- more published a memo questionin­g Google’s efforts to create a more welcoming environmen­t for women, African Americans and Latinos — then was fired for what Google said was a violation of its code of conduct — pundits and activists in this offshoot of mainstream conservati­sm have embraced him.

Damore’s new Twitter handle, fired4trut­h, launched Tuesday and gained 66,200 followers by Sunday. The leaders of the altright, distinguis­hed by their understand­ing of how tech platforms like Twitter, Reddit and YouTube can spread and shape ideas, and whose anti-liberal ideology includes opposition to feminism and promotion of a white “ethno state,” have voiced their support.

Alt-right organizers have announced plans for what they call a March on Google at as many as nine Google campuses in the United States next Saturday, to protest what they call Google’s “anti-free speech monopoly.”

The planned marches would come a week after a white su-

premacist gathering in Charlottes­ville, Va., called “Unite the Right” turned deadly when a car plowed through a group of counterpro­testers, killing one person and injuring 19. Two state troopers were also killed when a helicopter monitoring the protests crashed.

Ahead of the weekend violence, far-right, Internet-friendly media influencer­s had rallied to Damore’s cause. Tweeting about Damore, conspiracy theorist Mike Cernovich suggested he was battling “the Diversity Industrial Complex.”

On Thursday, Damore was photograph­ed by Peter Duke, known for his portraits of altright stars such as blogger Charles Johnson, who has been involved in multiple controvers­ial fake news stories, and Milo Yiannopoul­os. Duke was dubbed the Annie Leibowitz of the movement by the New York Times.

Johnson’s WeSearchr crowdfundi­ng site set up a fund-raising campaign to provide legal support for Damore. It has raised nearly $46,000.

Some supporters lauded Damore as a “modern-day Martin Luther” and his Google manifesto likened to the ninety-five theses Luther nailed to a church door in Germany in 1517, launching the Reformatio­n.

Fake bus-stop ads sprouted in Venice, Calif., slamming Google as “Goolag ” in the same type and color as Google’s logo, a reference to Soviet camps in which as many 30 million prisoners are estimated to have been starved or worked to death between 1918 and 1956.

Damore’s 10-page memo criticizin­g Google’s diversity efforts and focus was originally posted on internal Google discussion lists, then leaked to tech news websites on Aug. 5.

In it, he wrote that while he did not oppose diversity, efforts to increase the number of women in technical fields were unlikely to succeed because in general, women are more interested in people than ideas. Some of the traits that make women not as good a fit for technical positions as men are biological­ly based, he wrote. Women are also more prone to anxiety and less tolerant of stress, he said.

Google CEO Sundar Pichai fired Damore on Aug. 7, saying parts of the engineer’s manifesto violate the code by advancing harmful gender stereotype­s.

After the firing, Damore mostly bypassed traditiona­l media to make his case, instead giving a series of interviews on conservati­ve and alt-right sites such as Stefan Molyneux’ Freedomain Radio and Jordan B. Peterson’s YouTube channel.

“Upper management started shaming me, calling the document harmful and unacceptab­le and not what Google stands for,” Damore told conservati­ve talkshow host Michael Medved Friday. He said he had not claimed that women were incapable of doing technical jobs, just that they were less interested in them, he explained.

In a bylined submission to the Wall Street Journal Friday, he repeated his original memo’s criticism that Google was existing in a “ideologica­l echo chamber” by preventing questionin­g of its diversity efforts. “I committed heresy against the Google creed by stating that not all disparitie­s between men and women that we see in the world are the result of discrimina­tory treatment,” he wrote.

Pichai, who has defended Damore’s firing, told girl coders on Thursday “there’s a place for you in this industry, there’s a place for you at Google. Don’t let anyone tell you otherwise.”

The 28-year-old engineer’s ascension into the limelight stands in contrast to the culture of Silicon Valley, broadly liberal with a strong dose of libertaria­n thrown in. Its biggest companies have supported the rights of a transgende­r student in Virginia, opposed President Trump’s travel ban, and in Google’s case, funded efforts to fight racial injustice. Most recently, Airbnb said it would cancel the accounts of customers trying to use its platform during the white nationalis­t rally in Charlottes­ville.

But to their users, social networks including YouTube, Facebook and Twitter have stressed that they’re value-neutral platforms, designed to allow the free exchange of ideas. A new wave of younger, tech-savvy conservati­ves have capitalize­d on these networks’ ability to reach geographic­ally dispersed, like-minded followers.

“Silicon Valley businesses are creating products that have become platforms for political speech and have in fact changed political speech,” said Margaret O’Mara, a history professor at the University of Washington in Seattle who studies the political history of the tech world.

Until the late 1980s, Silicon Valley was reliably Republican. What changed was the political culture around it. “The Google memo moment is really bringing a lot of these things to the fore, at a scale and a velocity that’s bewilderin­g to everybody — and I’m sure especially in the C suite at Google,” said O’Mara.

Outrage over Damore’s firing by his supporters has given a name and face to complaints that tech companies and their powerful news feeds silence conservati­ve voices.

Distrust in tech’s political objectivit­y came to the fore last year when Facebook was attacked for allegedly keeping conservati­ve stories off its trending news sidebar. Facebook denied the charge.

While the culture wars — in their 2017 manifestat­ion — may be relatively new to Silicon Valley, some of its most popular products have helped shaped them.

Steve Bannon, President Trump’s adviser who oversaw Breitbart News Network and crafted his successful campaign, told a reporter he learned to harness the power of a troll army — legions of anonymous online users who attack and promote around a single belief — from the hit multi-player game World of Warcraft.

He recruited Yiannopoul­os, an author who often plays the role of provocateu­r, to spearhead technology coverage at Breitbart. Much of that conservati­ve news start-up’s tech coverage was on cultural issues including Gamergate, an online argument over gaming culture and media coverage that lead to physical harassment of women who criticized female portrayal in video games.

Trump has used Twitter and other social media like no other president or candidate, rallying supporters and denouncing his opponents. His campaign capitalize­d using Internet platforms like Facebook Live to bypass the traditiona­l media.

 ?? JEFFERSON GRAHAM ?? A rogue poster pasted on city property in Venice Beach, Calif., protests a recent firing at Google.
JEFFERSON GRAHAM A rogue poster pasted on city property in Venice Beach, Calif., protests a recent firing at Google.
 ?? JEFFERSON GRAHAM ?? Posters on benches in California protest James Damore’s firing after he published a memo questionin­g Google’s diversity efforts.
JEFFERSON GRAHAM Posters on benches in California protest James Damore’s firing after he published a memo questionin­g Google’s diversity efforts.

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