We claim the privilege of calling ourselves 'civilized', of being 'mature' individuals, of having the capability to reason between right and wrong. This claim is echoed even more so by those who blog, and I would like to believe that bloggers inherently are people who are more mature than the rest.
That is why the death threats issued to Ms. Kathy Sierra, a prominent blogger and technology writer, are distressing. The very act of abusing someone, to demean someone's identity, and to degrade his/her person is the worst that can be inflicted on an individual, and is worthy of nothing short of the highest penalty available to a civil society. Irrespective of the victim's gender, the act is as serious as things get, and becomes even more so when the abuse starts bordering on actually threatening to injure, maim or even kill the victim.

The person(s) who have issued the threats may have intended them to be read as criticism of
Bloggers chafe at being asked to conform to a code of ethics, stating that such a code could restrict their expressiveness. I fear that if such expressions are needed and protected by the right to express, that blogging as a culture is doomed to be relegated to the sidelines. We need to comprehend the fact that bloggers have a responsibility to society akin to that borne by the writers and philosophers of yore. Their behaviour reflects even more starkly on the societies that they live in, and influences even more so the people in such societies. Their attitudes, their biases, and their prejudices can go a long way in determining how a society views a particular issue.
And so such unreasonable and intolerable behaviour needs to be condemned for what it is: sheer barbarity. I fear that if such comments and such threats are permitted to go unchecked, tomorrow bloggers would fear to express themselves even when they are in the right, merely because they could become potential targets for such deranged delinquents. The blogsphere cannot afford to be silent now; it has to be vocal, for if not now then when?

