This is my mom. I think she played Angry Birds once.

My mom took this picture as the police cordoned off the area several blocks around the venue. Notice that peoples homes are within the cordoned off area. Presumably they had nothing to do with GamerGate, either.

My mom was at anin Miami. She was one of the first women in news radio in the South, a Pulitzer Prize nominee and a staunch feminist. So you can imagine my surprise when she told me that this afternoon she was escorted out of the awards ceremony after a series of not one or two but FIVE].The bomb threats weren't called in by ISIS or Al Qaeda or white supremacist militias. Apparently the threats were called in by anti-GamerGate activists. I guess somewhere in the same building was an event called SPJ AirPlay , which was targeted.Someone threatened to explode my mom overI have to admit I am not very familiar with GamerGate. I guess it has something to do with a couple breaking up very publicly and a nasty blog post accusing video game critics of some sort of malfeasance? And I guess also its about women in video games? And somehow "social media" became involved?Whatever GamerGate is about I would like to humbly suggest that just maybe its not worth blowing people up over. Specifically - I would like to suggest it isn't worth blowing upover. It also isn't worth shouting fire in a crowded theater (or bomb in a crowded hotel as the case may be).I have come to the realization that there is almost never a good reason to engage in or threaten violence. Hurting people is the worst thing you can do. I admit that when people say things you might think are dumb, it sucks, but that's never a good reason to hurt them.Maybe when people say things you disagree with, the best thing you can do is to try to convince them otherwise. Maybe the solution to bad speech is good speech. One thing is for sure: blowing up my mom is not the solution.