What gets me is that employees of Disney seem to think that Disney must support their political beliefs. That Disney is REQUIRED to do so. Yeah? Since when?
All Disney owes them is a paycheck and benefits. That's IT. It strikes me as the height of arrogance to expect more.
I know, I know. That's not the "real world". But it's becoming amusingly (to me) clear that playing real-world games just gets you into a real world of trouble.
You can bet that the vast majority of parents agree with DeSantis' position. I'm not a parent, so I'm more or less indifferent to the issue myself. But I can still see that the basic question is to whether parents can control what their kids learn in school. The idea that they have no say to what a school chooses to teach their kids is, well, kind of appalling. Of COURSE parents would get their backs up over that. There is no way Chapek and others will win by opposing parents' concerns. And so Chapek is in deep Dumbo doo-doo. Plus, you gotta admit that DeSantis does have a point about The Bob Chapek Company moralizing about what should be taught in public schools while doing business with the evil empire that is China. Maybe Bobby boy should be more worried about what's being taught in those Chinese concentration camps, no?
One would hope that this whole debacle would be a lesson to corporations who want to publicly pick political sides and grandstand about it. Who knows, maybe that will happen. Because this situation is a real debacle for Chapek and the company as a whole. It's a lose-lose proposition. And IMO it serves him and his goons right for getting involved in politics in the first place. And ESPECIALLY sexual politics. And for believing that Twitter is a microcosm of America. It isn't. Only a tiny fraction of the U.S. population even uses Twitter. The rest of the country doesn't care about it. The press blows it up to be more influential than it is, because headlines.
So, bottom line: will corporations learn from this? Only if stocks are affected and people don't buy the product. Since boycotts seldom work, frankly, I'm not optimistic...