by Zancarius » Sat Sep 05, 2009 9:15 pm
I recall that incident as well, because I was one of the ones who spoke with him. I generally won't speak poorly of people in public unless I have just cause. In this case, I think the cause is just. Not only has he resorted to insulting the guild as a whole (again), but he's also proven himself to be a sexist.
We're all a bunch of girls.
Fancy that. Maybe he has a point, though, most of the guys in the guild have/have had female characters. Otherwise, to the women in guild, here's a tool who seems to think that being a girl is somehow an insult. He's gonna go far in life, all right...
Anyway, I think it's comical that his attitude hasn't changed at all. Evidently, it's impossible for him to connect his own attitude and behavior with the treatment others afford him. Word to the wise: It's easy to joke about the Golden Rule, particularly if you're not religious, but it does apply. Human interaction is something of a meritocracy. If you come off as an ass, you're not going to endear yourself to those who would be willing to support you! In Rsd's case, that's precisely what happened. He received no support from officers and guildmates a like because he wasn't willing to work with us to resolve the event Turus referred to.
The Story
For the uninitiated and curious, I have a brief story I'd like to share of my recollection of the guy (with a few things filled in that Turus reminded me of when I was talking with him earlier today after sharing Tirian's experiences). Here goes:
One of us received a dramatic whisper on an otherwise lovely evening. I recall that it was quite uneventful, and I was working on my shaman's mining skill since I had been planning to drop mining on Thalaria. My endeavor to replace mining with jewelcrafting has, of course, nothing to do with the story. What I do remember is that I wasn't the one who received the initial whisper from a distraught priest who had been in a group with Rsd (I think it was Alacor or Snobal who did), but I do recall having my time in Un'goro interrupted because of a dispute that required my undivided attention. For what it's worth, the priest in question was part of an SGA guild, and I was informed by Alacor of the incident via officer chat, along with some notes on what had transpired. He requested those officers who were online at the time to join him in TeamSpeak on the merit that it was far too complicated to type everything that he had thus heard. Complicating matters further, Alacor was also trying to relay part of the discussion he was having with Rsd via whispers. TeamSpeak has a great deal of utility when it comes to this sort of thing.
As it was explained to me, there was an epic (purple) world drop healing trinket (BoE NOT BoP) that had dropped in a heroic instance Rsd was in on his hunter. (It is important that I stress this: He was on his hunter and ]not the character he intended to use the trinket on.) As is the practice with most ninjas, Rsd had clicked on need after everyone else had passed since the rules at the time were generally pass first, discuss, then [icode]/roll[/icode]. The priest mentioned that it would've been a highly suitable upgrade for him/her and, as far as I know, asked if he could have it, buy it, or roll for it. It makes sense; after all, the priest was on the run, he was rolling for his main, and he could use it. This is where several inconsistencies entered Rsd's story. I'll try my best to explain each alternate explanation the he provided, individually, Alacor, Snobal, Turus, myself, and then all of us once we were in a party to discuss the mistake.
But first, I am compelled to explain a few things. The events Alacor, Sno, Turus, and I were dealing with together transpired after Rsd had left the party (booted, I believe, but whether that actually happened or not escapes me now; I think he may have left of his own volition). This afforded Rsd with some time to think and possibly even concoct a few alternate explanations for his behavior. It became clear that he was lying to us simply by the nature of his myriad inconsistencies. Worse, he had no idea that we were all communicating via officer chat and sharing the individual accounts he presented us via tells. Naturally, none of them agreed.
The first variation that came to either Alacor or Sno was that Rsd had rolled on the item and claimed that he won it "fair and square" (his words). The priest, however, had informed us that he offered to pay for the item in question, but Rsd had simply left the party without any further exchange for better or for worse. Actually, that's something of a lie--I believe Rsd mentioned that he could use the item on his alt for healing. Though, the only other alt that he could have used such an item with was Rsd himself: a prot pally. He wasn't known for respec'ing and his random appearances at strange hours would have put him at odds for being selected as a healer on any of our runs. Mind you, that last bit is mostly incidental; many of us have unusual hours and play when we have time. The crux of it being that he wasn't the sort who would have respec'd to heal an instance as he felt his calling was that of a tank. Tanks don't need healing trinkets.
The second variation that he had later explained to Turus was that he was going to give the item to the priest but forgot to pick it up. This later mutated into the suggestion that he had picked it up but couldn't find it in his bags. He later went so far as to claim that he may have accidentally sold it to a vendor. Regardless of which variant was most popular in his reasoning at the time, the story he stuck with for our Fearless Leader was that the item had gone missing, he was hoping to give it to the priest, but he couldn't because he didn't have it. How someone comes across an item, loots it, is seen looting it in the chat log but claims not to have it and loses it in his own bags has either encountered an extraordinary bug of which Blizzard might want to be made aware, is stupid, or is lying. Of course, we know he was a liar, because most courteous individuals would have stayed in the party long enough to rectify the situation. They would have also apologized. Rsd didn't.
The story he told me was so grossly disconnected that I can't recall much of it. I suspect this was largely because I had been asking him via whispers why he didn't take it upon himself to correct the dilemma he had created with the priest. He continued to explain, to me anyway, that he had won the item in a fair roll (familiar?) and wasn't going to give it to the priest because the priest "was being a [expletive deleted]" (probably rhymed with "ducksquad").
During the course of this discussion, we partied with him and requested his presence in TS so we could each as him questions individually. He was cooperative, I admit, but reluctant to express any willingness to rectify the situation he had created for us. Let me first explain our rationale: We've had to deal with reports of loot ninjas in our guild in the past. We deal with each report fairly, and it is our believe that it is inappropriate to first presume guilt without proof. There are plenty of people in the world who will claim they have been screwed over without actually having had anything dreadful befall them. This bit highlights the philosophy to which we subscribe and it is one that unfortunately appears to have escaped Rsd: We were more than willing to work with him and hear his side of the story. It's just unfortunate that the venomous words he used shortly after our inquisition soured any hope of us accomodating his wishes and concerns. Given his hostile behavior to each of us, he inadvertently loaned great credence to the words of the priest. (Of course, being as the priest was from a well known SGA guild, we had little reason to believe he or she was actually lying, it's just that Rsd's attitude made the decision significantly easier.)
Since my written recollections of this event are growing rather long, and I'm not fond of issuing a lengthy dissertation over someone who is now little more than an incidental bump in our recent past, I will simply add this. I vividly recall that, when we had asked him why his story was so inconsistent and queried why he couldn't so much as apologize to the priest for his behavior, he said something to the effect of "Maybe next time, but it's mine now." (Never mind that he claimed on separate occasions that he didn't actually have anything.)
I also distinctly remembering that Alacor told him, "With that attitude, Rsd, there won't be a next time." Alacor went on to explain that we each wasted well over a half hour contending with this matter, reminded Rsd that he was less than cooperative in offering a resolution, and that he would be far better off in the midst of a guild of likeminded individuals. Rsd was promptly booted.
Much of the interaction between Rsd and Alacor transpired via whispers, and so I felt it necessary to gloss over precisely the sorts of things that he said as it isn't quite my place. If Alacor were available, I'm sure he would be better able to weigh in on the things Rsd shared with him directly. I do recall that he had few kind words to share with Al, including but not necessarily limited to the suggestion that Alacor was an inept player who didn't know his class and had no business playing the game. He also called Alacor names that I refuse to repeat in mixed company. Those are things that probably don't rhyme with "ducksquad."
The guy was a scumbag. He demonstrated immense disrespect toward Alacor (Al had spent several days helping Rsd in his selection of gear and giving him pointers), the guild as a whole, our time, our intelligence; he displayed that he was incapable of adequately resolving spats he himself had provoked; and furthermore, he was awash in the notion that, of all things, he was being picked on by us and that his way was right and just. There are, of course, two sides to every story, but for the curious reader, I would strongly advise against hearing his. He likely doesn't remember any of these events, but I can guarantee that his description of us as a gaggle of "backstabbers" couldn't be further from the truth. To resort to such words after we spent a significant amount of time--and resources--resolving something he created for us is something I will not soon forget. Laughably, after being booted, he complained to one of us (who I can't remember) that "Alacor kicked me from my guild."
I can't think of many of our regulars who even knew the guy much less liked him. How that constitutes separating him from "his" guild when the guild is most assuredly ours is beyond me.
For the record, we offered to craft a healing mace for the priest whose gear at the time was rather poor. He was grateful for our generosity and graciously accepted our gift. If nothing else, we wound up with at least one ally out of this. I'm also thankful that ally wasn't Rsd.
I gave that lich a phylactery shard. Liches love phylactery shards.