You should talk to some of the people who worked for him - found out they didn't have health insurance when a woman went for her one of last prenatal visits and was told by the doctor that BCBS RI had dropped her - hich led to the 38 Studios' employees finding out that, yeah, they had all been dumped by BCBS RI for non-payment. Nobody in the company had a clue until that moment that they no longer had health care.
The employees worked for a solid month after RI raised the alarm about non-payment (the company should have immediately gone into bankruptcy - they should have gone into bankruptcy months BEFORE that to give the employees a softer landing). But no, the employees were kept ini the dark, adn kept working as they were promised by someone who talked to them as if they were family that the checks were coming. Maybe he really believed that, but it was incredibly unethical and borderline criminal. Those employees, hundreds, never got paid, lost a month of unemployment, and started their new journeys in the hole.
Several had their homes, which they thought had been sold in the move to RI, given back to them because the relocation company hadn't been paid - so now, they're out of a job, a month without income, and some suddenly with TWO mortgages. Yes, there were bankruptcies, and all because the employees were left in the dark about the truth of the financial situation.
Not all of this is on Schilling, of course, although he was THE guy at 38 Studios (and would never listen to anyone trying to tell him what had to be done), but your last sentence is pretty ridiculous - not inviting someone to a reunion (which was about a lot more than political posts or religion, I'm sure) is "worse" than what happened to the hundreds of people working for 38 Studios, something for which Schilling bears great responsibility?
Suffice it to say that you know nothing about 38 Studios - how it rose, how it fell, and the fallout - and leave it at that.