| Let's consider your own contributions to this thread, most notably this one: > At this point, it's is just basic table stakes discussion context for anybody who loves individual liberty or believes in the Constitution and limited government. If you're still unable to even entertain the idea, then you're part of the problem. Based on your touchstone strawmen of "leftists", "radical", and "activists", it sounds like you've got a heavy case of TDS - the real TDS, not the accusation-in-a-mirror version. I understand you feel strongly about the topic, and from the frenetic tone in most of your comments, deeply feel a sense of urgency and peril. I'm sympathetic to that feeling, I really am. But it still breaks the guidelines, all while you assert that it's our job to make these threads orderly: > you need to police the partisan disruptors better The problem is everyone believes they are reasonable, moderate ones and that their opponents are the "partisan disruptors" who need to be policed. From a moderation point of view, there's no winning in “policing” people on issues that are deeply entangled with their personal identity or their sense of physical safety. (And that's before you even contemplate the perversity of appealing for greater “policing” of a discussion about this, of all topics.) Our role is to uphold the guidelines, no matter the side, and topics that are repetitive and that inevitably attract comments like your very own are very well established as being against the guidelines. |
> The problem is everyone believes they are reasonable, moderate ones and that their opponents are the "partisan disruptors" who need to be policed.
I said what I said taking into account the mirror view. The issue I'm pointing out isn't the disagreement between disruptors and myself, but rather the disagreement between disruptors and the context/assumptions of the submission. That is what brings the discussion down into the level of a flamewar battle, rather than conversation being able to grow curiously/constructively within the context of the submission.
Let's say there were some other submission exploring why Trump is so "irrationally" disliked, from the perspective of someone who wants to change people's minds and make them see some redeeming aspects. I'd say that going into that thread, calling Trump a fascist, and otherwise not engaging with the points of the submission would be similarly incendiary and destructive to curious/constructive conversation. And by the same standard it should be policed, even though I'd most likely personally agree with it.
For my comment that you called out, sure, there is some aggression there. I'll own that, and I certainly could have done better. But look at the context - I was mirroring the aggression in the comment that was responding to me, which categorically rejected the entire topic under discussion out of the blue! That is exactly the type of nothing-but-disruptive comment I'm talking about.
If I were to write it again, I guess I'd try to stop after the "Trumpism is fascist" material disagreement and leave it at that. Although I don't see how that version would support constructive discussion either.
edit: Re: the perversity of appealing for greater “policing” of a discussion about this, of all topics I don't see that it is perverse at all. While the simple view is that the police are an authoritarian force that cracks down on freedom (as we're often discussing their abuses), the more encompassing view is that they are necessary as otherwise some other group invariably steps into the power vacuum. There is a general reason you moderate this forum, right?