zlacker

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1. paxys+L4[view] [source] 2023-06-14 01:07:42
>>stanis+(OP)
It will be interesting to see the eventual outcome of this saga. I have already seen backlash against the backlash in many subs. /r/NBA, which was mentioned in the article, had a poll one day before the blackout and made the decision based on 8000 votes (out of a total 8+ million members). Casual users were not happy to find out that they would have nowhere to discuss the most important game of the season, and the mod announcements were very heavily downvoted (the blackout happened nonetheless).

Will a chunk of users stay off the site permanently? Maybe. Will Reddit as a business be better off without these users? Also maybe. There's definitely a case to be made that the community would benefit from more casual participation minus power tripping and over moderation from the top 0.01%.

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2. thr_lo+F5[view] [source] 2023-06-14 01:13:10
>>paxys+L4
Moderators _seriously_ underestimate how hated they are. At this point I'd rather the admins just take back the subs and let the voting system sort it out. Like how it did for the first 10 years of the site's life.
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3. lokar+07[view] [source] 2023-06-14 01:20:59
>>thr_lo+F5
It will be overrun by nazis pretty fast. A lot as changed in 10 years.
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4. thr_lo+oa[view] [source] 2023-06-14 01:43:30
>>lokar+07
Yes, like the definition of Nazi and the fact that Goodwin's law no longer means you lose the argument.
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5. xracy+aJ[view] [source] 2023-06-14 07:05:03
>>thr_lo+oa
It's not that Godwin's law meant you lost the argument. Godwin's law was just an observation, that a common evil, is an easy thing to reduce someone who disagrees with you to. So you have to avoid doing that, if you want to be able to maintain any level of discourse.

That, of course, goes out the window when the person you're arguing with legitimately identifies as a Nazi.

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