Easy, friend. Merely pointing out that the line of argument is moot.chikusho said:snip
Easy, friend. Merely pointing out that the line of argument is moot.chikusho said:snip
Wait, I'm actually curious now, what did Tesla do to harm the Feelz Brigade? I admit I don't know a huge amount beyond the normal things you pick up, but how is he politically controversial?AgedGrunt said:This is surprising? IIRC, some time ago it was banning articles about Tesla Motors for being in the popular r/technology subreddit (where they were widely viewed and popular). A mod claimed an electric car was no different from a normal car, but given the political controversy over Tesla, it's highly suspect.
Probably because the first step is never trying to sit down and talk and instead it is some action such as this where people can only react to it after the fact. Sort of puts a dampener on things when you say "why can't we talk about this like civilized people" after someone already hit the nuclear option in dealing with it. Comes off as sort of disingenuousness or like an attempt to deflect the fallout of the actions done.erttheking said:I swear, is there a reason we can't just sit down and talk about things? Do we always need to freak out?
That does raise a question though. If someone treats a nuclear reaction with one of their own does that make the responding person worse than the first offender? Personally I feel people should use calm civil discussion against a nuclear option every time. I can't get interested in a discussion when most of the people involved are screaming and yelling at one another like animals.runic knight said:Probably because the first step is never trying to sit down and talk and instead it is some action such as this where people can only react to it after the fact. Sort of puts a dampener on things when you say "why can't we talk about this like civilized people" after someone already hit the nuclear option in dealing with it. Comes off as sort of disingenuousness or like an attempt to deflect the fallout of the actions done.erttheking said:I swear, is there a reason we can't just sit down and talk about things? Do we always need to freak out?
Not that civil discussion is bad, but I find few use that as a first resort, and far too many only call back to it out of reflex after their actions have been called out as grossly over-reaching.
It is certainly nicer if someone is trying to be civil, but expecting it after doing something like that is just not realistic. If I socked you in the jaw and then you got up and started to kick my ass, my saying "Hey now, lets talk this over civilly" really is kinda absurd to expect to be greeted with that unless the one you did it to has the patience of a saint. Sadly, most people are just emotional people.Bat Vader said:That does raise a question though. If someone treats a nuclear reaction with one of their own does that make the responding person worse than the first offender? Personally I feel people should use calm civil discussion against a nuclear option every time. I can't get interested in a discussion when most of the people involved are screaming and yelling at one another like animals.runic knight said:Probably because the first step is never trying to sit down and talk and instead it is some action such as this where people can only react to it after the fact. Sort of puts a dampener on things when you say "why can't we talk about this like civilized people" after someone already hit the nuclear option in dealing with it. Comes off as sort of disingenuousness or like an attempt to deflect the fallout of the actions done.erttheking said:I swear, is there a reason we can't just sit down and talk about things? Do we always need to freak out?
Not that civil discussion is bad, but I find few use that as a first resort, and far too many only call back to it out of reflex after their actions have been called out as grossly over-reaching.
You apply the razor in situations where one cannot be sure, not when one party claims something but is light on evidence.MarsAtlas said:Ocaam's Razor. Whats more likely, a conspiracy to make Reddit an SJW hugbox that somehow doesn't have a problem with subreddits dedicated to the same thing, just under a different name (eg: Shit Niggers Say was shut down, but Coontowm, among others, still persists) or perhaps that the five subs in question that are all mean-spirited in natured violated some new rules? Besides, on FPH they were posting personal details about imgur staff. Thats a pretty good basis to shut them down.SecondPrize said:Actual harassment isn't hard to archive when one finds it. Why would you believe it without seeing any?
Because both reddit and the internet as a whole was built from the ground up as a bastion of free speech and the propagation and discussion of ideas, thoughts and anything else people could think of so long as it wasn't illegal. A magazine, on the other hand, is not. That's like asking why ABC not advertising R rated movies during prime time is not considered the same as YouTube removing all of the videos which Google feels shouldn't be there, but don't brake any laws or rules of the site. It's a false equivalence of the highest order.mecegirl said:Why do people only freak out about "free speech" on the internet. Folk will rally for FPH on reddit but no one gives a damn if Food Network magazine doesn't print articles about sports cars. How is that not the same thing?
From what I've read it's not that people are angry over reddit censoring free speech, but the perception that their admins say they want open discussion while then going and closing select pages they disagree with.mecegirl said:Why do people only freak out about "free speech" on the internet. Folk will rally for FPH on reddit but no one gives a damn if Food Network magazine doesn't print articles about sports cars. How is that not the same thing? Publications and websites choose what they will or will not host all the time. If someone wanted to be a content creator for this website, but wanted to make videos about 1950's architecture, and the idea was turned down, no one here would shed a tear. Only if so called anti sjw content would be turned down would anyone care. And why? A website is allowed to pick and choose what they will host, full stop. Some internet savvy person will just have to create their own website for folks to rag on fat people on. I'm not saying they are as bad as Stormfront...but Stormfront has a website, their own website. No one has tried to take their website down or off Google listings in the U.S. Their freedom of speech is protected. So FPH can do the same thing.
Also worth noting that the complaints stem from a sudden change and disparate application of in enforcing policy. The example they gave is something established and defined towards a certain topic getting shit for not talking about a different one, where the reality of the situation is an established and accepted bunch of groups, built on top of the very idea of free speech mind you, were suddenly nuked in a rather sudden and inconsistent manner.Zontar said:Because both reddit and the internet as a whole was built from the ground up as a bastion of free speech and the propagation and discussion of ideas, thoughts and anything else people could think of so long as it wasn't illegal. A magazine, on the other hand, is not. That's like asking why ABC not advertising R rated movies during prime time is not considered the same as YouTube removing all of the videos which Google feels shouldn't be there, but don't brake any laws or rules of the site. It's a false equivalence of the highest order.mecegirl said:Why do people only freak out about "free speech" on the internet. Folk will rally for FPH on reddit but no one gives a damn if Food Network magazine doesn't print articles about sports cars. How is that not the same thing?
And countless other subreddits that people can point to as well. Hell, off the top of my head, gamerghazi was a notorious hub of that sort of shit, as is a number of the ones listed earlier in the thread like Coontown. As others have pointed out, many times now, it isn't that they were enforcing a policy, the problem was that it was a nuclear response to individuals accused of doing wrong, that it was an unevenly applied nuclear response as not every subreddit guilty of that behavior got nuked, and that the site itself grew based upon the idea of free speech and the sudden nuking of subreddits like that seems to spit in the face of that sort of foundation.MarsAtlas said:And this is one of those situations. After all, "harassment" on the internet, as a definition, nowadays has been stretched wider than a fisherman's epic catch of the century that they conveniently left in the ocean. I can right now link screencaps of people just generally being assholes, making statements that could be taken as threats, and just outright making threats and there will be more than just one or two people who will say that that isn't harassment. There are people here who will say that posting somebody's personal information on a message and implicitly encouraging people to go use this personal information to bother people is not harassment. Thats literally what Fat People Hate was doing.SecondPrize said:You apply the razor in situations where one cannot be sure, not when one party claims something but is light on evidence.MarsAtlas said:Ocaam's Razor. Whats more likely, a conspiracy to make Reddit an SJW hugbox that somehow doesn't have a problem with subreddits dedicated to the same thing, just under a different name (eg: Shit Niggers Say was shut down, but Coontowm, among others, still persists) or perhaps that the five subs in question that are all mean-spirited in natured violated some new rules? Besides, on FPH they were posting personal details about imgur staff. Thats a pretty good basis to shut them down.SecondPrize said:Actual harassment isn't hard to archive when one finds it. Why would you believe it without seeing any?
If that's what they were doing then it's simple matter to post archives of it.MarsAtlas said:And this is one of those situations. After all, "harassment" on the internet, as a definition, nowadays has been stretched wider than a fisherman's epic catch of the century that they conveniently left in the ocean. I can right now link screencaps of people just generally being assholes, making statements that could be taken as threats, and just outright making threats and there will be more than just one or two people who will say that that isn't harassment. There are people here who will say that posting somebody's personal information on a message and implicitly encouraging people to go use this personal information to bother people is not harassment. Thats literally what Fat People Hate was doing.SecondPrize said:You apply the razor in situations where one cannot be sure, not when one party claims something but is light on evidence.MarsAtlas said:Ocaam's Razor. Whats more likely, a conspiracy to make Reddit an SJW hugbox that somehow doesn't have a problem with subreddits dedicated to the same thing, just under a different name (eg: Shit Niggers Say was shut down, but Coontowm, among others, still persists) or perhaps that the five subs in question that are all mean-spirited in natured violated some new rules? Besides, on FPH they were posting personal details about imgur staff. Thats a pretty good basis to shut them down.SecondPrize said:Actual harassment isn't hard to archive when one finds it. Why would you believe it without seeing any?
Comparing the shut down of a site that picks on fat people for supposed harassment, to someone not running an article because of racism, is a bit of a stretch because the situations are not equal. They say they have rules against harassment, and FPH was accused of breaking those rules, which means that the Reddit admins did not go back on their word.NiPah said:From what I've read it's not that people are angry over reddit censoring free speech, but the perception that their admins say they want open discussion while then going and closing select pages they disagree with.mecegirl said:Why do people only freak out about "free speech" on the internet. Folk will rally for FPH on reddit but no one gives a damn if Food Network magazine doesn't print articles about sports cars. How is that not the same thing? Publications and websites choose what they will or will not host all the time. If someone wanted to be a content creator for this website, but wanted to make videos about 1950's architecture, and the idea was turned down, no one here would shed a tear. Only if so called anti sjw content would be turned down would anyone care. And why? A website is allowed to pick and choose what they will host, full stop. Some internet savvy person will just have to create their own website for folks to rag on fat people on. I'm not saying they are as bad as Stormfront...but Stormfront has a website, their own website. No one has tried to take their website down or off Google listings in the U.S. Their freedom of speech is protected. So FPH can do the same thing.
Now it does seem like the reason reddit closed FPS was because the mods were allowing harassment under their watch and not doing enough to stop it, in particular harassment of admins of a website imagur which works closely with reddit, an understandable reason.
Im not saying those complaining aren't at fault, but outside of a few who misunderstand what free speech is, the vast majority of people who bring it up are those who use it as a tool to show how stupid those who are complaining are, yes most understand websites have total control and a right to filter and edit everything on their site, but the issue some have is the (perceived) reason why a website filters its content.
If food network did not carry a piece on cooking fried chicken because it wanted to focus on healthy options then most would be ok, if they did the same because they don't want black people to watch then most would be angry, both are the same outcome but it shows the reason behind an action can make people angry.
Well, it was... a couple years ago before going defunct. Then FPH got banned (and rightly so) and it got taken over.Pax Romana said:Also hilarious how they banned a sub Reddit whalewatching that was about actual whales that live in the sea.