Moderation Questions
The last iteration of the moderation discussion thread was a complete disaster. Numerous attempts to keep it on topic failed, and it became a general discussion thread with almost no moderation related posts at all. And those that were posted were so buried in non-mod posts that it became a huge time drain on the mods to sort through them. Then, when off topic posts were deleted posters complained about that.
This led to the closing of the mod discussion thread, replaced by the post report/pm approach. This has filtered out lots of noise, but has resulted at times in the General Discussion Thread turning into a quasi-mod thread. This is not desirable, but going back to the old mod thread is also not a workable option.
Therefore, I have created this new moderation thread, but with a different purpose and ground rules than previous mod threads. The purpose of this thread is to provide a place for posters to pose questions to the mods about how policies are applied; to bring to the mods attention posts they think are inappropriate and reach the level of requiring mod action; and for mods to communicate to posters things like changes or clarifications to policies, bannings, etc.
Now let me tell you what this thread is NOT a place for. It is not for nonmoderation related posts, even if the discussion originates from a comment in in a mod related post. It is not for posters to post their opinions about other posters or whether a poster should be banned. It is not to rehash past grievances about mod decisions from months or years ago. The focus of this thread will be recent posts that require action now. Or questions about current policies and enforcement.
So basically, this is a thread to ask mods questions. Which means, pretty much that only mods should be answering those questions. If a poster asks why a particular post was deleted or allowed, only a mod can answer that. Everyone else who wants to jump in with their opinion or their mod war story needs to stay out of it. It just increases the noise to signal ratio and does nothing to answer the question.
Everyone needs to understand that this thread has very different rules than the old mod thread and any other thread. Any non-moderation post will be deleted on sight. Not moved to the appropriate thread, just deleted. So don't waste your time crafting a masterpiece post about wars or transgender issues or the presidential election and then post it in this thread. It will be gone. Also, this isnt a thread for general commentary about our mods performance. Posting "browser sucks as a mod" or any such posts that don't actually ask about a policy or request a mod action will be deleted. Everyone is entitled to their opinion about the moderation of this forum. But this thread isnt for complaining about mods. You are free to go to the ATF forum and make your concerns about modding in this forum there.
So with that intro, this thread is open for those who need to bring questions about mod policies or bring inappropriate posts to the mods attention. Again, it is NOT a thread for group discussions about other posters or for other posters to answer questions directed to mods.
We'll see how this goes. If you have what you feel is an open issue raised in the General Discussion Thread, please copy that post or otherwise reintroduce the issue here.
Thanks.
I mean if you support a war that is killing civilians then you support killing babies. People should own that.
I drive an SUV that gets 24 mpg highway. I support killing the planet. I'm fine with that.
I mean if you support a war that is killing civilians then you support killing babies. People should own that.
I drive an SUV that gets 24 mpg highway. I support killing the planet. I'm fine with that.
That sort of thing used to be called 'reasonable inference'
It really depends what you mean by support. I 'support' a hell a of a lot I profoundly object to just by paying taxes.
not the Soviets!
I mean if you support a war that is killing civilians then you support killing babies. People should own that.
As a matter of pure logic, this is obviously wrong.
I can imagine a hypothetical just war in which military action was justified in order to prevent 5X civilian deaths, even though the military action itself would result in X civilian deaths.
Under your theory, that means the supporters of the military action support "killing babies," even though the net effect of the military action would be to save civilian lives, including the lives of babies.
As a matter of pure logic, this is obviously wrong.
I can imagine a hypothetical just war in which military action was justified in order to prevent 5X civilian deaths, even though the military action itself would result in X civilian deaths.
Under your theory, that means the supporters of the military action support "killing babies," even though the net effect of the military action would be to save civilian lives, including the lives of babies.
Supporting war is very bad. Even if it means more people will die, supporting war is very bad
War, at its very fundamental roots, is humans killing humans, and that is bad
As a matter of pure logic, this is obviously wrong.
I can imagine a hypothetical just war in which military action was justified in order to prevent 5X civilian deaths, even though the military action itself would result in X civilian deaths.
Under your theory, that means the supporters of the military action support "killing babies," even though the net effect of the military action would be to save civilian lives, including the lives of babies.
this isnt just any war
Supporting war is very bad. Even if it means more people will die, supporting war is very bad
War, at its very fundamental roots, is humans killing humans, and that is bad
You think that supporting a military action that indisputably would have the net effect of saving a large number of innocent lives is obviously wrong? It could be wrong, but I don't think that it is inevitably wrong.
If you wanted to argue that such situations arise far less frequently than we imagine, I might agree, but that's a different point.
Supporting war is very bad. Even if it means more people will die, supporting war is very bad
War, at its very fundamental roots, is humans killing humans, and that is bad
Not a nuanced take. There have obviously been several wars in the last century where not engaging in conflict would have resulted in a much worse outcome.
What do you mean? We aren't discussing a specific situation. We are discussing a pure hypothetical and a general principle.
I guess it comes down to how you interpret luckbox's initial post. I took it to mean a war that intentionally and primarily targets children.
but, I also realize the discussion has moved to a more generalized hypothetical of war.
As a matter of pure logic, this is obviously wrong.
I can imagine a hypothetical just war in which military action was justified in order to prevent 5X civilian deaths, even though the military action itself would result in X civilian deaths.
Under your theory, that means the supporters of the military action support "killing babies," even though the net effect of the military action would be to save civilian lives, including the lives of babies.
If some babies have to die to save other babies, and people aware of that and are still ok with it, then they support killing babies....as a matter of pure logic.
did we just do the trolly problem?
If some babies have to die to save other babies, and people aware of that and are still ok with it, then they support killing babies....as a matter of pure logic.
I disagree. In my hypothetical, it is entirely possible that the person supporting military action abhors killing babies, and for that reason, is choosing the course of action that results in the fewest killed babies.
In my hypothetical, there is no option C that avoids dead civilians.
If some babies have to die to save other babies, and people aware of that and are still ok with it, then they support killing babies....as a matter of pure logic.
Agree
I disagree. In my hypothetical, it is entirely possible that the person supporting military action abhors killing babies, and for that reason, is choosing the course of action that results in the fewest killed babies.
In my hypothetical, there is no option C that avoids dead civilians.
They don’t abhor them enough not to support the war though.
If some babies have to die to save other babies, and people aware of that and are still ok with it, then they support killing babies....as a matter of pure logic.
According to your theory, if I invented a miraculous, anti-air pollution machine that removed pollution from the atmosphere at four times the rate it added pollution to the atmosphere, and had no other negative impact on the environment, then anyone who supported the use of my machine would be properly described as "supporting" air pollution.
That’s not how your analogy works.
You’re saying we need to kill children because it will possibly prevent more deaths later
A machine that adds pollution while cleaning 4x as much is a whole different animal
I disagree. In my hypothetical, it is entirely possible that the person supporting military action abhors killing babies, and for that reason, is choosing the course of action that results in the fewest killed babies.
In my hypothetical, there is no option C that avoids dead civilians.
Option C is called being a pacifist. Such people do exist. Not me. If a bunch of babies are coming at me wanting me dead I'm taking them out.
According to your theory, if I invented a miraculous, anti-air pollution machine that removed pollution from the atmosphere at four times the rate it added pollution to the atmosphere, and had no other negative impact on the environment, then anyone who supported the use of my machine would be properly described as "supporting" air pollution.
Your position is that it's the net impact that's important not individual cases, but I agree with those who say that people and molecules are different enough that your analogy does not fit.
For one-- pollution is fungible. One molecule of pollutant is the same as any other, like how currency works. People are not fungible though.
I drive an SUV that gets 24 mpg highway. I support killing the planet. I'm fine with that.
Would you state this outside of internet anonymity? I'm not trying to do a "gotcha". I really don't know and am curious because people so many hold opinions which they won't even own up to on the internet, let alone in public. The need for claiming the moral high ground for a position is so strong with people, even when they know damn well their aims are wrong in any meaningful sense of the word.
David Duke will not admit to being a racist. He thinks different races should live separately. He has endless criticisms of every aspect of anything associated with any non white people, wants total racial segregation, but is not a racist and is really promoting peace according to him.
In actual fact it was when Victor was banned for a month. Micro said he'd stop posting then and hasn't been back.
Looks like he posted on July 9th in another forum one time but this was his last post here.
But to answer the question about who drove away Micro....it was the mods
This is right. I know Victor came back and as KoNY said, I could come back,
I presume Micro left for the same reason a lot of smart sensible people left:
That thread is largely terrible for the average person's emotional well being. And that's because it's overflowing with toxic polarization.
It's not a place to discuss ideas, facts, and nuances. It's largely a place to blame, virtue signal, troll, and hurt. And people who have no interest in that, have either left, or barely post. Doesn't have to be more complicated than that.
But maybe some of this too. I haven't been following the thread, so I haven't been sucked in. And the bolded is certainly true.