zeezrom wrote:I guess I came to a realization. I don't like it when people are attacked online and I also don't like having all the moderation. What does that mean? An impossible scenario.
In case you missed it, here how Shades put it:
Dr. Shades wrote:As an addendum to the above, if you want to "go the extra mile" and become one of the truly great posters around here, then follow the additional instructions on
this page.
viewtopic.php?p=124202&f=1#p124202Follow the link and give it time to load. I'm pretty sure I'm the one who first brought this to Shades' attention, as I posted the link here many moons ago after horrible experiences with "Pharisaic" moderation on that board. How anyone could "enjoy" that, I wouldn't have a clue. The other extreme which turns people off is having
too little moderation, and that has clearly happened here. Ultimately Shades is going to have to decide which tack attracts the greatest number of
quality posters, and making a "democratic" appeal in the form of current board opinion, through polls or otherwise, is sort of like Captain Bligh having a mutineer poll on what's best for the destiny of The Bounty.
In short, Shades may have to stop trying to be too democratic, and exercise a little more "benign dictatorship" (he already has with the smilies). It's a predicament that calls for real leadership, and some obvious risks. I still maintain that, with some exceptions, the highest quality LDS defenders remain aloof from MDB because of the "atmosphere" here, and a more civil atmosphere is not only more conducive to them, but to the betterment of the board in general.
Most people would prefer a more civil atmosphere.
This idea that the board will go in the direction the posters deem, now seems obsolete, because once one "side" becomes dominant, change is very unlikely. Shades (and the the Admin.) is in fact responsible for the culture of MDB to a large extent (I disagree with Wade here). They make (or don't make) the rules, and
that determines the destiny of the board. As I've said (elsewhere) about the "Schryver threads", it's inconsistent to
allow such uncivil discourse to take place, then crucify the person exercising his/her freedom of speech allowed under the rules. It's almost like blackmail. It's like inviting a person into your home and telling him/her "you can say whatever you like about me, my wife and children", and then when he/she expresses his/her honest opinion, you kick his/her ass out. Warn them from the start what is or is not allowed, and the "owner" of the house is the one responsible for that.
Edited to correct Cook/Bligh.