Seems like doing that would solve most problems here.

  • Tankiedesantski [he/him]
    ·
    4 years ago

    The mods aren't tyrants. They're certainly doing their best under difficult circumstances, but an outsider coming in during a purge is not going to have a good impression of the place.

    Lifting bans is good but most people who go out of their way to advocate for their accounts to be unbanned are already invested. I imagine the half way curious people who get banned just move on.

    Maybe ideological purity is not the best phrasing. I meant that if you want this place to be a pipeline you can't expect everyone to have perfect takes on everything all the time.

    Most people out there are still by-and-large ignorant about trans issues, and lots of things done out of ignorance can be transphobic.

    • hogposting [he/him,comrade/them]
      ·
      4 years ago

      an outsider coming in during a purge is not going to have a good impression of the place

      What's the solution, though? Never get rid of reactionaries and wreckers? Try to do it slowly and quietly, even though part of the wrecking strategy is to whine about the oppression of getting your account banned (even though you can literally start up another one right away)?

      There are a million reasons someone might check out a new place on the internet and nope out. We can't remove them all, and we shouldn't remove the ones that serve a legitimate purpose.

      • blobjim [he/him]
        ·
        edit-2
        4 years ago

        Wreckers can be easier to spot than others, because they're writing lots of weird comments and wrecking. But the real solution is to recruit lots of new users from places you know are good and have them drown out the bad stuff. This is the internet, you can't moderate stuff that can get posted like hundreds of times a second.