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Look, you're not wrong that low-hanging fruit is easier to mod than long posts that require us to try parsing what someone is actually saying, about a topic we may not be at all familiar with, which is why we don't try to make judgment calls about how "honestly" someone is presenting the case. If something gets reported, we always look at it, but if it's a wall of text and someone is reporting it as "lying" or "uncharitable" or "boo outgroup," I will read through to see if anything is egregiously in violation of the rules, but I am not handing out Supreme Court judgments here.
That being said, I for one do not use any kind of mental "flow chart," and I do not worry a lot about whether someone might question my decision. (People question our decisions all the time. Some people even demand I "take it up with the other mods." Which, in most cases, I actually do, asking if anyone disagrees with my judgement.)
"We all know" is indeed a red flag that someone is trying to assume a nonexistent consensus, but it's not the only way to get flagged for consensus-building. If your point is that we mod by doing a Ctrl+F on certain phrases, no, not really.
What sort of context link would you like to support the assertion that Kamala Harris is an airhead? It's clearly an opinion. It's not a particular charitable opinion, but people are allowed to say "I think Kamala Harris is an airhead." Arguably, "Given" could be interpreted as "consensus building," but if I were to mod it on that basis, I really would be doing the sort of keywoard-based modding you're accusing us of. If you say "Trump is a venal, fascist clown," that's your opinion, and someone who likes Trump would very likely report you for it, but you don't have to post a link to support your opinion. If you say "We all know Trump is a venal, fascist clown" you'd get modded, not for using the magic no-no words "We all know" but because you are trying to imply everyone agrees with you and you are reinforcing a consensus opinion. Was @MelodicBerries doing that about Kamala Harris? Eh. I don't think so, but feel free to ask another mod what they think.
Then you aren't very good at counting, because we enforce that rule all the time (even though almost no one ever thinks that their claim was partisan or inflammatory or required evidence).
Either an insult is materially relevant to the argument, in which case it requires justification (and deserves a mod warning if one isn't given), or it is not relevant (in which case it deserves a mod warning for creating needless heat).
It's plain here that the point about Kamala that's actually relevant to the argument is that she has no hope of being the Democrat nominee. A context link that is appropriate is a link to a poll or a prediction market.
Instead MelodicBerries goes needlessly out of his way to call her an airhead. If this was relevant to the argument and supported by evidence it would be fine. Instead it's neither.
(This is a good time to mention that it has always bothered that TheMotte has never explicitly endorsed "Victorian Sufi Buddha Lite comment policy", but even if @ZorbaTHut doesn't like that, surely "don't insult people for no reason" is a good norm, since the round up text links to things like IN FAVOR OF NICENESS, COMMUNITY, AND CIVILIZATION and mentions "you should argue to understand, not to win", "Write like everyone is reading and you want them to be included in the discussion", etc.)
Props for consistency (though, to be clear, I'm not arguing the mods are politically biased), but I strongly disagree on your trade off between light and heat. "Trump is a venal, fascist clown" should not be allowed unless (1) required by the point you're trying to make and (2) proactively supported. Having higher standards when people are being insulting seems like required, base-level moderation to me.
I can't remember if we killed this after leaving from the SSC subreddit or if I just never copied it over, but the problem we always had on the SSC subreddit was people saying "kind/necessary/true? well, I'm clearly right, and it's necessary that I tell this person he's an asshole, so what's the problem".
And after a few attempts at editing this for "but seriously you can't just be a jerk even if you think you're right", it ended up entirely subsumed into early rulesets without much hint of its previous existence.
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We do prefer "don't insult people for no good reason," but public figures are more or less fair game, as long as the post is not just a boo light. "Kamala is an airhead" or "Trump is a fascist clown" are not great comments, no, but we're not going to make a rule against saying mean things about politicians and celebrities.
"I think Kamala is a weak candidate and has no hope of being the Democrat nominee" is clearly an opinion. You are free to challenge it, but if we applied your proposed standard, we'd have to mod anyone who expresses any kind of opinion without providing a link.
Those rules already exist.
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Does every statement need a citation? No, but we need some standards to prevent literal for-it’s-own-sake mockery.
I'm open to sincere suggestions about how to improve moderation. So is @ZorbaTHut. But I do not think what you are asking for is reasonable. I am not going to issue warnings every time someone says something mean about a politician. Our norms have developed over time, and they are always evolving, and if you think they are going in the wrong direction, or are failing to maintain the sort of discourse we want, you can make that case, but so far I find your case unpersuasive. You seem to just want me to mod people who insult Kamala Harris. There is a threshold at which I probably would mod a comment. E.g., if someone said "Kamala Harris is a whore" - that's actually a falsifiable statement that would require some evidence, or "Anyone who votes for Kamala Harris is a weak air-head" - that's a very broad boo-outgroup. But calling Kamala Harris a weak, air-headed candidate who has no hope of winning the nomination? It's not kind, but it's an allowable opinion.
I don't know what I've said to imply that Kamala Harris is special at all. I don't want people insulting Trump or Bill Gates or Elon Musk either. It does nothing but lower the quality of discourse here.
Saying Kamala Harris has no hope of winning the nomination is fine (preferably justified with evidence, but I have low standards). "Weak air-headed" seems to contribute nothing but heat.
In any case @ZorbaTHut could you please update the rules to say make it clear that the mods don't mind comments like "Trump is a venal, fascist clown" and "Kamala Harris is an airhead"?
Now you've lost the benefit of the doubt I gave you that you were complaining in good faith.
You said
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Despite the fact the rules clearly say that you will. Pointing out that inconsistency is not a lack of good faith.
A lack of good faith is when I say I take issue with "Kamala is an air-head" and you say "You seem to just want me to mod people who insult Kamala Harris" (a person, incidentally, that I don't admire).
The rules explicitly ask that you mod comments like this and you're refusing to. I don't think asking for a rule update to make it clear that insulting public figures is tolerated is bad faith on my part. I'm asking for consistency between the rules of this site and what the mods actually enforce.
Alternatively, you're welcome to argue that the rules don't demand that you mod that comment.
Alright, I went looking for a post I had in mind, possibly written by Scott, and totally couldn't find it. Sorry. You're getting a crappy cliff-notes version of it.
The cliff-notes version is that you shouldn't always need to prefix things with "I think". That it is, sometimes, pretty obvious that you're referring to an opinion. If I say "anchovies are tasty" then I am probably not suggesting that anchovies are objectively tasty; it's a phrase that maps to "I think anchovies are tasty".
This is, to some extent, how I think about statements like "Kamala is an air-head".
At the same time, I don't think we want to go full force on that. The bigger your claim is, the more wide-reaching, the more antagonistic, the more it's aimed at a person in the community, the more I want people to couch things carefully. In this case it's a single target who isn't in the community. Is that good? No, not really, I wish they'd stop. But it's maybe not lethal to the community we're trying to build.
I don't really know how to phrase this in the rules, and I'll admit that a perfectly strict reading of the rules probably wouldn't allow that. We've always allowed a bit of flex, and part of me has always been unsatisfied by this just because it makes moderation a lot more subjective. But the alternative is, I think, worse, and the flex will continue until I figure out a way to formalize it.
tl;dr:
The rule technically doesn't allow it, practically we kinda allow it as one of many ways that people can flex the rules a little if they've built up cred, I'm not totally happy with this, I'm not convinced there's a better alternative, it is definitely not true that "insulting public figures is tolerated, full stop" because I don't want people to just start flaming public figures; the rules, as always, cannot be fully complete because humans are kinda dicks.
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