I'm bundling a few comments together, since I feel they're related:
8 hours ago, fleabay said:Take the damn politics somewhere else along with any other off-topic nonsense.
I don't know why the mods/admins here think that it is a good idea to have political discourse here. It's not like there are not hundreds of sites just for such purpose.
6 hours ago, Makusik Fedakusik said:All what you need to know about political discussion in the internet:
Politics is something many people misunderstand. Sadly in many sub-groups --- ESPECIALLY among people under age 30 or so -- politics is a trendy thing to hate upon. Among younger people it is hard to go wrong by decrying that politics are bad and politicians are evil. That demographic happens to fit a large part of our users.
Politics is simply the exercise of power. That can be government politics where governmental power is used to do things, or office politics where corporate power is used to do things.
In governmental politics there is often partisanship, where different sides have created firmly entrenched positions. In US politics the partisanship is currently at highly toxic levels, which makes it even easier for people to misunderstand what politics really is. If all you see are two sides that are actively working to sabotage each other it is easy to lose perspective on the nature of politics.
3 hours ago, Unknown33 said:I think what's interesting is when a Trump bashing thread lasts for several pages but a similar question about the future of liberalism is closed immediately, followed by serious discussion about only allowing certain people to participate in political discussion.
We actually discussed in a discord chat minutes after you started the thread. Whether intentionally or accidentally, your thread had a major difference that was presented as a minor wording change. There is an enormous difference between the post that was closed and the earlier post that was left open with the warning on top.The earlier post was about a specific person in office, and a specific set of policies. Your post was about the abstract concept "liberalism". In debate the two are radically different, and your topic appeared to have been skillfully crafted to mask that difference.
In the earlier topic, a specific person with specific events and policies CAN be civilly discussed and debated. Shortly after posting a warning was placed on it as a reminder to keep the discussion based on concrete events and concrete examples. Several times in the discussion people needed to be reminded of this. The discussion included many different viewpoints from different groups. Some were more liberal, some more conservative, some independent of the US political parties, but as long as they referred to concrete examples, the topic was allowed to continue.
In the topic of "liberalism" there is no specific policy or event to discuss. It is an abstract philosophy defined in relative terms. If there was a specific policy or event it would have been different, but the post was clearly a troll designed to mimic the earlier pattern. While reification and analogues are sometimes appropriate in discussion, they're a fallacy in this context. Said differently, sometimes you can use examples of an abstract idea to discuss the idea, but in some cases such examples are logically invalid.
Since many different sides (including both of the US political parties) were fairly well represented in the previous discussion, it is unfair to say the site rejected a criticism of "liberalism". People using the site run the full breadth of the political spectrum. What we reject is the blatant trolling.
10 hours ago, khawk said:Many communities outright ban Politics in forums. I believe that is the lazy way out and refuse to do that here.
I agree that discussion of politics in the Lounge is a good thing for the site. Overall our community has mature and civil behavior. Programmers tend to be highly intelligent and it shows clearly in the discussions here. Sometimes the discussions veer into the realm of the abstract, but overall people are able to remain civil. People on the site are generally good about acknowledging the diverse range of backgrounds and beliefs and experiences. We may not agree about solutions, but we can hold discussions and remain in disagreement.
I've seen in most of the political debates over the years the people involved all agree that something should be done, or that some action should be taken (or not taken) even when the people involved never reached a consensus on what actions it should be. For some examples from past posts: everyone agrees we want to see less violence but many people disagree on the methods of reducing violence; everyone agrees discrimination is harmful but people disagree about specific effects and about actions needed to address it. Those have included topics on racial discrimination, gender discrimination, age discrimination, religious discrimination, and nationality discussions. We've had discussion about nudity and violence in games where people expressed their viewpoints about what their effects were and what (if anything) should change regarding policy. The discussions remain civil far longer than they would in communities like Reddit, and often reach a natural conclusion without moderation.
While each of those may not seem like politics at first glance, each one refers to making changes to policy or taking action as a group. That is all politics means, it is all about the power to take action in that way.
Any time there is a group of people, politics becomes an emergent factor of the group. Having political discussions is a great thing in The Lounge, and it contributes to the vibrancy of our community. I think overall our community is better for them.