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1010. Angel-Five - 2/23/2000 12:37:54 PM

Whoops.

and help make it the type of place you want it to be

Yes, well, now, you complain every time I try to do that, don't you? There's no consensus, we don't need to do this, it's unworkable, I don't see how yadda yadda yadda. I can't post on policy or content without you popping right up and posting off a barrage of 'there's no need for us to even consider this' or 'there's no need for such a change'. You're doing it right now. Forgive me if I look at the sentiment of your quoted statement askance as a result.

And your newfound willingness to let anyone discuss changes to the rules is a day late and a pound short for you to be able to casually refer to it as a given, especially as it was your recalcitrance to even consider a rules change in the first place that contributed heavily to those three hundred posts you mention. Sorry, Sparky, I won't take that check.

You don't think the new rules are any different? So far everyone else has said they like the wording and the emphasis; you're the only one saying that the results weren't worth the effort

1011. Angel-Five - 2/23/2000 12:43:48 PM

Brisk, no-bullshit tone?

Has it escaped you that all of my criticisms of your RoE focused on a lack of clarity? Yet it must just be because of your brisk, no-bullshit tone, obviously.

Then again, you're still going on about how I wanted the RoE changed to force transparency when I said several times that I wasn't interested in forcing transparency on an unwilling forum. Please, CalGal, don't talk about what I want unless you're willing to figure out just what that actually is.

1012. CalGal - 2/23/2000 1:17:30 PM

And thank you, I'll bring up whoever I wish, whether or not you happen to like them.

?????

Where did I mention liking them? If you've heard from them, that's fine. Just say so. You happened to mention a few people who are posting here, which cast doubt on the accuracy of the rest of your mentions.

I was pointing out an obvious fact that strong and valued members of the community have departed and we need to replace them.

The people you've mentioned didn't leave the Mote. They left the Fray--for the most part long before the Fray ended. If they don't want to check out the Mote, that's their business. But they didn't weaken this community, which started without them. It'd be nice if everyone from the Fray came back, but we can't judge the strength of this forum just because some people who'd left long before don't show up here.

I have directed people I know at the Mote.

Wonderful. Good. You hadn't mentioned it, so I had no idea whether you have or not. You'll notice I didn't make an accusation. But as I said, sending over 10-20 people might end up with one regular. So the fact that no one has stayed means precisely nothing. Keep those cards and letters coming, and see what happens.

Yes, well, now, you complain every time I try to do that, don't you?

No, I don't. I have mentioned at least five times that I support your efforts to change the rules--even if I disagree with your proposed changes. I think we should check to see if there is a consensus for change before we start drafting changes, but like anything else that's just my opinion. But I completely support discussions, and have said so. Please don't make me go back and find the many times that I said so--although I will, if you insist on misrepresenting things.

1013. Angel-Five - 2/23/2000 1:22:04 PM

Reply in the Inferno.

1014. Angel-Five - 2/23/2000 2:02:41 PM

It might be nice to next discuss, as a group, ways of increasing the size of the Mote community as a whole.

1015. CalGal - 2/23/2000 2:04:44 PM

I can't post on policy or content without you popping right up and posting off a barrage of 'there's no need for us to even consider this' or 'there's no need for such a change'.

Here's the odd thing, Angel--as much as I support your ability to say, "I want a change", I support my own ability to say, "I don't think a change is needed." To me, they are equivalent rights. What I find amusing is the notion that you all think that I say this with any authority, rather than just a simple expression of my opinion. Since I have no authority--as you yourself have said several times--why is it any less my prerogative to disagree with you than it is your prerogative to ask for changes?

So far everyone else has said they like the wording and the emphasis; you're the only one saying that the results weren't worth the effort

No, I'm saying that the results have no connection to the discussion. 300 posts aside, we have the same basic rules we started with. The only thing that changes if we adopt Irv's draft is the wording, not the rules.

I do still have reservations about spelling out procedures--there's no need to commit ourselves to what we do when a rule has been broken.

As for the rest of your posts, I'm not going to play. Have a nice evening.

1016. CalGal - 2/23/2000 2:06:11 PM

Angel,

No, I'm not replying in the Inferno. You started by saying that the Mote is dying, I disagreed. You want to go post non-policy complaints in the Inferno, it's not like I'm going to stop you. Have fun.

1017. Angel-Five - 2/23/2000 2:06:45 PM

Reply in the Inferno.

1018. Angel-Five - 2/23/2000 2:07:40 PM

'Reply in the Inferno' = my reply is in the inferno. Twit.

1019. Seguine - 2/23/2000 10:54:20 PM

"I should be clear--it's my brisk, no bull-shit tone that I like. I wrote it purposefully with that tone. Irv, your tone is more formal and may be what more people prefer."

I certainly prefer Irv's neutral tone. What you term "brisk, no bull-shit" would be considered bossy and condescending to anyone I would consider inviting to this forum. (As would, not incidentally, much of your discourse.) One gets the impression from the existing RoE that the Mote, contrary to Pelle's peculiar avowal to the contrary, is indeed a kindergarten, and that it's presided over by a thirteen year old girl. Who doesn't express herself clearly.

As for the issue of transparency, although I advocated it, my proposed revisions to the RoE didn't address it. (The RoE should be concise enough that people can actually read it without their eyes glazing over.) I still think it's extremely important that transparency be achieved. The best place to do that is probably in the FAQ, which should be linked to the RoE, and probably linked elsewhere as well (e.g., the banner).

As for my proposal re personal info, I have not abandoned it because I think it wouldn't be helpful but because the RoE Irv has written achieves some of my aims and will surely benefit the forum. I'm not sure why anyone's compromises here should mystify you.




1020. Seguine - 2/23/2000 10:54:44 PM

I have changed my mind about one thing. I no longer think it's essential to establish that a consensus for change exists, or even to submit Irv's change proposal to a vote. True, having a vote would be the fair and democratic thing to do. But if the members are generally united in their feeling that the Mote operates best under a benevolent dictatorship (and they seem to be), then the RoE can legitimately be changed by fiat. I advocate for Irv's proposed change on the basis that if no one cares either way (and the lack of participation in this discussion seems indicative, but of course an emailed query would indicate more and should be standard procedure by now), then the rules should be changed per his revisions to reap the benefit they would bring.

1021. Seguine - 2/23/2000 11:36:43 PM

"Summing up: I don't think this policy set-to has squat to do with anything other than the unhappiness of a few people."

As you well know, when a collective situation is unsatisfactory to some part of a population, that cohort either attempts to change the situation or, determining that the costs of the attempt are too high relative to the potential benefits, leaves the collective.

What A-5 (and I, and others, be quite assured) have observed in the Fray, and even more so the Mote, is analagous to the American phenomenon of money abandoning cities for suburbs.

It's claimed by liberals (like Irv) that the rich and the middle class should stick around and contribute their resources to cities for the good of those communities. But when the people who supposedly benefit most from those resources openly resent the folks who ostensibly contribute so much, when their relative numbers swell, and when they make all interaction a power play whose outcome is an impoverishment of the community and nothing more, well, then it's time for the folks with the resources to go elsewhere and allow the proletariat to run things as it sees fit. The fact is, proles want control and power more than they want what their "betters" have to offer, for the cost of those goods in self-respect is too high. Thus we have ghettos, and chat rooms.

The fact that "a few" remaining people in the Mote are unhappy is testament, more than anything else, that the ones with the most to offer have already gone. At some point, even those of us with more modest contributions in hand must consider whether they might be given better elsewhere.

1022. ChristinO - 2/24/2000 2:15:46 AM

Excuse me?

Pardon my sorry ignorant inner city ass but your condescension is unfuckingbelievable. Thank you for blessing us with your intellectual superiority, but you can catch the white flight bus with any others too pretentious to lower themselves to converse with proles.

1023. CalGal - 2/24/2000 2:25:51 AM

Uh, Christin?

It's unbe-fucking-lievable.


You'd know that if you weren't such a prole.

1024. ChristinO - 2/24/2000 2:54:43 AM

Angel to CG:

"You don't think the new rules are any different? So far everyone else has said they like the wording and the emphasis; you're the only one saying that the results weren't worth the effort


I'm curious about this "everyone approves of it" bit since only four people have commented on Irv's draft. Angel, Seguine, CalGal and Indy. That's two for and one opposed and one saying "It's fine but I don't see how it's different than the rules we have now".

I'll now weigh in and say that I prefer the RoE the way they are. I am open to change and Irv's draft is a worthy effort but as I see it the rules haven't changed and I think it's a bit silly to spend all this time on a change that is merely stylistic.

The reason I prefer to have things more rather than less vague is because the more specific your rules the more specific they need to be. We've had this argument before and in an attempt to make things specific Seguine was almost suspended because she crossed a line that was not set out explicitly but which was clearly against the rules so far as most everyone was concerned. I would rather we not end up with a 500 page document listing every single instance of what can and cannot be said. We're mostly grown-ups here. The abuses have been rare and handled responsibly by both thread hosts and the Moderator. If there were some huge problem then I'd be more amenable to making changes but there hasn't been.

1025. Seguine - 2/24/2000 3:06:56 AM

If you consider yourselves proles, then perhaps you are. I count myself among those whose contributions to this forum have been, and will continue to be (if they continue at all), quite modest.

If the prole/money analogy upsets your delicate constitution, Christin, then choose another. Lib arts majors overwhelming engineers. Libertarians swamping progressives. Much of the dynamic is the same. But something resembling a class dynamic is also at work here, like it or not. And some of the very folks who dominate discussion now, CalGal, and have invited folks to leave when they didn't like the way it was run by the royal "we", are the ones who used to bitch loudest about special people dominating the forum. Musical chairs.

There's another thing going on here, too, which I referred to in my party analogy. Ghettos of one sort and another--undergrounds, that sort of thing--can be extremely interesting. (Harlem in the 1920s, for instance.) But after a while the fortuitous mix of types that come together under pressure or by accident sort of homogenizes itself. "Outliers" go away; conformity takes hold.

The interesting mix can't just be recreated at will or by appeals to community obligation. It has to happen via the influx of new blood, and pretty much by accident. Moreover, the invitation of new blood should be as random as possible (the print advertisements you mentioned, CG, are probably an excellent start).

There's nothing unbelievable or condescending about any of this; it's just the facts.

1026. CalGal - 2/24/2000 3:28:18 AM

And some of the very folks who dominate discussion now, CalGal, and have invited folks to leave when they didn't like the way it was run by the royal "we", are the ones who used to bitch loudest about special people dominating the forum.

Actually, what I didn't like is exactly the same notion you are promulgating here--the "betters"/"proles" class structure. I didn't like it then, and I don't like it now.

I have consistently supported the same approach to forum values and management and values from the "inside" (this assumes that I am on the inside) that I did when I was not involved in any way.

It's not that I don't want "your sort", Seguine. In fact, quite the opposite. I want all sorts, and I don't inherently value one kind over the other from a forum perspective. (As an individual, I like and value some more than others, but that's a different story.)

Happily, this means that both you and I are consistent. I can't remember the first time I heard you (and others) spout this idiocy about "classes" of members, but it's probably been at least two years. My position on this has remained unchanged--it still gets me a tad nauseous to see someone seriously recommend that a forum do what it can to encourage a superior class to come in and keep the barbarians in line.

1027. ChristinO - 2/24/2000 4:00:07 AM

Seguine,

It's your idea that's insulting not your analogy.

Since this is and has been comepletely pointless for the most part I'll take my leave.

1028. Seguine - 2/24/2000 4:03:11 AM

Ah, CalGal, it all rings a little hollow from a self-professed elitist who resorts to "we're all equally valuable" populism only when it suits her aspirations.

The class issue in the Mote (or anywhere) is a matter of perception; you can't change that fact, and you can't change perceptions without changing their object (or by spinning and lying about it, but perhaps you realize this has its downside).

You may not like the fact that some participants in the forum command more respect than others; more curiosity, interest, deference, or whatever. I'm not troubled by it. That's the nature of honest human interaction.

It was the inequality, the variability of the Fray, not some imaginary, populist eveness of value, which made it interesting. If this forum fails to attract people whose extraordinary qualities attract others still, it will languish. If it loses people with extraordinary qualities, it will croak. Don't you know that?

1029. Seguine - 2/24/2000 4:04:30 AM

Christin: whatever.

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