Rules are dumb and communities or really any organized gathering of people is retarded and fundamentally flawed. There's always gonna be that one power hungry nigge who's gonna rise up to the top and push their agenda onto everybody else, and then they're gonna start kicking out people who think differently and 'ranking up' people who make them feel good. I know this shit sounds gay but it actually happens, there are stinky nerds that do this.
For example, there's one chatroom full of tech enthusiasts that succumbed to nothing, they don't talk about anything really, but when someone comes in and starts posting anime stuff, they get banned right away.
However, this stupid thing works, it's how you build large communities. By setting strict and pointless rules based on personal taste, you attract people who think this adds to "quality", and by giving them moderator, and later administrator permissions, they stay for pretty much as long as they have these privileges.
If you have a totally anarchic service with little to no moderation, most people would shitpost in it for some short period of time, and then leave. However, a place with little to no moderation and interesting people thrives in it's own way, it lets people build friendships without much to be afraid of. New ideas can manifest and it's really the more natural way to make friends.
Break your next community by breaking rules they didn't think to make yet. See how their autistic admins and mods show their worst selves. You learn by breaking things, and everyone can learn from disobedience. Kill niggers, fuck elves, and hang trannies. Shoot midgets too.
Comments
May 21, 2020 03:58
Rule followers are not ethical or just people, their willingness to follow rules comes from their desire to express their frustrations through violence upon people who they are allowed to abuse when they are in a position of power or have the ear of a person in position of power. Women and weak men are often these types.
Moderators need to justify their violence upon the community. note, these people do not care why they are punishing people, they only care about excuses to justify it to the greater community. Online we see this expressed as moderators making generic rules. These rules are vague and could apply to anything but they sound respectable and allow the moderator to maintain their image of being a just character.
The reality of internet moderators. Because being a "Moderator" on an internet service such as a video game requiring a good chunk of time and constant attention to the website, the moderator is often a small world, little ideas type of person, their illusion of being a protector of a community is all that drives them in life and they try to find "threats" all the time. From past experience I found moderators work jobs which do not require a great amount of abstract thinking, they are occupied by learning how to obey systems such as learning the rules to a board game, learning the rules to a framework of political or philosophical thinking etc. The problem with these people is that they are unable to think outside the box, they do not understand that a philosophical frame work of though was created by a man, same with the rules to a board game, they internalise systems as if they were base truths of reality.
The cycle of creativity to stagnation can be explained by this type of person mentioned above. Once a community is formed, the rules are not exact, people push and pull at the structure either making it better or worse, if this community grows beyond a certain size, you will start to get people coming in that start to believe the creators of the community are some sort of divine entity and derive a sense of community through their actions. The leaders then naturally will give these people moderator positions which causes the community to enter a stage of stagnation. These people will uphold the leaders positions by using the tools of the community to exclude people they feel "don't fit in". As the people who "don't fit in" leave, the community enters a cycle of decline. If the "community" is not a community but a forum for a product, this is not a problem due to the leaders having a monetary interest in keeping people around to sell more products.