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Reddit was infinitely more valuable (to the user) when it lead a hands on approach. I understand somethings should and must be removed from the platform but it is undoubtedly an echo chamber, almost unparalleled at this point. It's value to provide viewpoint, insight and discussion is almost nonexistent at this point. This announcement certainly doesn't bode well for anyone hoping to find it a platform that fosters better discussion.

    > it is undoubtedly an echo chamber, almost unparalleled 
    > at this point.
What does "unparalleled" mean here? It sounds melodramatic.
English (UK, US and others?) meaning something like "having no parallel; especially : having no equal or match"
Hard to find a worse or larger echo chamber than Reddit, no? Seems like a good use of “unparalleled” to me.
Do you often debate white nationalists outside of Reddit? I don't (granted I do live in Canada). I would love it if Reddit were closer to an "echo chamber".
I assume you mean hands off approach?

Can you elaborate on the connection between this announcement and the platform's value as a platform that fosters discussion you perceive? Do you mean content moderation has turned the site into an echo chamber?

Reddit still feels like a biker bar to me. I don't know how many important conversations hinge on the ability to use racial slurs. My naive take would be: few, if any.

The average age on Reddit is probably 12 anyways, and those tweens upvote factual errors, more readily than correct information. That's on any topic, political or not.

The rate of important problem-solving on Reddit is a big fat goose-egg: Reddit is a counterexample to "the wisdom of crowds."

> I don't know how many important conversations hinge on the ability to use racial slurs. My naive take would be: few.

But that wouldn't be content policy, that would be tone policy. You can say incredible racist things without using any slurs. If you want to police the content, you'll outlaw saying racist things (or rather: things you perceive to be racist). If you want to police the tone, you'll outlaw the use of slurs, insults etc, but allow the content.

I assume that Reddit has an issue with the content, not its presentation.

I wish the average age on Reddit was 12. That would explain a lot of things but it's far from true.

The biggest group on Reddit are millennials, those between 25 and 35 years approx. And it's pretty sad because they don't want to have a civil conversation with anyone. They only want to hear what they already think/believe.

The real value Reddit has it's the small niche subreddits that fly under the radar. Small communities that are not dragged by the hive mentality.

And what defines "hate"? Are they going be as consistent with the content of gangsta rappers? I'd wager no.

It really is sad to see how hiveminded reddit has become, particularly with the city subreddits. Any person with a dissenting viewpoint either gets banned or gets downvoted to oblivion.

And not everyone shares the same viewpoint on who the "bad people" are out there. I, for one, feel that thug brutality is a bigger problem than police brutality, and I have my own reasoning behind it. But an idea like this can never be stated on reddit because it's simply too radical. And the more people that use this platform, the more people are going to mimic whatever the popular narrative is playing at that point in time. (Remember covid?)

And it's affected my friends too. It's almost like I'm in Invasion of the Bodysnatchers Movie.

We are unable to apply reason and consistency to any of what's happening, including speech, hiring policies, policing, laws, moderation, etc. Same for "gangster" culture that is absolutely degenerate and probably a huge cause of all sorts of societal ills for many groups, and yet it's being given a free-pass due to "reasons". It's quite sad that we're so powerless collectively as a society to criticize things that are capable of, and currently are, ruining entire generations.
If you say this on reddit, you'll likely either be banned or downvoted so it can't be read. It's not so much censoring as people not wanting to read it.

Edit: wow! HN is doing this too! The parent just got flagged.

No wonder Gab, 8kun, 4chan and Voat are seeing a healthy level of activity and consistent growth.
Jesus, so many barely concealed dog whistles in one post. “Gangsta rappers”, “thug brutality”, mate just say what you mean.
> feel that thug brutality is a bigger problem than police brutality

That phrasing, as if we had to choose between two forms of brutality, is the problem itself. Police brutality doesn't decrease other forms of violence.

On the contrary, it legitimizes it and contextualizes it as a war. This has been exhaustively studied for the past half century. It is a sociological problem which has sociological solutions, which a functioning police force is a large part of. Perhaps it is easier to see this pattern if you look at other countries than your own.

If you find yourself accused of taking sides with hate speech, this framing in the form of a false choice might be a big part of why.

> And what defines "hate"? Are they going be as consistent with the content of gangsta rappers? I'd wager no.

Probably because the content from "gangsta rappers" doesn't instigate brutality that leverages a power imbalance the way cultural and systemic hatred drive police brutality.

> thug brutality is a bigger problem than police brutality

It's objectively not, and I won't hide the reasoning either: police brutality is the end result of power-induced amplification of (as noted earlier) cultural and systemic hatred against minority/protected classes. "Thug" brutality on the other hand... isn't even a thing.

p.s. Your implicit analogy between "gangsta rappers" and "thug" brutality suggests you see "thug" and "black" as analogous; not sure if that's what you were going for, but it certainly reads that way. And since you're asserting "thug brutality" as being worse than power-imbalanced crime - more specifically since you're stating your perception of black-on-black crime as worse than police-on-black crime - it's important for you to understand why the movement itself is so focused on police brutality and systemic bigotry. Circa 2016: https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation-now/2016/07/27/wh...

You're missing his point; what defines "hateful" is mostly subjective and is always influenced by the watchmen interests. And what is acceptable today may be considered hateful tomorrow, in fact back in the 1990s "gangsta rap" was considered hateful.
> back in the 1990s "gangsta rap" was considered hateful.

By whom?

Yay, more censorship!!
I blocked Reddit on my computer but I decided to unlock it temporarily to read this.

"u/kn0thing has resigned from our board to fill his seat with a Black candidate"

Now I regret it. I despise this kind of actions taken based on the colour of the skin/nationality/ethnicity/religion.

    > I despise this kind of actions taken 
    > based on the colour of the skin
Are you sure you aren't applying a rule, on this occasion, without thinking it through? Skin-colour is relevant to the job here: it's a guarantee that the board member will have first-hand experience dealing with the issues Alexis thinks Reddit has mishandled.
Not necessarily guaranteed, not every person with a certain skin color has experienced the same thing... but you can probably find someone that has if that is what you are selecting for.
True. I actually considered clarifying that. But if we're being pragmatic, the chances are awfully good that a new "black" board member will understand the issues.

Have to say, unless the board member is also a prickly character, there's a high likelihood, even with an understanding, that he or she won't really rock the boat anyways.

>not every person with a certain skin color has experienced the same thing

True, but try finding an Afro-American that haven't faced racism.

The notion that only representatives from those who suffer racism or oppression can be the ones to get us out of it, is an attitude that hinders all of us from making progress against it.
Putting people that don't have an intimate understanding of the problem sounds like a great recipe for success.

Sure, a plumber might have the solution to the halting problem, but I'd trust someone who's spent a good deal of their life interacting with the problem instead

Having suffered racism doesn't qualify you for fighting it.

If all black have suffered racism why there's racist black people out there? Would those who look down at Asians or South Americans have the solution for racism?

You defeat your own cause by insisting that only people of the same race can help solve it.

"Would you refuse to be treated by a doctor for cancer, unless he himself has had cancer?"

I would far prefer, other factors being equal, treatment from the doctor who has first-hand experience of my malady.
I guess doctors who treat end stage dementia need to have had it too?

The wish to have a person of the same race solve the problems of race are understandable. But I would encourage you all to hope for the better situation which is that anyone with good ideas, regardless of race, should be considered as equally as someone else to solve our problems.

Because, I have the feeling that your position leads to bad side effects. Like having very fragile victories. Like black voters (or young people) being very fickle and not turning out to vote because the person who might have good ideas doesn't look like them. Like not engaging or believing what someone says just because of their skin color.

The very things you're fighting against. Take a longer term sustainable position and you will be better for it.

    > I guess doctors who treat end stage 
    > dementia need to have had it too?
I did specify "other factors being equal." A brain disease is clearly a special case, since the real advantages bestowed by first-hand experience (eg: better empathy, fuller understanding of symptoms) are negated by the doctor also becoming a mental vegetable. Further, unless you equate being "black" with having brain damage, how would that example even apply to the original issue?

The remainder of your comment rails against a position I do not hold, and did not claim to hold. My best guess is that you were thinking of Affirmative Action? Affirmative Action, as I answered someone else in this thread, is its own issue.

Steve Jobs was treated by someone who didn't know anything about cancer; that didn't turn out well
I am sure and I think we shouldn't fall into this kind of traps.

First of all it doesn't guarantee anything. They will pick someone black with the same line of thought that they already have on the board. They won't be selecting, let's say, a black conservative. So in the end, their skin colour would be less important than their ideology but at the same time it'll be the decisive factor, which is stupid. Just as stupid as it would be to fire someone not white to hire a white person.

I'm saying this as an immigrant and hence a minority. I wouldn't even think about taking a job where they want me because of where I come from. It would make me feel like if I had some kind of disability or special needs and I couldn't do the same thing as others.

Race problems won't stop until people understand that the more emphasis you put into race, the more you'll divide people.

Yep, nominate Thomas Sowell to the Reddit board and see what happens!
You are assuming that:

1. a nonwhite has SURELY experienced racism first-hand at least once in his life 2. a nonwhite cannot be racist 3. a white cannot have the required sensitivity with the subject

Wow. A selection criteria based solely on a person's skin color is what racism is all about.

This whole post is weird. Based on the tone they seem to think they are combating racism. But really the CEO of a company just announced that they are looking for a new candidate. Requirements? - No particular requirements, except having the right skin color.
We cannot know what the requirements are other than the one announced here.
Your implied reverse-racism argument just doesn't hold. Are you telling me that there are no capable African-Americans who could fill that board position? If not, the what are you arguing? That increasing the representation of historically oppressed minority groups is bad?
Maybe that choosing people based on their ethnicity or skin color is wrong, whatever they might be?
> Are you telling me that there are no capable African-Americans who could fill that board position?

Of fucking course not.

> If not, the what are you arguing? That increasing the representation of historically oppressed minority groups is bad?

This might be difficult for you to understand but explicitly hiring someone with a particular skin colour is the fucking definition of racism.

>This might be difficult for you to understand but explicitly hiring someone with a particular skin colour is the fucking definition of racism.

The only difference between what they're doing now and what they did before is the skin color requirement is explicit instead of implicit. Only hire white guys? Meritocracy! Decide you want to hire 1 black guy? Racist!

What is your proof of an implicit skin color requirement?
This is a bit odd to me. I have have siblings who are married to high achieving blacks and having talked to them the issue is more complex than "white people are all inherently racist and don't want to hire minorities". There are cultural problems in the black community in terms of how educating oneself is viewed. To be clear: if you strive academically you are "acting like a white man". Not only do I applaud and know individuals who are able to shut out that garbage mentality but it is awesome to see them get into high paying engineering roles. They deserve it.
You make it sound as if they were intentionally only hiring white guys before -factoring skin colour in any way in their hiring process. Are there reasons to think that was the case?

Because if not, even if there was a statistical imbalance in the hires according to skin colour -or any other property that should be irrelevant, gender, sexual orientation etc-, do you think companies should go out of their way to try and compensate for that imbalance instead of only factoring in properties relevant to the job?

Hey, we are in agreement! It was really bad and racist when Blacks, Hispanics, and Asians people were excluded because of the color of there skin. Hopefully we agree it's really bad and racist when Whites, Hispanics, and Asians are excluded because of the color of their skin. You do agree, right?
Ah yes, who better to make decisions related to the problems of racism in Reddit than a group of white people. And intentionally including a non white person is in that discussion is actually racist.

I think the "reverse racism" argument shows that you haven't read a huge amount in this topic. Which is surprising given the focus of these issues in the past couple of weeks.

You're discounting a group of people as unfit by nothing more than their race/skin color. That's racist, by definition.

None of this will ever be solved as long as race and physical characteristics continue to be of importance (regardless of what "side" you're on) over someone's actions and character.

I really really implore you to read up on this stuff more. It's clear that you haven't approached the subject of racism with humility, humbleness, or even the possibility that you aren't the best person to know about the issues that other people face.

You are right in a way, I am discounting a person who hasn't felt the effects of racism to fully understand racism and give a good opinion on it. Which seems like a pretty good benchmark? I think your response to this enforces that those who haven't felt it aren't good judges of it.

How is it clear? Is your claim that only certain groups feel racism? And are these groups defined by their race? If so, isn't that inherently racist?

What is the basis for your assumption that I have not felt racism, which you seem to be using to say that my perspective is not as valid?

>Is your claim that only certain groups feel racism? And are these groups defined by their race? If so, isn't that inherently racist?

No, obviously not. Otherwise it would be, for example, inherently racist to say that black slaves in 1700 felt racism whereas white colonists did not. In fact, the statement is both obviously true and obviously not racist.

Then I would like that person to clarify how they judge who "hasn't felt the effects of racism", and how they're applying that to me.
No-one is talking about you. They're talking about broadly-defined groups of people (e.g. white people, black people).
> "It's clear that you ... aren't the best person to know about the issues"

That was directed at me specifically. Why are you answering for them?

> "discounting a person who hasn't felt the effects of racism"

That's the claim. How do they know someone hasn't felt the effects? Based on their race? So they're using nothing but race to define and determine who is what - which is quite literally racist.

Consider the following.

I suffer from experiencing the results of x-ism from class y in power. I am the only member of this marginalized group in society, and the only one who has "felt the effects of [x]-ism". I require you to put me in power to absolve the effects of x-ism through methods that include the marginalization (but not x-ism) of groups who are neither suffering from the effects of x-ism or are x-ists themselves.

Do you see the reductio ad absurdum?

If you go out to search someone who can make better decisions about how to fight racism, you will have higher chances of finding that person in a black community, and that is true and okay.

But if you say part of the requirement is to be black, then that is racism.

Making a decision basing on a race. Automatically disqualifying people from other races is racism.

I'd say the opposite; not going out of your way to hire people with some specific skin colours is racist.

It wouldn't be if all the people with different skin colours had an equal standing, but they don't, and have a history inequality.

If you purposely ignore the inequality, you're perpetuating it. You're working with a faulty definition of racism.

To do so would mean discriminating against the races you're not choosing. This is, by definition, racist. Also the mere fact that inequality exists is not evidence of racism.

I find it very troubling to see that race is increasingly the primary selection criteria by people who want to progressively "eliminate" racism. It might be good-intentioned but it's ultimately incompatible and doomed to failure. The only solution is to go beyond such attributes and focus on actions and character instead.

If the inequality is along racial lines, it's tautological that racism exists. You don't need more evidence than that

Sure, they should also get representation on the board from other races too. Can they do that without specifically looking for people from those races?

Are they not already hiring board member without considering race? How's that gone? How do black people get consideration based on actions and character as board members, when said experience is gated by connections?

What do you mean by inequality? Employees not perfectly representing the population? At what level of geographic census does this matter? Any why did you choose racial lines? What about other factors like education which show far more significance?

If a certain group indexes higher or lower in a profession, why is that a problem? Do you consider NBA and NFL teams to also have inequality? By your definition, you must.

>not going out of your way to hire people with some specific skin colours is racist.

Sorry to be painfully cliche but this is some straight up war is peace, freedom is slavery, ignorance is strength stuff.

Most of that domain (if I can call it that) includes downright upside down definitions.

We might as well start a Ministry of Equality at this point, and it'd go around dishing out punishments to those that aren't as "equal" as others.

Those things are all about exploiting ambiguity though. Such an argument will never be used to say that black people should step down so that a white person can take their place
How far does one have to go "out of their way" and who is to judge if one has gone enough? By this logic, racism is fully the responsibility of the employer. Are all employers responsible, then, for homelessness, drug addiction, cancer and all other issues of our society, and should go "out of their way" every day to address them? If not, then who is to judge who should go out of their way and when? If employers are responsible then employers should attempt to resolve all the problems of our society, all the time, which is, a priori, impossible. Hence, I don't think your argument is correct or constructive.
I would say they should go out of their way to solve those issues?

They might not be successful all the time, but they will be some of the time. You can treat their success as floats and doubles, rather than booleans.

Today by government regulation, corporations do take measures for all those problems. Ever seen a warning that a product is carcinogenic?

No it is not. This is not the innocent, pristine untouched garden of eden before Adam and Eve ate the apple. This is a society where the ancestors of one group of people auctioned off the ancestors of another group of people like cattle. This is a society where 38 years ago, the KKK last lynched someone. This is a society, where 30% of all black males in Alabama permanently lost their right to vote. This is a society where you get a slap on the wrist if you are a rich white coke-head but get years in prison if you happen to be black, poor and are caught with a bong.

The counter-example to your argument: Imagine a company with a serious sexual harrassment problem, where men abused and raped female staff. You argue that in such a situation, giving a voice to a female victim is sexism! No!

...in the United states, which contains roughly 5% of the world's population. Reddit isn't just used by Americans.
john_alan asserted that hiring where having a specific skin color is required is racist hiring. Your response is black people have been treated poorly so it isn't racism. Your argument more reads like a justification for treating people different based on race rather than this specific action isn't racist.

Would you be willing to give an alternative definition of racism?

This sort of aggression is not acceptable on HN, and we ban accounts that do it, so please don't.

https://news.ycombinator.com/newsguidelines.html

So you’re not allowed use swear words?
That's not the issue.
What is the issue? I just got flagged for explaining that they're not aiming for equality but equity.

I find this odd. Iagree with the move sometimes you need to do the wrong thing to get the right outcomes.

If you were flagged, that was most likely by regular users, not moderators.

The issue with the comment above is that it was (a) a personal attack and (b) fulminating.

It seems a bit silly to say "reverse racism" doesn't hold when race is an explicit criteria for the job. Maybe this is still net positive for all the good that could come out of it, but clearly racist to say certain races need not apply.

Imagine I'm selling clothes to upper middle class people in Iowa and someone applies to be a salesman or a general manager. "Oh sorry, I'm really looking for a white person here because I feel we've mismanaged our relationship to white consumers in the past." That seems like pretty clear cut racism to me. I don't see we should apply different logic just because the races or jobs are different.

But people of all races are required to know white people culture to attend to our needs.

In the situation you give, being white offers no special qualifications.

Culture is not race or skin color, nor dependent on them.
Why does the current generation have any obligations with right to sins (slavery etc) committed long before they were born? I don’t believe that sins can be inherited. It’s now well over half a century since any remaining discriminatory laws where abolished in the US, and longer than that in most of Europe. Government affirmative action has existed for decades. Let everyone compete on their own merits.
The odds of the best fit for the position being an african american are quite low.

Positions should be assigned to people on the basis of their ability, not their skin colour.

Thats the point. They want equity, not equality.
There is no such thing as "reverse racism". What a silly term.
This is the epitome of corporate virtue-signalling. The new candidate will surely end racism completely from Reddit.
I deleted my reddit account after I saw this announcement. That website has been on a downward slide ever since Tencent got some ownership and it’s become very evident Reddit is being used to push some ideologies.
I deleted my reddit account too. Reddit is becoming an editorialised website where people propose content slowly but surely. Promoting sub they entirely control and moderate heavily. I used to visit reddit daily for more than a decade. Reddit is dead to me.
Reddit's downward spiral has not changed since Tencent. It has always been like this and has nothing to do with Tencent and everything to do with the administrators/owners/boardmembers and the few moderator friends they let control most of the big subs. Go read what actual moderators (not the admin-friend-mods but everyone else) says about this and it will have nothing to do with China.

Could you not have left Reddit on Reddit instead of taking it with you here? There's enough China-hate here already.

The China “hate” is simply a result of the amount the CPC has meddled with American affairs
About time. It is almost impossible to browse the front page without seeing some hateful content.

And I am not talking about the political stuff. You can upload video of a random dude getting beaten to death, make some absurd claims like "the guy is a pedophile caught in the act" and watch the hateful comments roll in.

Basically, you can make any claims and the ones that keep people's blood boiling seems very popular way of getting clicks and upvotes.

maybe you should unsubscribe from subs you don't like. plenty of people like violent subs, like justicesurved or others.
Mate I got news for you:

they are getting so popular they are all over the front page.

I sometimes wonder if Reddit has resulted in a generation completely unable of critical thinking.

I don't understand what you mean by frontpage. it is made only from posts from subs you subscribed to. if you don't like it, unsubscribe.

or the thing that bothers you is that other people like it and want to see it

I get /r/politics all the time recommended to me, filled with hateful content. I can't "block" it even though I've looked.
old.reddit.com is the only way to reddit.
You're not alone! I feel exactly the same way. Not only the submission and upvoting of mean-spirited, tasteless content, but the utter sense of entitlement when someone tries to remove it: "it's our right to watch videos of people dying and being maimed!"

At the same time, it seems impossible to find any sentence on Reddit that isn't just a few expletives mixed together with a stock catch phrase.

That combination (ie: of depravity and vapid language) makes me snort with disgust at the idea that people conduct "serious debate" on Reddit.

Maybe we should just embrace the concept of an Internet License, after all.

> Maybe we should embrace the concept of an Internet License, after all :(

Likewise. Regulation of communication is beginning to look like the only way out of this trap.

I don't know about others, but for me the "top" subreddits are filled with things that I consider very hateful and it goes way passed the "hate" radar of most of the mods due to the politics.

E.g. I was on the main gifs subreddit the other day when a gif of a wall being erected around the Whitehouse was shown. The amount of vitriol, hatred and borderline violent/violence-encouraging comments I saw that was at the top and mostly directed at conservatives/Donald Trump was just too much. It was truly hateful, but because it was directed at the right groups/people, it went unpunished and mostly upvoted.

Here's hoping that all hate and violent stuff like that gets removed from reddit, instead of just having it aimed at "the right", because that's their goal here really. Maybe we can then have an honest conversation about left/right politics.

I'm not sure if this is good or bad. Maybe time will tell.

One thing popped up in my mind was YouTube demonetized a lot of videos that are not 'family-friendly', and eventually destroyed a lot of great content creators.

To me, it seems like a combination of childish-authoritarian beliefs that the world will change for the better once, and only once, you stop anyone from saying anything controversial at all. Once nobody is able to disagree, bad things won't exist any more.
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It’s all about doing what you can when you can. Please take this acerbic, hyperbolic attitude somewhere else.
I hope the irony is not lost on you when you ask me to leave this platform for disagreeing with you.
I hope you realize the irony of the fact that you're posting on a forum much more heavily moderated than Reddit.
Isn't your own reply but a hyperbole? Reddit can do much better than this. The person suggested it should be a platform for open discussion, including controversial topics, rather than becoming yet another China. The person was saying you cannot stop violence by shutting up people.
What does this actually do though? There are countless examples of hiding disagreeable/hateful/unwanted speech leading to no reduction in action, if not actually increasing it.
I deleted my reddit account. Reddit is becoming an editorialised website where people propose content, slowly but surely. Promoting sub they entirely control and moderate heavily. I used to visit reddit daily for more than a decade. Reddit is dead to me.
Sadly Reddit's announcements have a long history of verbosity, with little to no action taken afterwards. It's a long post but you'll notice very little in the way of actual measurable goals.

The comments in that thread are very telling of how Reddit's admins have chosen to wring their hands, or lament over their lack of involvement in the past rather than address issues, policies or tools.

Ellen K. Pao was right all along. Also if the replies in here are representative of Silicon Valley as a whole, damn. It just reminds me of the stereotypical too-smart-for-their-own-good hacker who is prone to making sweeping generalisations and extrapolations in domains that lie outside of their own experience or expertise. I know I'm prone to this and I've met a lot of arrogant smart people who fall into this category. I really think that there is an empathy problem here. Sometimes we just need to shut up and listen instead of looking at the world in binary terms.
Isn't the whole point of this upcoming policy change to prevent people being able to hear racist voices?
This is the exact kind of gotcha look-at-me-i-am-smart rethoric that I was talking about, you do not engage with what I wrote. "He said 'listen' without technically qualifying it further so let's reframe this so that listen also covers listening to racist view points, something orthogonal to the essence of his post, gotcha!". We both know what you are doing here, and honestly I expect better from people. I have no idea why you are doing that however, I'm interested in what led you to reply in this manner.
Kitsune, your rhetorics are high on arrogance and low on substance.
(comment deleted)
Here's the thing: forums are not publications. Forums are discourse, so it's not a platform, and discourse cannot exist with muzzles, and must operate in tune with real world consequences.

That's how you know you're having a conversation. It's a conversation when there are no boundaries that render topics off limits.

Expressly forbidden subject matter with little justification other than personal desires to shift goal posts represents the destruction of personal agency, at which point the value of discourse and interaction becomes dubious.

You can see this emerge in many stifled areas, where self appointed referees march in and police activity down to a single word or punctuation mark. The interactions are sterilized and dead. To say they'd been rendered kid friendly might be charitable.

Reddit's no exception. Imgur as well. It's been obvious for years that the discourse is molded and extruded to fit into a sentiment of entertainment that strikes one's cognition as uncanny. There's curation beyond the natural "organic" crowdsourced voting that assists in ranking the value of participation.

Facebook, while moderated, and wrapped in the slimiest of user interfaces still demonstrably rings as augmented discourse, but true discourse among familiar peers, no less. Twitter as well.

Instagram and Snapchat are mostly channels for drug dealing and prostitution, by contrast. Something twitter chased away at one point, and Facebook has intimidated with seemingly unwitting blunders originating from all angles, such that teens and parents blow up their own ploys regularly, never mind other criminal elements.

Anyway, it's laughable that we worry about a word like nigger, uniquely American in its sensitivity, when there are many other ways individuals deliver serious and real harm beyond exclusion and hurt feelings, by way of discussion.

Feel free to regulate another platform to death, and watch people vote with their feet, until real laws completely ruin the internet and prevent natural discussion with honest consequences, but perhaps worthwhile risks.

> Also if the replies in here are representative of Silicon Valley as a whole, damn.

The replies in here are coming from all over the world. People assume that HN comments are representative of SV and come to extremely distorted conclusions, because that's quite false. In fact only about 10% of the HN community is in SV and the majority of those are not posting to HN in the middle of the night.

I want to write more about this misconception, because it's common, poorly understood, and unfortunately damaging.

Readers frequently misinterpret other comments because they have no idea of how frequently national lines are being crossed on HN. They misinterpret a conventional comment coming from a different country or region for an extreme comment coming from some other place—usually their own, because that's what we naturally calibrate to in the absence of differentiating data—or else they assume everyone is in SV, which is an illusion as I described above.

This is particularly significant in flamewars about race, like this one. Many HN comments that count as racist, or point that way, in a mainstream American context are being posted by users from countries that don't have the US's fraught history with race. These users are looking at race issues in the US from the distant outside, and often they have poor intuition for the depth and complexity of the issues, the intensity of the feeling around them, and the conventions by which Americans debate them.

Because these comments get widely assumed to all be coming from American commenters (which, to be sure, some are, but many are not—certainly the majority in this thread were not), suddenly the population sample appears highly skewed, and much more extreme, to readers who are familiar with the US.

Some people will say 'racist comments are racist, period', but I bet that they, along with everyone else, make many fine-grained adjustments of interpretation when they have information about someone coming from a different background. For example, they would be more likely to perceive a comment as ignorant, and respond by educating the other person, if they think of them as foreign—and more likely to perceive them as an enemy if they come from nearby, even if the comment is otherwise identical.

It's likely that many of these adjustments aren't even conscious. Humans are deeply conditioned to react to nuances in social cues, and foreignness is one of the biggest categories of social cues. Unless we're arguing about specifically national disputes (which is a different sort of flamewar) we make extra allowances in such cases. Unfortunately, most of this nuance is lost in the stream of HN comments, and it puts extra strain on divisive discussions. The social machine runs without the lubricant it typically relies on, leading to excess friction, heat, and damage. This lack of lubricant gets experienced as a defect in the machine—which it is, in a sense, but it gets misinterpreted.

While your comment is eloquent I have no idea which sweeping generalizations you see as problematic. What problem would empathy solve and how would it solve it?
This week the NYT apologized[0] for publishing an op-ed[1] from a Republican senator which stated something (using the military to restore civil order) which has broad - if not majority - support among Americans[2]. Some columnists apologetically said that giving Sen. Tom Cotton a stage could be justified on the basis of giving that to other enemies of the US in the past, such as Iran and the Taliban[3].

It seems like in the USA circa 2020 there's a pretty narrow legitimate range of opinions, stepping out of which immediately earns you *cist expletives.

[0] https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/04/business/new-york-times-o...

[1] https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/03/opinion/tom-cotton-protes...

[2] https://www.forbes.com/sites/nicholasreimann/2020/06/02/58-o...

[3] https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/04/opinion/tom-cotton-op-ed-...

Seems that a new thing these days is that we need to be lectured on what the content mean. And that we are incapable of understanding ourselves. When did we get so dum that some individuals/groups gets to do the explaining. What makes us sure that these actually have the right answer. IMHO, I’m not sure.
Why are you mis-representing what the NYT did? Are you just hoping people don't read your citations. From your citation

> For example, the published piece presents as facts assertions about the role of “cadres of left-wing radicals like antifa”; in fact, those allegations have not been substantiated and have been widely questioned. Editors should have sought further corroboration of those assertions, or removed them from the piece. The assertion that police officers “bore the brunt” of the violence is an overstatement that should have been challenged. The essay also includes a reference to a “constitutional duty” that was intended as a paraphrase; it should not have been rendered as a quotation.

The NYT didn't apologize for publishing an Op-Ed from a Senator. It apologized for doing it's job badly and publishing materially false statements as fact.

It's worth noting that Senator Cotton went on to publicly call for the extra judicial killing of protestors. Which, if we're really so concerned about legitimate opinions, I would suggest murdering protestors would have more of a chilling effect than choosing not to publish their op-eds.

The "opinions" section is not for fact checked objective pieces of journalistic integrity; it's for stating the personal opinions of important people, whether factually right or wrong.

My opinion remains that NYT had to apologize and take corrective steps for letting a stray wave penetrate the echo chamber.

I've read quite a few NYT opinion pieces with completely false claims in them in the past, some of them racist (against British people!).

They only start to care now? I thought the point of an op-ed is that it's like a blog. The publishers don't interfere with its content and thus it can be totally wrong.

> It apologized for doing it's job badly and publishing materially false statements as fact.

Does that mean they'll also be apologising for The 1619 Project?

So many people here in HN are so scared that they cant be pushing onto the racism boundary. They are the snowflakes!!!! OHHHH THE HURT! WHY CANT I BE RACIST ANYMORE!!! WHERE IS MY FREEDOM TO OFFEND?!!!?!?!?
I do not believe that there is strength in racial diversity when every instance of multiracial proximity in history and today results in dysfunction and violence.

I believe that threatening my (predominantly White) nation with millions of foreigners is extremely hostile and hateful.

I wish nothing more for than my children and their children to grow up in a place of peace, harmony, belonging, unity, joy and fulfilment. I want them to love themselves, know their history, respect their ancestors. I want them to extoll the virtues of our people and to enjoy the many fruits of European culture.

I want for them a place where they may pursue their potential, free of the countless difficulties and dangers that the multiracial option, free of the daily hysteria and thinly-veiled anti-White hatred that my generation has experienced all our lives as the West demonstrates the unending division and tension that is inevitable with multiracialism.

I am motivated by nothing but love for my people, my family, and myself. I do not hate Africans or Jews. Or Chinese or Muslims. I do not wish for their children to grow up in awful conditions, I only wish for my children not to.

I owe strangers in foreign places nothing; I owe my family everything.

Is this view 'hate'? It certainly doesn't seem like it to me. Am I to understand that wanting a homeland for my people to exist in peace and prosperity is hateful, while the non-Whites openly celebrating violence against Whites, our dispossession, depression, and extinction, somehow act outside the definition of 'hate'?

'Hate' is not an objective term. It means nothing unless you also define what you hate. All-too-often, that thing is White people.

Just seen my other comment was downvoted to hell. Just shows the position of many users of this forum. Why can we not have an area where more people are represented and know fine well they wont be targetted with abuse? If this means banning racist or fascist outlets / users then so be it.
Unfortunate. Looks like there will soon be a crackdown on any HBD discussion.
What's HBD in this context? Urban Dictionary failed me I think.
Human biodiversity, a PC term to rebrand racism. Brought to you by the snowflakes that rebranded nazis and neoconfederates as the "alt-right".

Some discussion: https://www.reddit.com/r/BadSocialScience/comments/3cdz2z/rc...

Yep, that HBD-loving subreddit was actually called /r/coontown and was actually worse than you might guess, if possible.

Other commenters in this thread seem to miss it. Says more about them than about reddit, which is much better than it used to be. If anyone misses the coontown crowd they can easily catch up with them at "free speech" havens like voat and gab, which are both worse than most people would guess.

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Is HBD verboten because it's factually wrong, or because even if it's right it's repugnant to talk about such things?

If you believe it's factually wrong, is that belief falsifiable? Is there some sort of study or experiment that could convince you otherwise? I'm not talking "plausible" or "morally correct" experiment here - if it would take blinding a few hundred infants of different races and raising them without non-automated human contact and comparing outcomes, that's fine - but it would be nice to know what level of evidence you'd be looking for.

But hey, I'm just some guy who's looking forward to Embryo Selection [0], which kind of depends on some part of intelligence variance being genetic, and who thinks Blank Slate/Tabula Rasa is pretty dead [1]. Maybe I'm wrong, but from that perspective your BadSocialScience link is pretty questionable.

0: https://www.gwern.net/Embryo-selection

1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nature_versus_nurture

The comments in this thread are evidence of HN's shared, yet latent, trajectory with Reddit. It's been a fun 10 years, idiots.
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The threads comments are made up of users in popularity of biggest political subs in order.

/r/Politics, r/ChapoTrapHouse, r/TopMindsofReddit, last are a few of /r/The_Donald. The first 3 would love all conservatives gone. ChapoTrapHouse embraces communism and doesn't care either left or right (Except Sanders). TopMinds is sub dedicated to attacking conservatives.

And why is Steve calling out Conservatives aka, r/The_Donald. He considers all conservatives hateful now just for looking at problems differently? Wow, rude.

Lets look at how stupid this Hate argument is for different political views. All Live Matters vs Black Lives Matter, Its a right vs left argument. The right thinks All Lives isn't racist, because it includes every race. Black Lives Matter thinks Black lives are being targeted more, and needs dedicated attention. Both sides are for the same issue, stop police abuses, but Reddit Admins think the right are hate filled because they look at the problem differently than the left.

BLM is now throwing Antifa towards the cops, Antifa is actually causing violence. Antifa hangs out in ChapoTrapHouse, and CTH has been called out and punished by reddit admins a few times, but CTH is still allowed, The_Donald isn't. Topminds actively brigades and attacks conservative subs, and the Reddit Admins ignore it.

If you Want to stop hate, first realize most people on the right and left want mostly the same things, (excluding the far left and far right). Concentrate on the issues, not the people. Almost all the hate on Reddit is either towards groups of people on the forums of the opposite part they dont like. You know who you can hate on reddit and not get banned? White men, White women (Karens) and Christians. /r/All routinely has comedy, art, memes that are targeting conservatives, /r/News and /r/Politics has been banning conservatives for even participating.

Lets not pretend that Reddit cares about Hate, Steve allows hate, as long as its towards conservatives...

which antifa is this?

The antifa that is "Anti Fascist" meaning PRO Democracy?

or the antifa that is the invisible boogieman tag that the far right extremists use to group anyone that's not them and attach violent acts to them?

Not sure which claim you made here downvoters disagree with. Or perhaps they agree with the claims you made and, disturbingly, believe their entailments are justified and virtuous.

I will say your use of the terms left, right, conservatism, antifa are imprecise.

Not exact duplicate of earlier post, since this one points to the reddit discussion involving u/spez

Many comments bring up the fact that administrators punished a subreddit called r/waterniggas, which featured posts with the running gag of people taking water extremely seriously, to the point of humor. Here's an example of the kind of content there:

https://ia802908.us.archive.org/view_archive.php?archive=/21...

In retrospect, naming the subreddit r/waterniggas was a poor choice, but many agree that it was harmless and that there was no hate speech propogated by it. This supports the notion that the administration does not actually care about hate speech, but rather the optics and superficiality of caring about it, winning "brownie points" to the general public. This is so that Reddit as a business can make it seem like a safer platform for advertisers and earn more dollars because the advertisers feel like it is a safe place to park their brand.

Furthermore, any time the administration makes public posts like these, they tend to come at very convenient times. This kind of post has happened before and no actual change ever occurred as a result of it. It is clear that the recent George Floyd protests encouraged them to make this post decrying hate speech, but again, if they were really concerned about hate speech, they would have acted on r/The_Donald faster than r/waterniggas.

The first two sentences of the post begin with this. "TL;DR: We’re working with mods to change our content policy to explicitly address hate. u/kn0thing has resigned from our board to fill his seat with a Black candidate, a request we will honor." Oh my lord, there are so many things wrong with this that I want to claw my eyes out. Congratulations, once we hire you to the board, know that the main reason we decided to hire you is that it's because you're black! If they were going to take this road, they could have at least lied about how they care about inclusivity and that they would hire someone who was equipped and experienced to deal with sensitive racial issues, and then hired someone who happened to be black. I did not expect them to just outright say that they would motivate their hiring process with racist intentions!! "We believe that hiring a black person is going to make a big difference in how racist we are!" To me, this really screams out how superficial the administration's concerns are, how surface-level those concerns reach, and how they could not care less deep down, despite protestors and police officers dying. All of this just so they could generate more ad revenue.

I am highly concerned with the way social media is going. While I understand that it is 100% in the right of private companies to police their platform, we were brought up with notion that we were participating in more-or-less, "public" forums, and that we would enjoy the benefit of having varied discussions on them. I did not particularly like r/The_Donald, but I liked that if you did like that content, you could go there. It's not like anyone was forced to go to r/The_Donald. I really do not want a future where Facebook or the Reddit echo chamber decides on what kind of opinion I should have. I would rather be on a platform where the only things I cannot post is illegal content or spam. I want to be on a platform where everything else should be permissible. If not, then I want the administration to explicitly tell me that they want to be thought policing, so that I don't feel deceived and I can go somewhere else.

Reddit articles, posts, and comments have drained in quality so much that I barely visit it nowadays. All of the stupid meme parent comments and lowest common denominator banter chain "joke...