this post was submitted on 27 Jan 2022
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I think that little episode sucked, but it wasn't sufficient reason to bring on the amount of hate it did, and it was kind of opportunistically used by angry mobs.
The background context was that mods were bringing down the hammer on places like /r/thedonald and /r/fatpeoplehate, (my timeline may be a bit off and those are just illustrative, stand-in examples). The spez thing was weaponized opportunistically by people looking for anything to put reddit mods on the defensive. They wanted to do that because reddit mods were taking action against toxic behavior of terrible communities.
I feel like it's totally appropriate to take action against people or communities that violate ToS, but to alter comments and change what they're saying is totally uncalled for. You can ban people, delete their comments, but changing what they said is too much for me. That's a slippery slope.
I agree that it's bad, and should be reacted to in proportion, and as I said, there's a lot of context that suggests that people were taking a legitimately bad thing but nevertheless taking it out of proportion for reasons that didn't have anything to do with the offense.
I think one of the weird only on the internet style biases that gets exploited by angry mobs is i the nability to take stock of things in proportion to their relative merit.
I'm a bit confused by your stance: are you trying to say that the ends justify the means in this case?