Published on 12, July, 2020
I don't know about others, but I'm getting a little concerned that the arguments will put off new members.
Quite often people join and then disappear quite quickly.
I've been involved in these myself on occasion, so I'm not innocent.
However, maybe the mods could create a section where these potentially contentious threads could be placed that had a heading like NSFW (a new one on me but it seems to be well known).
If a seemingly innocuous thread then turns into a constant argument, perhaps it could be moved to there.
It's sometimes interraction between older males and older females (or non binary etc) and comes down to very different relationship/*ex points of view but can of course stem from any subject and any set of contributors.
I think it happens more often than it once did, and I've not been here a year yet.
You know I have a vision for this forum as an autistic safe space. What is an autistic safe space? It's a place where its safe to be your self and honest about your self and your issues with out having the outside world accuse you of being a weirdo and a creep. It's a place where we can be honest about our special interests with out apologising for the fact that they make other people uncomfortable. It's a place where people can honestly relate to each other with out having to do a stressful mental risk assessment on every word and joke. It's a place of tolerance where when people express views or tell jokes that upset each other they can work it out in a civil manner with out hurling accusations or villainizing each other.
It's a place where autistic people can come to discuss the difficulties they have interacting with the neurotypical world, whether that be in work, or relationships, or sexuality or anything else, without being made to feel bad because they don't conform to societies expectations and norms. Because they struggle to traverse a social landscape not made with them in mind.
What a safe space is not is a place where young autistic men new to the forum open up about the difficulties in their relationships / sex lives only to be dog piled by people vilifying them, even accusing them of being criminal.
People have been leaving this forum because of this. Lots of people have been put off when their 1st or second thread is filled with hateful comments against them only to be locked by a mod without any reassurance that they have done nothing wrong.
The last thing I want to do is create an echo chamber. This forum is better if its full of a diverse set of views and robust debate. However as they are subject to repeated abuse by a small subsection of this forum people are already starting to vote with their feet. If this continues, if this tirade of abuse is allowed to continue, this forum will become an echo chamber anyway.
If this happens I will have to seriously consider setting up my own forum for autistic people for those leaving this forum. I already run my own autistic rights advocacy type website and I'm more than capable of doing this. I don't want to do it. But I'll have to consider it if things don't improve going forward.
An autistic safe space must be a queer safe space, an ace safe space, and a trans safe space, given the enormous overlap in these already marginalized identities. The current rules would ensure this if they were enforced, but they are not, which has turned this place into an echo chamber where the existence of trans people is up for debate and men proclaim their right to sexually harass / coerce others and encourage new posters to do the same.
Peter said:If this happens I will have to seriously consider setting up my own forum for autistic people for those leaving this forum.
Go for it! That would be fantastic. I'm not saying that there can't be an autistic space run primarily for the benefit of and dominated by straight men, but it's shameful that the National Autistic Society is hosting it.
I assure you if I set up such a forum it will be for everyone. EVERYONE. And a place of tolerance, including tolerance of views people don't like so long as they are made in a civil way.
No. The education is free and there if you can be bothered to look for it. Now let this thread end for everyone's sakes.
I have to say that forbes article is really bad. A hand full of cherry picked anecdotes about accounts that were banned with no real response from the social media sites that did the banning as to why they were banned. They could have at least looked at the banned content critically to see if it violated TOS but it seems they are willing to take the word of the users. That's very unbalanced journalism.
That social media advertising can be abused by companies to get around equality rules is no surprise. But it's also unrelated to censorship because it's not about limited what people can say but rather targeting who sees it.
As for government use o social media so far the governments message doesn't really seem boosted about the myriad of different opinions out there. Again a cacophony of divergent voices both extreme and not is helping to ensure people don't just swallow everything there read online. Including what the government posts.
I'll delete the duplicate, no idea why it was posted. I'll leave this thread now because it feels all that can be reasonably said already has been. Besides which I figure the longer we spend on this one now the more nicer threads and posts from people asking for help are being distracted from. So lets go make ourselves useful.
Peter said:The issue you're highlighting is not 'hate speech' on some web forum but state / mass media propaganda. The real lesson is that its dangerous for centralised powers to have too much control of what people can and can't say or listen to.
They do it online now.https://www.thebureauinvestigates.com/stories/2017-05-15/the-dark-ads-election-how-are-political-parties-targeting-you-on-facebookfor example Donald Trump admits what the GOP’s anti-trans agenda is all abouthttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YCmqDJixx94
and many other such examples
https://novaramedia.com/2021/07/26/the-tories-are-on-a-mission-to-destroy-black-lives-matter/
https://www.forbes.com/sites/janicegassam/2021/01/08/social-media-continues-to-amplify-white-supremacy-and-suppress-anti-racism/
https://www.brookings.edu/articles/solving-the-problem-of-racially-discriminatory-advertising-on-facebook/ https://www.propublica.org/article/facebook-advertising-discrimination-housing-race-sex-national-origin
π Bees π (they/them) Autism resources in bio #stoptheshock #NothingAboutUsWithoutUs said:True civility is not just being "polite" using pretty words, it is doing no harm to one another and ceasing doing harm once made aware of it.
One poster here has done considerable harm to me.
Those examples aren't that good
The issue you're highlighting is not 'hate speech' on some web forum but state / mass media propaganda. The real lesson is that its dangerous for centralised powers to have too much control of what people can and can't say or listen to.
Peter said:You get in sticky territory when you start attributing harm to words with out having to point to where the harm falls. Who was injured, who lost money, how was their daily life limited or threatened? If it's just hurt feelings, well someones feeling can be hurt by almost anything, serious or trivial, reasonable or unreasonable, it can all hurt someones feelings somewhere. That's why crimes involving speech ought to be linked to tangible harm. Like threatening violence or defamation. You ought to be able to show some one actually spread missinformation about you not just that they expressed an opinion you don't like or a joke you felt that went to far.
A free education on how words turn into actual sticks and stones: https://www.un.org/en/hate-speech/understanding-hate-speech/hate-speech-and-real-harm
You get in sticky territory when you start attributing harm to words with out having to point to where the harm falls. Who was injured, who lost money, how was their daily life limited or threatened? If it's just hurt feelings, well someones feeling can be hurt by almost anything, serious or trivial, reasonable or unreasonable, it can all hurt someones feelings somewhere. That's why crimes involving speech ought to be linked to tangible harm. Like threatening violence or defamation. You ought to be able to show some one actually spread missinformation about you not just that they expressed an opinion you don't like or a joke you felt that went to far.
Now if we're talking about forum standards I'd say you can and should go further and also ban uncivil speech towards others on the forum. This for example is not illegal speech but it's not exactly civil. But we can and must distinguish between criticism of people and the lifestyles and identities people may espouse. And we also need to distinguish between criticism and hate directed towards people. There is a difference between saying "I don't agree with people doing X" and saying "I think X people should go die."
Peter said:I assure you if I set up such a forum it will be for everyone. EVERYONE.
The problem with this Peter is that a safespace for everyone must literally be for everyone...
Peter said:And a place of tolerance, including tolerance of views people don't like so long as they are made in a civil way.
... which it will never be if it is in any way acceptable to say "certain groups of people shouldn't exist or are undeserving of respect" or words to those effect just because it doesn't take a slur or swearing to say it.
True civility is not just being "polite" using pretty words, it is doing no harm to one another and ceasing doing harm once made aware of it.