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Quote from: Rymdolov on September 02, 2013, 05:53:38 PMI would be annoyed if there were certain subjects that we were not allowed to discuss, but some guidelines and rules about how to discuss things are fine with me. That said, there might be times when certain subjects should be avoided, if they only serve to start arguments. We are all adult enough to notice this if it should happen, I think, and not stoop to flamebaiting. Due to the nature of SMAC it's unavoidable to have some interesting political discussions, though. The political content of the game is a large part of what makes it interesting.Sorry about rambling a bit. Perhaps the membership would like to speak out on/propose ideas about guidelines? I only consider announcements I've labeled as rules to be actual rules, but I do consider any idea proposed in this thread and not contradicted to be site policy that guides my moderation decisions.That wasn't a ramble, Rym; it was intelligent focused and a helpful suggestion.
I would be annoyed if there were certain subjects that we were not allowed to discuss, but some guidelines and rules about how to discuss things are fine with me. That said, there might be times when certain subjects should be avoided, if they only serve to start arguments. We are all adult enough to notice this if it should happen, I think, and not stoop to flamebaiting. Due to the nature of SMAC it's unavoidable to have some interesting political discussions, though. The political content of the game is a large part of what makes it interesting.Sorry about rambling a bit.
Here's a little something I wrote up about four years ago on what I think about arguing done right:Quote There's little in life I love more than a good argument. It takes the right kind of people, and I think we have a lot of them here. So let's see if we can start a good one- or several. A few ground rules/observations- that you may also take as a little essay about how to argue productively: The object is not to win, but to come to an understanding or educate each other. It helps beyond measure sometimes to discuss your respective values and base assumptions as they relate to the issue at hand. Know your thesis and your opponent's. That is, be sure you and the other person aren't actually talking past each other about two somewhat different things. Know what you're arguing about. However, it's no fun if the conversation can't go where it wants to. Be cool about the topic changing- just know what it is at all times. It's okay to try to steer it back, but good to not be bossy about it. It's like the dozens; if you get mad (or compare someone you're arguing with to Hitler, for that matter) you lose. Really; well-intentioned persons can say things so utterly at variance with your view of something important to you that it is a good thing when an adult says he's had enough and bows out. Do it with good grace and you haven't lost. If you set out to provoke anyone just to win via the previous guideline, you lose. That's immature troll-behavior and dirty pool. It doesn't have to be polite, but the rules of this forum and the laws in your jurisdiction apply. Polite is better. At least a sketchy knowledge of the rules of formal debate will help you enormously, even though those rules will not be enforced here. Please don't be a jerk about the rules of formal debate, either pro or con. It is always in order to point out that something just said belongs in a separate argument than the one you're in. I'm lazy about interrupting a conversation to research the topic. You are welcome to do so, however, but I will likely try to challenge your source on any grounds I find valid. Again, if you only play to win, you're doing it wrong. Try to persuade me you're right. Convincing your opponent is victory- so is finding out you're wrong and learning something. [Current-day addition: As I said to Nikolai above, Recreational debate is mental fencing - on that level, it can be a huge buzzkill to go straight to googling, rather like bringing a gun to a knife fight. To me, that tends to feel like the other guy cheated, since I like to rely on whatever happened to already be in my head when I walked in...]Not really the guidelines Rym suggested, but maybe this will get discussion started in that direction.
There's little in life I love more than a good argument. It takes the right kind of people, and I think we have a lot of them here. So let's see if we can start a good one- or several. A few ground rules/observations- that you may also take as a little essay about how to argue productively: The object is not to win, but to come to an understanding or educate each other. It helps beyond measure sometimes to discuss your respective values and base assumptions as they relate to the issue at hand. Know your thesis and your opponent's. That is, be sure you and the other person aren't actually talking past each other about two somewhat different things. Know what you're arguing about. However, it's no fun if the conversation can't go where it wants to. Be cool about the topic changing- just know what it is at all times. It's okay to try to steer it back, but good to not be bossy about it. It's like the dozens; if you get mad (or compare someone you're arguing with to Hitler, for that matter) you lose. Really; well-intentioned persons can say things so utterly at variance with your view of something important to you that it is a good thing when an adult says he's had enough and bows out. Do it with good grace and you haven't lost. If you set out to provoke anyone just to win via the previous guideline, you lose. That's immature troll-behavior and dirty pool. It doesn't have to be polite, but the rules of this forum and the laws in your jurisdiction apply. Polite is better. At least a sketchy knowledge of the rules of formal debate will help you enormously, even though those rules will not be enforced here. Please don't be a jerk about the rules of formal debate, either pro or con. It is always in order to point out that something just said belongs in a separate argument than the one you're in. I'm lazy about interrupting a conversation to research the topic. You are welcome to do so, however, but I will likely try to challenge your source on any grounds I find valid. Again, if you only play to win, you're doing it wrong. Try to persuade me you're right. Convincing your opponent is victory- so is finding out you're wrong and learning something. [Current-day addition: As I said to Nikolai above, Recreational debate is mental fencing - on that level, it can be a huge buzzkill to go straight to googling, rather like bringing a gun to a knife fight. To me, that tends to feel like the other guy cheated, since I like to rely on whatever happened to already be in my head when I walked in...]
1. Personal attacks in the context of debating are absolutely prohibited. If it is absolutely necessary to call into question someone's personal qualifications (such as because they invoked their personal expertise to support their point), or to provide constructive criticism regarding their posting style, it should be done as politely as you can manage. [We want to keep things civil, even when discussions get heated in off-topic as they no doubt will eventually. I don't think it will be too much of an imposition to restrict friendly teasing to non-debate contexts.]2. When debating, any person's explicit statements about their own position should not be contradicted. If they seem to be holding the position that they explicitly deny, politely ask for a clarification. [It's a lot easier to follow rule #1 when not provoked, and there's very little that is more provocative than being told that your position is something you explicitly deny.)3. While friendly teasing is permitted outside the context of debating, if the object of the teasing requests that the teasing stop, that request is to be followed.4. No teasing may include believable claims of real-life actions (e.g. claiming to have engaged in desecration of something valued by the other person). [Once real-life gets involved, it's very easy for people to get seriously distressed. Normal teasing doesn't involve such claims anyway, making it pretty much exclusively the domain of the worst sort of troll.]5. While some drift of topics is expected and allowed, any artificial transition of a thread to an unrelated controversial matter will be treated as trolling and be dealt with harshly. (If it cannot be precisely determined who performed the transition or there was no single point of transition, it can be presumed to be a natural transition.)6. While some controversy is expected, anybody who exclusively or near-exclusively raises controversy about certain issues may, at the discretion of the admins and any moderators they appoint, be warned, and if they continue such behavior may be banned.
No, I don't think so. We're on our way down, IMAO, but the fall, though it will be mighty, is slow.
Ahhh, but wants to enslave , a pretty irreconcilable difference
and is losing the battle for hearts and minds to who is deeply in cahoots with , , and lately .
I don't think there's any way and could get along.
I think you're on the right track.Incidentally, a fundamental failure of the Democratic party in my lifetime, IMAO, is to not go all all over everything, not and everything else they've tried. My father's father was a sharecropper during the Great Depression - he was racist and he was conservative; he didn't get that All in the Family was a joke, often commenting that Archie Bunker was right.But he was a farmer, and he knew that Roosevelt was his buddy, and he was a voting partisan Democrat all his adult life (a fact he concealed from my great-grandmother, being from a family so Republican that Daddy once found out he'd been voting a second time in their home county against his principles - the FBI was not amused). , labor issues, is the winning strategy for the left.
And yet my cite is 'look at the news for the last 13 years'.
Insert my Bakrama is Neville Chamberlain when we needed Winston Churchill speech here.
I haven't seen much there; if anything, it's the fringe of the Democrats that tend toward . (Republicans favor small government except when it conflicts with , , or ; the former two don't care much about the social issues where focuses, and what wants to follow, sees as primitive superstition.)