Joe Guy wrote:A "popular poster" would not be popular if he/she behaved in a way that makes one unpopular.
Balderdash yourself,
Joe Guy. That might be true if we were all paragons of objectivity. But we are not.
Poster A blatantly misrepresents what Poster B has written, and there is a chorus of outraged howling. Poster C equally blatantly misrepresents what Poster D has written, an the ensuing silence is deafening. Poster E writes vicious nastiness about Poster F, and the board goes ballistic. Poster G writes equally vicious nastiness about Poster H, and the board says nothing (or almost nothing).
Not that that happens all the time, of course. Quite the contrary. Still, it happens often enough to show up clearly under even casual observation.
There is a lot of complaining about
loCAtek's having insulted various posters. And much of that complaining may very well be justified. But when she is called a "drunken whore," a "lying cowardly cunt," a "drunken slut," a "short fat turd, with a face like a dog's arse," and "so unloveable that even [her] family despises [her]" -- and that is only a cursory sampling -- those who subject her to that abuse receive, on the rare occasions when they receive anything at all, nothing more than what amounts to a mild "tsk, tsk".
One of the most common of human imperfections is the tendency to find misbehavior by those whom we do not like to be outrageous while finding substantively identical misbehavior by those whom we do like to be merely regrettable. All of us, to varying degrees, suffer that infirmity.
And that is one of the great dangers of democracy. And it is one of the principal reasons why all of the "developed" nations which like to call themselves "democracies" have actually taken great pains to ensure that they are not democracies.
Those whose board this is are, obviously, free to run it however they wish. I merely suggest that those who advocate majority rule as the mechanism for deciding who may post here and who may not might do well to remember John Stuart Mill's salutary reminder of the neccessity of protecting "against the tyranny of the prevailing opinion and feeling, against the tendency of society to impose, by other means than civil penalties, its own ideas and practices as rules of conduct on those who dissent from them".
Reason is valuable only when it performs against the wordless physical background of the universe.