Acid test for any social network or fedi instance:
If you say "fuck you" to a Nazi, who gets banned?
Acid test for any social network or fedi instance:
If you say "fuck you" to a Nazi, who gets banned?
@Svegress
I think you're being a bit presumptious in assuming that I'm talking about something I did, since I've seen this happen many times to other people.
On #Nextdoor, for instance, they make it clear that even being rude towards people expressing Nazi-like ideas is likely to get you suspended or banned -- so I've avoided doing so, but I've nonetheless been suspended at least twice for more or less this exact reason. For the sake of argument, then, I am the one saying "fuck you" to a Nazi.
Why is that bad?
@woozle I read Svegress' response as "being rude to Nazis is bad" and that's what I wanted to say was incorrect.
I declined to elaborate because I'm frankly uninterested in debating it, and nor do I believe this should require a debate.
Thank you for the clarification. I think it's important to understand, though, that sometimes what you call "violent language" (in English, "fuck you" may literally imply nonconsensual sex, but idiomatically it's more like "I'm absolutely done with you" with emphasis; it's understood that the speaker actually has no wish for further contact, much less violent intimacy) is the only way to really communicate one's feelings and position.
I think the scenario I had in mind, on some level, is where the other party has been -- using only the most civil of language -- expressing more and more horrible ideas, and moderators have been ignoring reports on the issue.
At that point, one wants to express not just repudiation of the other person's position, but rage that they even consider it a valid position.
"Fuck you" is often the most eloquent way of saying this.