this post was submitted on 07 Feb 2024
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Anarchism
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Discuss anarchist praxis and philosophy. Don't take yourselves too seriously.
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a long tine. It was a good decision because reddit doesn't prevent people who are not approved from voting or commenting and it added a ton of drama
I get why it happened, and why after the coup fizzled, /r/met@ remained closed. The exhaustion of the mods was palpable. I miss the transparency though. Being able to see other anarchists navigating the management of a space designed for hierarchy was kind of inspiring, the subversion of the comment system to vote over issues was clever, and participating in debate and politics as a non-mod was empowering.
Not that I'm advocating a return to that experience. Volunteer moderators don't deserve the kind of harassment they typically received modding on Reddit's anarchism subs. But it was one of those moments in history where idealism overwhelmed caution, and something beautiful but ephemeral was called into brief existence.
Eh it's pretty trivial for any anarchist to join metanarchism. The problem isn't that we tried to exclude people, it's that nobody cared to help with governance unless there was drama to be had