NullNowhere

joined 1 year ago

I mean it kinda is also that kind.

I don't disagree, but I thought it was important to point out that this comes from something deeper than just rank partisanship before something thought I was merely culture-warring.

you can see this in the lingo and memes they use, which mostly come from that crowd.

Yeah I debated touching on this, but didn't know how as you did. This is the 'drop in quality' I was referring to. There's been a marked uptick in the impotent-anger nihilism talk/memes that characterize the reactionaries, elon-musk dickriders, and crypto-bros. I saw that the two times I was there and decided I wanted none of that swamp.

[–] NullNowhere@lemmy.dbzer0.com 50 points 1 year ago (7 children)

We're encountering several little phenomena here.

  1. Many of the people who were passionate or concerned about this issue are here and elsewhere - but they're no longer on reddit. The anti-protesters are those who didn't understand, didn't care, and are just annoyed that their opium hit is suddenly asking them to give a shit. They're consumers, and in the absence of those who care, they've gotten bolder and a larger proportion of representation on the site. In the ~2 times I have checked in on Reddit, I've noticed a drop in comment quality.
  2. This is a classic Conservative reaction. Not exactly the Donkey/Elephant kind, but that raw conservative instinct endemic to humanity. It's the fear that change is a zero-sum game, where is people move up, other's status degrade, or if it doesn't. that someone will create a new environment that they themselves are less familiar and adept at navigating. Some people are so insecure that they'll lash out at anyone as long as it makes them just sit still in their chairs, please. These people are fear-driven ghouls, it could have been anything and you'd get a similar reaction.

Opinion: This doesn't really solve a problem like dataclasses v. namedtuples did. This mostly boils down to someone not really liking the dataclass syntax and deciding that adding yet another way to write classes is the way to go and is somehow more teachable (because now we need to teach both).

Maybe it'd be nicer in a few use cases, but I don't really feel it's worth the expansion to the syntax burden.