You may have noticed a distinct lack of return2ozma. This is due to their admitting, in a public comment, that their engagement here is in bad faith:

I’m sure there will be questions, let me see if I can address the most obvious ones:

  1. Can I still post negative stuff about Biden?

Absolutely! We have zero interest in running an echo chamber. However, if ALL you’re posting is negative, you may want to re-think your priorities. You get out of the world what you put into it and all that.

  1. Why now?

Presumption of innocence. It may be my own fault, but I do try to think the best of people, and even though they were posting negative articles, they weren’t necessarily WRONG. Biden’s poll numbers, particularly in minority demographics ARE in the shitter. They are starting to get better, but he still has a hell of a hill to climb.

  1. Why a 30 day temp ban and not a permanent ban?

The articles return2ozma shared weren’t bad, faked, or from some wing-nut bias site like “beforeitsnews.com”, they were legitimate articles from established and respected news agencies, pointing out the valid problems Biden faces.

The problem was ONLY posting the negatives, over and over and then openly admitting that dishonest enagement is their purpose.

Had they all been bullshit articles? It would not have taken anywhere near this much time to lay the ban and it would have been permanent.

30 days seems enough time for them to re-think their strategery and come back to engage honestly.

tl;dr - https://youtu.be/C6BYzLIqKB8#t=7s

  • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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    7 months ago

    I don’t think you’re trying to silence political views at all, but I do think you’re trying to dismiss them as fringe, dishonest, or intentional subterfuge.

    Castigating people you disagree with as ‘shills’ or ‘bad faith actors’ is, in my opinion, the lowest quality of political commentary. It excuses you from engaging with what that person saying, simply because you doubt their honesty, as if somehow that invalidates what they’re saying. I think it’s lazy and I wish mods would enforce their own rules against it.

    I also find it frustrating that you continuously accuse people like myself and ozma of acting according to some agenda, but then appear in every political thread giving impassioned arguments about how we need to look past Biden’s flaws no matter how real they are, as if that is not itself a political agenda. Do I think you’re arguing that in bad faith? No, but then again i’m not in support of banning people who are simply too loud about their perspective.

    • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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      7 months ago

      Castigating people you disagree with as ‘shills’ or ‘bad faith actors’ is, in my opinion, the lowest quality of political commentary. It excuses you from engaging with what that person saying

      Can you point to anyone who’s said anything that I responded to without engaging on its own merits?

      Everyone has a rosy view of themselves I am sure, but in my mind, I’ve spent an almost pathological amount of time here talking to ozma about the merits of what he’s saying, on the face of them, and likewise for you, likewise for a lot of the other people. Then also in addition to that, if they display shill-like behavior I tend to call it out instead of just avoiding the potentially-unfair accusation. But I don’t think I have ever really led out of the gate with anything along the lines of “you’re a shill so that means I don’t have to respond to what you just said”.

      Can you point to an example of someone who said something and I just dismissed what they were saying instead of breaking down why (in my view) it wasn’t right, at least as a first step even if later I proceeded to what I thought of their motivations or changing the subject or etc?

      • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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        7 months ago

        If you need to qualify your acquittal with ‘but I haven’t said it to their face’, i think you’ve kind of proven the point. I don’t think the face-to-face accusation is at all a requirement for it to be considered lowbrow prejudice.

        That’s just in this thread, but i’ve seen quite a lot of, ‘i don’t know for sure, but this person/these people really seem like bad-faith trolls to me’ in your comment history. I run into it maybe once a week, and those are just the ones i happen to run into. I’ve seen you speculate that midwest.social is a troll farm, based on what I assume is just your interactions with me (i don’t see you arguing with anyone else from here, anyway. maybe that’s just my vanity talking).

        Even if it’s not in response to what that person is saying, you’re still encouraging others to disengage with them based on some false notion of them being bad-actors.

        • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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          7 months ago

          I’ve told some people to their face (virtually speaking) that I think they are shills and why. Ozma is one, and in this thread I said it to somebody else after looking over their user a little bit. My point was that I generally engage with their arguments on the merits at first, and then proceed to accusing them of bad faith if it seems really clear to me that they’re engaging in bad faith; I don’t think I usually engage in it as a reason not to engage with their arguments.

          I’ve seen you speculate that midwest.social is a troll farm, based on what I assume is just your interactions with me

          It wasn’t from you. If I ever fully realized that you were from midwest.social I then forgot it; my instance doesn’t show what someone’s “home” instance is in comments unless I mouse over to investigate. It was a different user that raised my suspicion (who I didn’t really engage with all that much, just observed the type of stuff they posted), and the overall nature and setup of the site. If that’s relevant.

          I’m not completely sure if you are a shill user or not. I have suspected it in the past. If I’m honest, you engage in some of the same types of behavior they do (using some particular talking points, and mischaracterizing what the other person is saying to a more convenient thing to argue against, being the most egregious), but that could just be what you feel like saying because you feel like saying it, and you also talk at length back and forth which is un-shill-like behavior, just because I think it’s not really time-efficient for them to do that for any extended debate.

          Honestly, except for really egregious examples like ozma, I don’t feel like I can tell with any confidence who is and isn’t fake, so I tend to talk to people on the merits and then talk about fake users as a systemic problem as a separate thing.

          Even if it’s not in response to what that person is saying, you’re still encouraging others to disengage with them based on some false notion of them being bad-actors.

          Yeah, maybe so. I think in general, accusing people of acting in bad faith is a bad way to go, just because it doesn’t really lend itself to productive conversation (and I realize that’s ironic since I do do exactly that sometimes). Definitely getting into the weeds of ad hominem, categorizing each person in the discussion as is or isn’t a shill, shouldn’t be the main thrust of the discussion. It’s only relevant in this thread specifically with ozma because he does it like a full time frickin job.

          That’s the other side of that coin: if there’s a cohort of users that is so clearly engaging in bad faith that it’s distorting the overall conversation, I do feel like that’s worth talking about. I don’t think it’s real productive to just play the sucker and keep saying “No actually Biden didn’t ruin the US’s climate change policy” over and over again indefinitely, without delving into why it is that so many people keep saying that he did and using the same very particular talking-point framing.

          But yeah, the point about it being usually not really a friendly or productive thing to do to run around throwing accusations of shilling around, I’ll somewhat agree with you on.

          • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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            7 months ago

            I’m not completely sure if you are a shill user or not. I have suspected it in the past. If I’m honest, you engage in some of the same types of behavior they do (using some particular talking points, and mischaracterizing what the other person is saying to a more convenient thing to argue against, being the most egregious), but that could just be what you feel like saying because you feel like saying it, and you also talk at length back and forth which is un-shill-like behavior, just because I think it’s not really time-efficient for them to do that for any extended debate.

            Well I guess i appreciate the benefit of the doubt, even though I still take issue with the default seemingly being ‘shill, unless enough effort is shown’.

            You and I, I think, have put in far more effort into arguing our cases than most people on here do. Most people who share my perspective have long since stopped trying to argue anything in good faith at all with centrists, because doing so almost always ends with an accusation. Therein lies the pitfall of the shill-unless-proven-otherwise attitude - it makes it easy to characterize most people as shills, enabling anyone to dismiss or accept a perspective at-will according to what they believe a ‘normal’ perspective to be.

            I have no suspicion you are a troll - not because you put more effort into your comments than I think a bad actor would, but because it’s not hard for me to imagine your perspective as valid. It’s also not hard for me to imagine someone who supports trump, or doesn’t believe in climate change, or believes gay marriage is a sin (my relationship with my father is almost defined by our vociferous disagreement on those subjects). Half the battle of political organizing is trying to genuinely understand other people’s perspectives, and trying to persuade them on their terms, and writing those people off as bad-faith actors is a non-starter for organizing. I know people here value most of the same things I do, that’s why I harp on the things I do - those are the things we agree on, and those are the things I would like to organize pressure for. I have a lot of other perspectives I know for a fact are outside the norm for .world, and I don’t agitate for those on here because I know i’d sour any chances of progress on other fronts if I did.

            Ozma likely sees things the same way I do: there are a lot of well-meaning and left-of-center people in this community, with a lot of overlap in overall goals. A part of any strategy for normalizing and organizing around more left-leaning policy is pointing to that discrepancy between what we all agree on and what our electoral system fails to produce, and that’s uncomfortable and easily misinterpreted as voter suppression. “Biden at all costs”, while completely justified, stifles any discussion of progress outside of what has been provided, so the ‘blue no matter who’ rhetoric is a natural target for any agitation. There is nothing that enrages me more than a good discussion about ‘we should do x’ being derailed by ‘well that’s not electorally realistic, not nationally popular, not gonna happen’, and those are the things that cause me to spend a week straight posting agitprop memes.

            I’ll get off my soap box now. I think getting mad at the people agitating against complacency is counterproductive, even if it’s completely understandable.

            • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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              7 months ago

              even though I still take issue with the default seemingly being ‘shill, unless enough effort is shown’.

              Hey so check it out: That’s not at all what I said. My criteria I listed for suspecting you of something dishonest were:

              1. Reusing shill talking points
              2. Using tactics like rampant strawmanning, just blandly pretending that someone said something different than they said and arguing against that instead of what they said.

              Then I also mentioned that:

              1. Since you seem like you’re open to talking at this huge length which isn’t usual for shills, that sort of makes me trust you again.

              I have more to say, but I just wanna pause on this point for a second. Check this out:

              Therein lies the pitfall of the shill-unless-proven-otherwise attitude - it makes it easy to characterize most people as shills

              I literally never said that, or anything close to it. I listed two criteria that would fit a shill, and one that would exonerate someone from being a shill, and it sounds like you just totally edited away the first two and started telling me that I think everyone’s a shill unless exonerated by the third.

              Surely you can see how conducting the conversation like that would make someone conclude you’re not speaking in good faith?

              Like I say, I have more to say, but this is such a critical point that I want to pause and focus on it for a second.

              • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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                7 months ago

                Ok, fair enough, I was a little hasty with my response. Let me elaborate on what I meant.

                Regarding your 3 point list for determining reasonable suspicion"

                Reusing shill talking points

                I want to thoroughly address this one, because there’s a good reason why shill talking points are talking points to begin with.

                Shills primary objective is to sow distrust/chaos in a group, and a prerequisite for doing that effectively is to not be suspected of being a malicious agent. To that end, the talking points they use will always bear a resemblance to legitimate stances of the target group. Frequently they highlight a deep division in ideology or an inconsistency in the logic of the coalition, and they pound on that in order to drive a wedge.

                There’s a very good reason why legitimate leftist agitation looks an awful lot like that - for the most part, leftist agitators also seek to drive a wedge within the coalition, but not to sow chaos. They do so in order weaken the centrist consensus and breed discontent with the status quo. It’s similar to what the civil rights leaders did: elevate the issue to such a volume that the people who consistently refuse to negotiate are forced to address it, and the medium through which that discontent is sown is the complacent moderate, who agrees in principle but has no reason to risk their own security to push for the change without disruption.

                I get why this is one of three on your list, but you have to understand why this is too broad on its own: legitimate leftist agitation works and sounds much the same way as malicious agitation. What makes the difference between agitation that sows chaos and agitation that sows change is how moderates respond to the agitation. If agitation is effective for change, it will create just enough discomfort to spur action, but not so much that it breeds apathy, nihilism, and more complacency.

                Using tactics like rampant strawmanning, just blandly pretending that someone said something different than they said and arguing against that instead of what they said.

                This is a very fair point, and I’ll acknowledge that i’ve been short and quippy in this exchange and the thread broadly. However, as I pointed out to someone else, a part of persuasion is reframing your partners assertions in order to illuminate an inconsistency - any time I’m reframing something you’ve said, I’m doing so in order to reveal a deeper issue. In this instance the issue (i’ll touch more on this at the end), is that your three rules are too broad, and effectively can be applied to most people who disagree with you. A good example of this that I know you’re thinking of when you’re looking at my culpability of this is this meme. I’m well aware of how provocative this meme was, and that was the point. I was pointing to the comfortable rhetoric some centrists were using (your choice is binary at the ballot box) and reflecting back at them the rhetoric they were using as shelter from that discomfort. The point of the meme was to point out that what they were doing right then was rationalizing a choice they hadn’t been asked to make yet, and avoiding the choice they were making in that moment to convince people upset about the Isreali conflict that their concern was less important than the broader goal of defeating Trump (which is true, but that choice of rhetoric was also sheltering them from having to engage with their party). It was and is essential to make that distinction well known, because ‘trump will be the end of us all’ has the rhetorical potential to de-fang legitimate grievence within the base and relieves pressure on Biden and the democrats.

                I’ll also address a skepticism you’ve raised before about the pointlessness of agitating in this way on a small site like Lemme that will never be seen by Biden: by using that agitation to call out the comforting rhetoric being used, it makes the counter messaging of the democratic operation a lot less effective, and (ideally) prevents them from being able to hide behind convenience logic and actually address the issue. That’s why James Carville got on his podcast and was cursing out pro-palestinian activists for raising the issue so loudly: he knows that it’s a losing issue if it’s elevated above other, less controversial issues, and there’s not an easy way to message out of it if it keeps getting pushed.

                The reason for the explanation: I know you thought this meme was an intentional strawman, and to some degree it was an intentional re-framing of the issue. But it wasn’t a ‘misrepresentation’ of any real position (i wasn’t arguing they were anyone was “fine with a little genocide”), I was simply pointing out those people who were the subject of the meme, caught between a genocide they cannot themselves support but are desperate to fend off a trump presidency, needed to convince those undecided anti-genocide voters to vote for biden, and they could either convince them to vote by arguing that issue was less important, or by pushing the party platform to welcome those people back into coalition.

                This is an important distinction, because provocative agitation only works by de-constructing those arguments that get in the way of directed action. Sometimes that looks or feels like an intentional misrepresentation, but it is importantly not a representation of a false stance but a rejection of the framing that the stance depends on.

                Since you seem like you’re open to talking at this huge length which isn’t usual for shills, that sort of makes me trust you again.

                This being the only qualifier that doesn’t apply to me specifically, it’s not unreasonable to point out that it’s the only one that really distinguishes a good-actor and a bad-actor in your eyes, even though there are absolutely leftist political agitators that fit those first two on your list and do not give long and drawn-out responses like me. I’d venture to say that those people are not really doing the educate or organize parts of educate-agitate-organize, but sometimes you just have to live with a bit of disagreement when you’re a leftist.

                I was admittedly being reckless by using the “shill-unless-proven-otherwise” shorthand, but the above is what I was essentially driving at: your method of determining good-will or bad-will seems to have no way of distinguishing between ‘shills’ and leftist political agitators, and that effectively has a ‘chilling-effect’ on the entire community. That’s why every criticism of Biden here is always couched in “but i’m voting for him anyway”; without signaling ‘I am not seeking to cause chaos’ every critique is potentially suspect of being bad-faith. It’s a cancer for actual activism and it’s another one of the convenient logics that can dismiss uncomfortable confrontation as unworthy of engagement.

                Like I say, I have more to say, but this is such a critical point that I want to pause and focus on it for a second.

                I agree, and I appreciate the way in which you did and that you allowed me to address it.

                • mozz@mbin.grits.dev
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                  7 months ago

                  So, I still don’t think that what I am saying is what you think I am saying.

                  I wasn’t saying that those three bullet points were the things that would indicate a shill user. The only reason I brought them up was to speak to you directly about how I saw your user – they were all things that applied to you, as I saw it, in some way. But like I say, I don’t really try to get involved in saying “I think this particular user is fake” unless it’s pretty egregious. Just expressing leftist agitation isn’t it. Like I was recommending slrpnk to somebody recently, sort of like yeah they hate voting sometimes, IDK, but whatever, they are good people.

                  One of a much smaller set of behaviors that’ll imply to me that someone is fake is a glaring incongruity – like beliefs or ways of speaking that very rarely go together. A good example is ozma talking about CNN as a trusted liberal news, sort of “our news” since all of us are leftists together… presumably if you are this far-left lemmy.ml person, you will see how ridiculous that is. Does it mean on its own he’s a shill? Not completely, no. But it’s super weird. That kind of thing is why I am suspicious of him, somewhat less suspicious of you even though you post stuff that to me seems wildly counterproductive to leftist progress in this country, and not at all suspicious of slrpnk. Does that way of looking at it make sense?

                  it will create just enough discomfort to spur action

                  So your intent in posting memes against voting for Biden is to spur the reader to get involved in leftist action? What would they start doing, to improve the state of the country? I’m not trying to be dickish by asking that, I’m genuinely asking.

                  That’s why every criticism of Biden here is always couched in “but i’m voting for him anyway”; without signaling ‘I am not seeking to cause chaos’ every critique is potentially suspect of being bad-faith. It’s a cancer for actual activism and it’s another one of the convenient logics that can dismiss uncomfortable confrontation as unworthy of engagement.

                  Yeah, 100%. This is one of the key reasons why I don’t like the shills. The country needs a whole lot of help definitely including replacing the Democrats with something substantially better, and by distorting the whole conversation away from “how do we make some progress” and towards “is it a good idea or not to let Trump get elected and start imprisoning anyone to the left of Mitch McConnell and shooting anyone who tries to hold a protest”, it’s eliminating a lot of the potential for forward progress that something like Lemmy could otherwise provide.

                  • archomrade [he/him]@midwest.social
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                    7 months ago

                    Just expressing leftist agitation isn’t it. Like I was recommending slrpnk to somebody recently, sort of like yeah they hate voting sometimes, IDK, but whatever, they are good people.

                    I’m sorry that I seem to keep misunderstanding. I still think encouraging that speculation at all is problematic but I won’t push the issue more, I think i’ve made my opinion clear.

                    So your intent in posting memes against voting for Biden is to spur the reader to get involved in leftist action? What would they start doing, to improve the state of the country? I’m not trying to be dickish by asking that, I’m genuinely asking.

                    • I do not post memes ‘against voting for biden’, though I can understand interpreting it that way since I am mocking the essentialist and attitude that suggests it is the only thing that matters (I don’t mean anyone has actually said this, but the extreme sentiment conveyed certainly makes that implication clear). That attitude isn’t just short-sided, it is actively hostile toward critiques and agitation against democrats, who on their own routinely use it to rally support without offering real progress (anyone who pays attention to politics year-round might notice that these oppositional crises never really subside)
                    • I think driving a wedge between those who seek to enforce support for a candidate and discourage dissent (including discouraging the propagation of news coverage that is unflattering to that candidate to a point that is threatening to consensus opinion, or launching crusades against those who are insufficiently emphatic about the need to vote) is the first and likely most important step in agitating change, especially when that candidate is actively engaged in wildly unpopular (at least in present company) oppressive genocidal activity. Protest simply cannot be effective if it is expected not to mount a serious challenge to consensus opinion among moderates, and that absolutely includes here.

                    I realize that this would appear to be counterproductive to a less black-pilled progressive, but I simply do not believe even democrats have any intent to address crucial issues in a way that challenges or threatens the overall capital and imperial structure on which the US has been built (this encompasses my critique of incrementalism, because incrementalist proposals always fall short of challenging those ingrained macro structures i believe are fundamental to truly addressing our active crises). I suspect our support of Israel is one of those issues, I also think climate change and campaign finance and election reform are as well (I already know you disagree with me about incremental climate change progress under Biden, we don’t need to get into it here). And I believe without a hint of doubt that none of them will ever be addressed without anything less than even the mildest of discomfort among comfortable liberal democrats.

                    To drive progress we must sow discontent against the status quo, that much has always been clear.