original point sufficiently burried now as to have become mostly moot.
Your original post: Rafmun "Bureaucracy 2: Like Sartre, Only Longer" Mar 30, 2004 6:05:11 am PST
"PREFACE: The following is offered as observation, and in the spirit and tone of academic discussion.
It is also offered from the perspective of an outsider who has lurked for a fairly long time now, and who felt both piled upon and marginalized with his first offer of perspective in this thread - so it is unavoidably influenced by that experience.
OBSERVATION I don't think that newbies are particularly targeted or treated differently than long term posters.
I don't think newbies are piled upon by 'most of the board'.
DIME-STORE ANALYSIS After watching for a good time now, it seems from my perspective that there exists on this board a very large group of happy posters who go about day to day business on the board without involving themselves in bureaucracy or other threads/issues of controversy. 99 per cent of posters at this place are the most friggin' awesome group of intelligent, humourous and caring people found just about anywhere online.
But overshadowing the majority of posters is a very small group of activist posters who make it their business to involve themselves in most issues. These posters are currently directing the direction of the board by sheer pressure of persistence. These are not necessarily the board moderators, but rather, they are the proverbial squeaky wheels. These activist posters' points are not necessarily stronger in any given debate, and there are even a few posters who will persist in misdirecting debate away from actual points (i.e., the recent discussion over tone evolved without taking into equal consideration the points being forwarded).
It seems from an outside perspective that it has become more important to a small minority of posters to impose their feelings on the board than make the board better for the group.
This has not been specifically directed at newbies or at long-termers, but rather it seems indiscriminate - though it does seem like a few long-termers are being specifically singled out by a few of the activists.
There seems little question that this situation has alienated - at least to some degree - both newbies and long-termers. Some newbies simply leave while others accept the artificial hierarchy of culture. Some veteran posters have been marginalized and driven away from posting by this same situation. Others simply go on with their posting, but have given up trying to offer constructive input because they don't wish the long and largely fruitless debate to follow.
Anyway, this seems to be the way most boards drift over time - even the excellent ones. It seems partly a product of human nature, and partly a result of boards lacking a defined benevolent authority structure.
Let me reiterate - the above is the simple observation of a single person. It is offered only to the extent that the perspective of a lurker and newbie may be valuable in some way. If it is not valuable, useful, wanted or welcome, then please feel free to ignore.
In the interest of total sincerity, I will acknowledge that it is also offered with the smallest hope that it may play a wee part in the effort to bring out or bring back input from that 'silent majority' who are still around, and who were instrumental in making this one of the strongest, most enlightened, accepting, tolerant and tightest knit communities anywhere on the web.
We are STILL talking about a small group of posters waving their magical aggressive wands at the board and controlling all discussion and decisions.
I for one have moved from looking at your post thoughtfully and saying "yes, this does sometimes happen" and "I may be that person sometimes" to getting bothered with you for accusing teh collective us of ignoring you and getting sidetracked and being so easilyt walked over by these powerful posters.