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Erin Kissane

I think one of the hard things about fedi, culturally, is that a whole lot (most??) of us are here because we are refusers of norms. And which norms and which levels of refusal differ.

So even if you’re at the 80th to 99th percentile of resistance to corporate social media OR mainstream party politics OR mainstream journalism OR cars OR the normalization of repeat covid infections, there will always be people popping up to tell you that by not being completely pure, you’re killing everyone.

105 comments
Dave Alvarado

@kissane that is my newest unfollow/block criteria, sadly.

Lydia Schoch

@dave @kissane Same here. I struggle with that aspect of the Fediverse a lot.

(((Thinkaholic))) is antifa

@kissane And because we *do* care about resisting these things, those accusations of moral failure have potential to sting us in a way that “normie” folks wouldn’t feel at all.

Erin Kissane

And even if you’re SUPER PURE along one vector, you’re always going to miss some other one someone feels very motivated to discipline you about.

And this must be okay for some people! But I try very hard to live in a state of at least partial uncertainty, because the alternative is a real vulnerability to Going Bad without realizing it. The downside of that stance is that shit just doesn’t roll off. This is true for a lot of us, I think—maybe artists most of all, bc art requires sensitivity.

Erin Kissane

I don’t have a solution for this, and it feels obvious when I write it out. But it seems worth grappling with across as well as within our various communities. 🪴

Erin Jonaitis

@kissane There’s a volume aspect to this too. I suspect I’m considerably more norm-core than the archetypal Mastodon user (along most axes but not all) — but because I don’t have a big account, this stuff just doesn’t come up for me.

Might be worth doing a qualitative study of pain points identified by big users of various platforms/whatever-we-call-them, and what those say about the culture. (Possibly this is already out there. Possibly you are even the person who would have written it… I’m out of my depth here) The median user of any service probably just isn’t going to experience the same things.

@kissane There’s a volume aspect to this too. I suspect I’m considerably more norm-core than the archetypal Mastodon user (along most axes but not all) — but because I don’t have a big account, this stuff just doesn’t come up for me.

Might be worth doing a qualitative study of pain points identified by big users of various platforms/whatever-we-call-them, and what those say about the culture. (Possibly this is already out there. Possibly you are even the person who would have written it… I’m out...

Erin Kissane

@emjonaitis For sure! I am thinking a lot about ways of getting into the needs of a bunch of cross-cutting groups, like people who really want to connect more but feel lonely and ignored + people in groups that are likely to be targeted (Black women, most of all) + “big” accounts whose work enriches the network but whose own experiences of it are often so alienating. This is one of 2-3 things I’d like to work on next, tbh, but I’m a little crispy so I’m taking a wee moment first. 🫠

Azuaron

@emjonaitis @kissane I was thinking along the same lines. Even if only 1% of users is going to get all up in their feelings about something, and you have--to pull a random number--13,000 followers, that means 130 people are going to get all up in their feelings about something.

I don't want to have 130 pleasant and engaging conversations with people I know well in a given day, let alone 130 strangers getting upset at me for something, even IF I could sympathize with their perspective.

sara

@kissane I feel this hard, “purity culture” leading to subtraction (of self, of participation, of consideration, of ideas) and that we should be about growth, care, protection, revival. That purity is a test one is trying to measure up to, to force oneself (and others) into quantifiable boxes; chasing purity in all angles is not aligned with the messiness of human grown and maybe its allure is that it promises certainty? A way to KNOW we are safe (by whatever metric we measure that).

sara

@kissane to achieve communities that value vulnerability safety can’t be derived from a perception of absolute “purity” but instead something akin to… Grace? Generosity? Empathy?

(All within reason, and the tolerance paradox, and all manner of human messiness)

Juho Mäntysalo

@sara @kissane

I'm personally really happy when someone takes time out of their day to explain why something might be a problem and respectfully offers a solution.

But then there are those people who misread your message, or don't bother to contextualise it to another culture, and instead of checking did they understand correctly, they just jump forward to sending insulting pictures and tagging you for their friends, who just check the synopsis for the mob...

John

@kissane

I don't disagree on principle. But I do think that it's worth remembering that what you call "purity testing" is sometimes the result of hypervigilance.

I also think the language "purity test" is...not the best. It belittles their position and their reaction in ways that scream "privileged" to me, because the more marginalized you are the less wiggle room you've got for "live and let live" attitudes.

Fifi Lamoura

@johnzajac I don't find this to be true at all! I've always found that people who have been victimized and Othered, who are part of out groups, are more likely to extend understanding to people. Don't mistake purity testing for having and asserting boundaries (particularly with outsiders) or standing firm around values, these are not the same thing and purity testing happens within marginalized groups too and is equally toxic within the group. To be clear, purity testing isn't about discussing and maintaining values. @kissane

@johnzajac I don't find this to be true at all! I've always found that people who have been victimized and Othered, who are part of out groups, are more likely to extend understanding to people. Don't mistake purity testing for having and asserting boundaries (particularly with outsiders) or standing firm around values, these are not the same thing and purity testing happens within marginalized groups too and is equally toxic within the group. To be clear, purity testing isn't about discussing and...

Erin Kissane

@johnzajac I’m inclined to give people a whole lot of leeway on health stuff, but there’s a still point past which it’s still bad and counterproductive behavior.

Most of what I see here (and most of what I mentioned) is people exercising social discipline because someone else drove a car, linked to youtube, posted on another network, expressed excitement about voting, or used an iphone. As someone who grew up in fundamentalist purity culture, I think that stuff is classic purity culture. 🤷🏻

Erin Kissane

@johnzajac (And as someone on the way vulnerable and very isolated end with covid, I can understand and even sympathize with even fairly terrible behavior while also believing it’s doing the opposite of helping.)

John

@kissane

Haha for sure! When I was doing high school arts advocacy I had this staff of just post-college age activists working with me, and we'd often argue about stuff like this.

My position was that sometimes the right thing to do isn't the strategic or effective thing to do, and that where the left often falls apart is that they do the right thing rather than the effective thing. I also had a soft spot for slacktivists, which irked them to no end lol.

John

@kissane

I think managing those "purists" is part of being an effective and strategic change agent. I've found that if you build a mutual and trusting relationship with them you can temper that energy and bring it to bear.

I mean, this is the internet so whatever. Half of them are probably just trying to have a fight with you so they can let off steam.

I just wanted to inject hypervigilance because the ideas we get on here can bleed into everyday life, and I hadn't seen anyone else do it.

Leah Bobet

@kissane @johnzajac I've recently boiled down what's happening here to: "I understand you're [!SITUATION] but I still don't want to be treated like that."

John

@leahbobet @kissane

Everyone has their threshold for interaction and that MUST be respected. I mean, that's obvious to me, and it's part of why block function exists.

We are the ones lobbing our ideas into the cyberscape, though, so we bear some responsibility for inviting the trampires in.

Leah Bobet

@johnzajac I'm sorry: I'm not sure what you're trying to explain to me, or why you're explaining it to me, as we're strangers and none of this has been an information problem, just me chatting with a person I actually know about something we largely agree on. There's no query or debate in this situation to address.

Anyways, I hope sometime we have the opportunity to discuss something on real terms, because your work looks interesting. Have a good day?

John

@leahbobet

Oof I'm sorry. I recognize that I was just inserting myself and I regret that.

Umberto Ecco

@johnzajac @kissane as someone who's marginalized in a few different ways, I disagree: I have very little wiggle room to purity test people because I can't afford to be picky about who I accept help from

Fifi Lamoura

@kissane I think there are a couple of things...

Firstly, purity tests are an aspect of fascism, they're all about the individual subsuming and sacrificing themselves to an ideology or belief (usually that of the believer so it's making the other person subordinate and using the ideology as the lever to do so). It's not a coincidence that people who are judging others on these purist standards also see themselves as martyrs (and greatly underappreciated for their greatness). None of this is reasonable nor does it leave room for people to be human and imperfect. (We're all human and imperfect, even the people who believe themselves above all this.)

@kissane I think there are a couple of things...

Firstly, purity tests are an aspect of fascism, they're all about the individual subsuming and sacrificing themselves to an ideology or belief (usually that of the believer so it's making the other person subordinate and using the ideology as the lever to do so). It's not a coincidence that people who are judging others on these purist standards also see themselves as martyrs (and greatly underappreciated for their greatness). None of this is reasonable...

Fifi Lamoura

@kissane Secondly, there are also people who have a very hard time moving beyond binary good/bad thinking for reasons of nature/nurture and how their brain works. There's an aspect of splitting and projecting all bad onto others involved in this. But everyone can learn to move beyond binary thinking and it gets easier with practice (we can all use some practice doing this, our brains ARE wired for quick good/bad categorizations and quick reactions).

Juho Mäntysalo

@fifilamoura @kissane

I mean, purity is a thing about fascism, sure, BUT MORE IMPORTANTLY, purity is a thing that also happens when you have to protect your identity against majority.

That's how you get those flamboyant gays of 1980s, or vegans of the same period, or stop-oil -activists today. You either make yourself a caricature by demanding rights, or you stay in the closet.

(I can only think how many gotchas Thunberg gets for owning a phone, or using clothes, electricity etc).

Fifi Lamoura

@iju This is not how being flamboyantly gay works, firstly, and we weren't all purity testing each other before we engaged in activism. Purity tests are things usually used AGAINST activists for being humans living in the world and not saints (see the "gottchas" you listed, that wasn't environmentalists screaming about Thunberg being a person living in society with human needs). Back in the 80s we knew we were messy motherfuckers and we did our imperfect shit very imperfectly (in fact, that's the DIY mantra...just do shit and learn and adapt as you go). Also, purity is a religious idea and it's actually generally about projecting all of the shit one considers "bad" in oneself onto someone else so the person in question can feel like they're better than other people. It's bullshit, it's about the individual needing to disown part of themselves for some reason.

@kissane

@iju This is not how being flamboyantly gay works, firstly, and we weren't all purity testing each other before we engaged in activism. Purity tests are things usually used AGAINST activists for being humans living in the world and not saints (see the "gottchas" you listed, that wasn't environmentalists screaming about Thunberg being a person living in society with human needs). Back in the 80s we knew we were messy motherfuckers and we did our imperfect shit very imperfectly (in fact, that's the...

Juho Mäntysalo

@fifilamoura @kissane

Perhaps I used the wrong word, or wrong example. This isn't my first language, nor am I familiar with United States of today or or yesteryear (which I'm assuming you're contextualing my message to).

What I tried to say is that pushing new ideas as an activist involves being a caricature for various reasons: to draw attention, to set an example, to not be pushed aside when others ask you to take it down a notch for their convenience etc.

Juho Mäntysalo

@fifilamoura @kissane
2/2

In any case, this compelling to purity is something I've both seen and experienced, and have heard others mention.

In the spirit of trying to be constructive I'll add that there might be some other mechanisms for why vanguardianism (for lack or better word) so often tends to rise when pushing changes in society.

I've heard shouts* "if no one gets upset nothing's going to change" and people don't get upset by vegans who leave the steak on the plate..
_
* In 🇫🇮

@fifilamoura @kissane
2/2

In any case, this compelling to purity is something I've both seen and experienced, and have heard others mention.

In the spirit of trying to be constructive I'll add that there might be some other mechanisms for why vanguardianism (for lack or better word) so often tends to rise when pushing changes in society.

ig 🏳️‍🌈

@fifilamoura @kissane no doubt there are many things going on. but i think contemporary culture has brought out aspects of activism that are hyper-individualistic rather than community-focused - you see people performing these self-improvement projects like changing their diets, altering their vocabularies, and displaying only the correct opinions on social media, using an abstinence-based approach to becoming a Good Person. but with purity comes contempt for the people who fail those standards.

ig 🏳️‍🌈

@fifilamoura @kissane what these people don't realize is that if the majority of humans fail your minimum standards of being a Good Person, you end up hating the human race - and your activism is no longer rooted in compassion, but contempt for the impure.

you can't claim to care about humanity while despising almost all of it. there has to be room for forgiveness of human failure.

Elana | אילנה

@kissane I just want to say that I think you're doing great, I admire you a lot, and the person I saw who was engaging in all that finger-wagging at you seemed to be clearly working out his life frustrations in entirely the wrong direction. I think you're wonderful and I'm sorry you're taking such undeserved heat when you're clearly doing your very best, for yourself and for everyone 🫶

Erin Kissane

@elana Augh ❤️❤️❤️

I’m truly okay, my skin thickens back up fast! But I’m such a network nerd that whenever I see problems I start thinking about them in network-wide terms.

BashStKid

@kissane @elana
Without being trite, once you’ve seen everything is connected, purity shows up as brittle, binaries look trivial.

Daniel Aloi

@kissane This reminds me of the Bloom County strip where Opus tries not to harm even one blade of grass...
we all can do what we can, within reason; and dissuade others from doing the worst - scolding one another doesn't really help.

Kelley Graham
@kissane I love to ignore and block the #PurityTrolls and #SanitySealions. Not much else can be done. They’re not here to have a nice talk.
Voline

@kissane
This may be the Mastodon subcultural instance (ha!) of a more general phenomena of people being over-the-top intolerant on the internet. Interesting that you should say this just after I read this piece from yesterday by the amazing columnist for the Irish Times, Laura Kennedy. She was talking about the brigading of a couple girls doing a TikTok dance video.

"Online, things are different. We lose that rational sense of our own irrelevance and we can become thoughtless, credulous babies, quicker to judge and rage and dismiss.”

archive.ph/LyzJH

@kissane
This may be the Mastodon subcultural instance (ha!) of a more general phenomena of people being over-the-top intolerant on the internet. Interesting that you should say this just after I read this piece from yesterday by the amazing columnist for the Irish Times, Laura Kennedy. She was talking about the brigading of a couple girls doing a TikTok dance video.

Rob Campbell 🐳

@kissane the problem with zealots... You can’t let ‘em get to you. If you post online, you’re opening yourself up to attack.

It’s a fun thought experiment tho. You either silo yourself with other like-minded people and defederate, or stay open and exposed. Maybe there’s a balance, maybe there are better controls we could implement.

I’m not sure anyone’s really treating the “fediverse” as a “product” outside of Meta. It’s all individual instances and client software.

people are messy.

rood

@kissane kicking the can down the road to a solution - here's my 2¢:

As a regular vegan you learn to moderate expectations. Same again as a regular Linux user. Then there's regular cycling, sailing, hiking, gardening, eco-living, …

Eventually self preservation kicks in because a fully fledged extremist can establish a hate group with ease. And a hater can nitpick over the most mundane problems.

A modicum of reality becomes a life vest in a sea of perfectionism.

If nobody I know picks up a better way of living through me, then why would I strain myself to be the nth level guru? I'm not seen as a role model in any of my departures from the norm. I get happy to normalise until further notice. Yet, I work my butt off within the establishment of a better way.

@kissane kicking the can down the road to a solution - here's my 2¢:

As a regular vegan you learn to moderate expectations. Same again as a regular Linux user. Then there's regular cycling, sailing, hiking, gardening, eco-living, …

Eventually self preservation kicks in because a fully fledged extremist can establish a hate group with ease. And a hater can nitpick over the most mundane problems.

Ted Han ★ 韓聖安

@kissane I often think about the survivorship bias of the folks who've stuck around to post. There's a degree of intrinsic motivation and living in one's head that being in the fediverse requires.

acb

@kissane one model of Fedi is as a social justice dojo, where you are constantly challenged and honed on your righteousness, with the end goal being of producing paladins to fight against evil

Galaxy :neurodiversity:

@kissane It's the whole "perfect being the enemy of good" thing essentially. Agitation for purposes of purging out the bad is fine IMO and can even be a good thing, as long as it doesn't stray into actual attacks on others. I haven't seen a lot of attack behavior but I keep hearing it's a thing here (I do believe you and them) and it's a bit worrisome.

Luke Dorny

@kissane the artist portion striking nerves more than the rest.

Luka Rubinjoni

@kissane Yeah, I was amazed there's people here demanding that @mattblaze puts CW on his (excellent, black and white architecture and landscape) photographs.

Justin Kent

@kissane amen, been struggling with this idea a lot recently. The purity tests result in an inordinate amount of -this is why we can't have nice things-

Kadsenchaos

@kissane
You might be on to something! Never seen it this way, but it tracks.

John Mark Ockerbloom

@kissane I agree with that And each of us also encounters others who make it clear that the norm refusal we care about isn't, as far as they're concerned, worth caring about. Sometimes it's said explicitly; sometimes it's implicit but still apparent in what they say.

That can be stressful too, with enough scale and repetition. It's not something I think can be eliminated in wide discussions, for various reasons, but it's worth remembering (esp. when my own posts might heighten that feeling).

Stéphanie Pageau

@kissane I'm often scared that these "purity tests" will turn people entirely away from a good position.

I saw someone say that if you don't mask because of peer pressure, you're basically a fascist... wouldn't you prefer to get people to be COVID-safe from 90% to 95% of the time, instead of from 90% down to 0% because they think they'll never be able to be safe enough?

I don't know, I've been seeing a lot of black and white statements lately (and I'm sure I've made some too). I think it's important to think about the consequences that berating someone for not being absolutely perfect can have.

@kissane I'm often scared that these "purity tests" will turn people entirely away from a good position.

I saw someone say that if you don't mask because of peer pressure, you're basically a fascist... wouldn't you prefer to get people to be COVID-safe from 90% to 95% of the time, instead of from 90% down to 0% because they think they'll never be able to be safe enough?

Ryan Robinson

@stephanie @kissane
One of the few times I have invoked the wrath of the fediverse was when I dared to say I take off my mask on the elliptical because it gets harder to breathe when all my sweat is trapped around my mouth and nose. Didn't matter that I mask more than 99% of the population, basically anything other than sweating, eating, or needing to talk a lot.

Erin Kissane

@stephanie Yes, absolutely. I’ve spent a lot of time since 2020 with public health folks who do things like HIV prevention and vaccine hesitancy comms work and they’re all quite clear that purism and condemnation are wildly unhelpful ways of moving more people toward more safety. It was eye-opening! I know that a lot of people are just venting their (very understandable) rage but it’s such a counterproductive mode.

Fifi Lamoura

@kissane This! As someone who lived through and survived the AIDS crisis (and lost many loved ones to it), I am constantly annoyed by people who don't understand why we ran "safer sex" campaigns rather than demanding everyone stop ever having sex (abstaining from sex is the purist position on AIDS, not wearing a condom, and I wish that Covid zero people would understand this and why it's "safer sex" not "safe sex"). Harm reduction isn't a purist position and they do active harm to the message when they try to make it one. actu@stephanie@ottawa.place

@kissane This! As someone who lived through and survived the AIDS crisis (and lost many loved ones to it), I am constantly annoyed by people who don't understand why we ran "safer sex" campaigns rather than demanding everyone stop ever having sex (abstaining from sex is the purist position on AIDS, not wearing a condom, and I wish that Covid zero people would understand this and why it's "safer sex" not "safe sex"). Harm reduction isn't a purist position and they do active harm to the message when...

Mary Austin VOTED 4 HARRIS!

@kissane
People who fight hard for any cause in real life don't attack people who are any percent on the same side, let alone 80% on the same side. Actually fighting the powers that be is so exhausting you have zero time for pointless online drama, especially with people who mostly agree with you.

If you vote blue, we are on the same side and I'm not gonna pick a fight.

I tune out those who wanna fight our side instead of the Nazis, remembering that none of those people really do anything.

@kissane
People who fight hard for any cause in real life don't attack people who are any percent on the same side, let alone 80% on the same side. Actually fighting the powers that be is so exhausting you have zero time for pointless online drama, especially with people who mostly agree with you.

If you vote blue, we are on the same side and I'm not gonna pick a fight.

Mary Austin VOTED 4 HARRIS!

@kissane

(And a lot of them are actually Russian bots.)

kevin

@kissane @skinnylatte

Agree with this but would also add – moral purity (good vs. evil dichotomous thinking) is a trait of White/European culture.

There’s a great book called “White Bound” by Matthew Hughey, who spent a year in embedded in both a White antiracist organization and a White supremacist group. Members of *both* groups (White antiracists and neo-nazis) were very preoccupied with demonstrating ideological purity to their group’s mission.

kevin

@skinnylatte @kissane

That makes sense to me. It’s weird, White culture is very individualistic/competitive, but it also values conformity/purity.

L. Rhodes

@kissane Yeah, there's a tendency to see "refusal of norms" as an identity that is, itself, normative—almost as though there were a checklist of norms, and anyone who finds their way here is supposed to diligently go through the list and put a red X next to each. But really, the most you can count on is that each person refused one norm in particular, and that made seeking out a social media alternative seem practical.

HM02

@kissane@mas.to "Don't let Perfect be the enemy of Good."

bearsong

thanks for sharing @kissane

one perspective that i find really helpful is chatacterised by:
"if something is worth doing, it's worth doing half arsed"

trying, and valuing trying, and doing some is so important.

every effort, every hope, every positive step is a thing.
learning and trying to be who you (i, we) want to be, whilst loving and nurturing the slips and stumbles on the way

never let the impossibility of idealised perfection stop us from trying to get on okay, compromising as we go

thanks for sharing @kissane

one perspective that i find really helpful is chatacterised by:
"if something is worth doing, it's worth doing half arsed"

trying, and valuing trying, and doing some is so important.

every effort, every hope, every positive step is a thing.
learning and trying to be who you (i, we) want to be, whilst loving and nurturing the slips and stumbles on the way

CadeJohnson

@kissane . . .and they may be right. But sometimes I still get on a plane, eat some meat, compromise on policy preferences, etc. I am weak!

vashbear

@kissane Well said!

Prioritization of multiple issues can polarize on a single issue that people agree on.

On a single issue, Alice and Bob might agree completely with one another. But then...there might be 9 other issues that Bob believes are relatively more important.

Now suddenly, there seems to be a big gap between Alice and Bob on that original issue.

DELETED

@kissane Personally, I mute a lot of words associated with things I agree with, even. 🧘‍♀️

libramoon

@kissane

I feel no need nor desire to be pure
I contain multitudes, each with their own moods and peeves

Chris Funderburg

@kissane I'd love to know the generational makeup of those people popping up. I have a theory but don't feel like getting attacked for it myself!

Erik Moeller

@kissane

That's well put -- and often folks _have_ of course thought about the tradeoffs they themselves have chosen, but get "explained to" by others.

IME, many nerdy communities (especially male-dominated ones) have similar refusal of norms cultures, so for folks who've been part of such communities it may feel easier to tolerate or even normal, but it can be very offputting.

I think a culture of generosity in how we approach each other is a useful thing for any fedi community to nourish.

Daniel Aloi

@kissane yeah well it's pretty hard not to be a slave to the system as long as you want a car or a phone.

Erin Kissane

@danaloi I just had a whole I Lived in Berkeley in 2002 heart attack there

Daniel Aloi

@kissane lol I hear you (only for me it was Seattle in 2004 and Ithaca NY from 2005-15)

Marc Robinson-Rechavi

@kissane Thank you! This is such a great framing, and I can definitely see that I've contributed to this in my corner of mastodon. We should try to do better.

#RedOctober 4 The #Phillies

@kissane my GOODness does this post &🧵ever resonate with me. I think “purity test” IS the right term 💯.

As a lifelong #progressive activist who is left of center, I’m being shamed on the Fedi for - what I feel are the admirable traits of - nuance:

+ understanding both/all sides
+ not exploding AT people who think differently
+ not dismissing someone full stop for having one political difference from mine

These kinds of behaviors look and feel like #extremism to me and are HARMFUL.

@kissane my GOODness does this post &🧵ever resonate with me. I think “purity test” IS the right term 💯.

As a lifelong #progressive activist who is left of center, I’m being shamed on the Fedi for - what I feel are the admirable traits of - nuance:

+ understanding both/all sides
+ not exploding AT people who think differently
+ not dismissing someone full stop for having one political difference from mine

Jay

@kissane I think part of it is a tendency to increase the stakes/contrast between you and your opponent while repeating your strongest arguments that happens during a disagreement.

You’ve explained yourself but your opponent Doesn’t Get It which means they are just dismissing the consequences so you’ve got to make them clearer to them.

It’s a bad habit and I know I do it, too, as well as jumping into a new conversation already at that higher level. That’s when you need to walk away.

FelisCatus

@kissane on the other hand,you are always more "pure" than someone else, and you will always find someone more "pure" than you.

I don't like this "purity" terminology. The way I view it, in most cases it's just a way of saying that someone is concerned about an issue you don't care about (or not as much as them) -- and to discard their concern without bothering to rationally engage with it.

gary

@kissane i think almost opposite - most people are working reg jobs and mostly conformist - they toe the line, the platform is censored (essentially) - it is not anything goes or super inclusive/open minded. to get the real info out there you have to go other places - mostly accurate

DELETED

@kissane The solution is something no likes to do. It's humility. See when people do stuff like this it's not really about the action. It's about them being better than you. That's why people need to have humility, but it's hard to do. Even the tone of this post is very self congratulatory.

TheFwGuy 🇪🇺🇮🇹🇺🇸🖖

@kissane I read your post many times .. honestly I don't get it. I mean, I don't see the problem.
Personally I like being here because remind me the magical world of the BBS, more or less same way to communicate with other people. For me is a return to the past.
Then yeah, I guess I am a refuter of "norms", aka I like to think with my head.
Still I don't get the killing someone because not "pure". What does mean ?

crazyeddie

@kissane "...there will always be people popping up to tell you that by not being completely pure, you’re killing everyone."

And the correct response to that is, "Well I goddamn hope so! People suck."

Stanley

@kissane My reaction to folks arguing with your “it’s not your fault” statement…

A man trying to decide between two buttons labeled “confront power to make change” and “attach allies with purity test”.
David A. Dutton

@kissane I don't deal with people like that. I try to be a good person, but I'm not gonna have someone come along and criticize me because I haven't deleted Facebook. If anyone comes along and does that, it's just an instant block – and I wouldn't care if they are friend or family in real life. I do not use Twitter/X because I believe that platform is 1 million times worse than Facebook at this point.

Daniel Marks

@kissane Wouldn't you say then that refusing norms has become the new norm, and thereby we should be refusing the refusing of norms?

naught101

@kissane which is funny, because that's just people enforcing conformity to a different set of norms.

Susan Kaye Quinn 🌱(she/her)

@kissane it's one thing to be a refuser of norms and another thing to purity test and be a dick about it

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Blackheath Weather

@kissane For me, it's not so much a refuser of norms, rather, I seek out online environments that are more given to kindness and friendship and respectful exchange of ideas.

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