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However let me take a break from insisting on how bad the admins are to emphasis the other point: it's true the mods are faggy cancer.

Furthermore I caught something that it seems like everyone missed in the BardFinn thread.

View attachment 5162535View attachment 5162541

I don't know who most of these fags are, but something stood right out to me. In the first photo, left middle tranny and the closest leftmost one in the second, is actually deceased mod T_Dumbsford AKA Matthew ("Melinda") Brown who literally died from taking HRT pills (heart failure was caused by HRT complications which is why the originally "bigoted" doc refused to prescribe them), and that isn't Kiwifarms exaggeration, that's literally what happened. He lived in North Carolina. It's no surprise to see that fag with BardFinn, since he likewise was a deadbeat father, and I think Bardfinn actually convinced them to go trans. However, Bardfinn lives in TX. That means these people flew in somewhere to meet each other. Maybe you guys know the story of these photos, but I don't, but I think these are powermods all getting together. Look at this photo and take it in with your eyes, these are the people that reddit thinks ought to decide what you see and hear. These people are close-knit!
Oh by the way guys, I went through T_Dumbsford history just to show how fucked up shit is on reddit.


Reading this post vs. what happened and the replies is so interesting. They literally encourage people to kill themselves. Of course this terminally online freak talked to a lot of people behind the scenes and they convinced him more than this post; I just want to show you something that "doesn't happen."

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Prior to death T_Dumbsford was a long-time abuser of drugs like heroin and alcohol, so his heart and liver were in a bad state. The HRT ended up furthering damage to both and that's how he died of heart failure. He had an underlying drug-caused issue that was greatly exacerbated by the HRT.

The fact he died this way is funny as fuck and nobody should shed some tears, but I like to harp on about this stuff to show people, this just ain't memes. This shit does happen, right here. Reddit helps brainwash people into doing this shit.

There's literally an informal tranny cult on reddit, and sometimes it's a tranny death cult. They say, like it's a positive thing, that's it is better to live 5 years as a cheap and gross fascimile of feigned womanhood than to cope, get mental help or whatever, and they view this as uplifting, positive, and humane. Imagine if we had the same attitude towards anorexics. (Wait, couldn't you be a woman without having woman parts? You know they're never consistent on anything.)

Except he didn't get 5 years, he got less than 2.

That really depends, maybe in the U.S/canada etc

But overall the biggest influence on zoomers world wide is youtube and influencers
They influence different types of people. On reddit they influence people more likely to be politically active as they discuss this shit and enter communities and make friends. The other stuff like youtube and tiktok are propaganda too, I agree. Reddit just kind of gets ignored in most of the discussions though, usually being outshone by Twitter. They're all terrible, I'm just most familiar with reddit since it took over Forums/BBSes leaving little alternative, and I'm sure most of you understand.
 
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There's literally an informal tranny cult on reddit, and sometimes it's a tranny death cult. They say, like it's a positive thing, that's it is better to live 5 years as a cheap and gross fascimile of feigned womanhood than to cope, get mental help or whatever, and they view this as uplifting, positive, and humane. Imagine if we had the same attitude towards anorexics.
Troons have killed way more other troons than Kiwi Farms, which has killed a grand total of zero troons. We're the worst genocidaires in the world.
 
There does seem to be some change in tone on some of the subs. r/Calgary refused to do the blackout and they're more vocal about stuff that as recently as last month would be immediately removed, and even r/Canada seems to have more discourse where people are becoming more comfortable with discussing difficult topics like BLM being shit. I'm seeing promise of people becoming more free to talk and question things. When the api change happens we may be able to talk about how horrible trannies have been.
 
They influence different types of people. On reddit they influence people more likely to be politically active as they discuss this shit and enter communities and make friends. The other stuff like youtube and tiktok are propaganda too, I agree. Reddit just kind of gets ignored in most of the discussions though, usually being outshone by Twitter. They're all terrible, I'm just most familiar with reddit since it took over Forums/BBSes leaving little alternative, and I'm sure most of you understand.
Certainly fair. Reddit just kinda gets made fun of, but everyone knows what it is, and proably knows someone who uses it to some extent. Being a Zoomer myself, my main influence was youtube and some of the edgy parts of the internet i'd remembered from my childhood, mostly 4 chan and parts of Deviantart, and later on, here once I found out about Chris. That said, if I had to build a social media food pyramid of what is generally "standard" for most people, i'd say Youtube and Tiktok, with smaller helpings of things like Twitter and reddit.
 
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So much entertainment from all of this. Amusing watching jannies tell people if they don't like it to make their own sub. Someone will reply if you don't like what Reddit is doing make your own Reddit and they don't have a reply for that one.

I get that they need to make money. But imagine having a popular website where the users are addicted to it and you're too retarded to make money off it.
 
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Reddit's CEO, Steve Huffman, is going to war with the jannies, calling them "landed gentry" and threatening to let subreddit users vote the jannies out.

Huffman, also a Reddit co-founder, said he plans to pursue changes to Reddit’s moderator removal policy to allow ordinary users to vote moderators out more easily if their decisions aren’t popular. He said the new system would be more democratic and allow a wider set of people to hold moderators accountable.
 
The Jannie Genocide is apparently beginning.

Reddit Threatens to Remove Moderators From Subreddits Continuing Apollo-Related Blackouts​

Reddit Threatens to Remove Moderators From Subreddits Continuing Apollo-Related Blackouts​

Thursday June 15, 2023 3:20 pm PDT by Juli Clover
As some subreddits continue blackouts to protest Reddit's plans to charge high prices for its API, Reddit has informed the moderators of those subreddits that it has plans to replace resistant moderation teams to keep spaces "open and accessible to users."

In a comment shared by r/Apple moderator @aaronp613, Reddit cited its Moderator Code of Conduct and said that it has a duty to keep communities "relied upon by thousands or even millions of users" operational. Mods who do not agree to reopen subreddits that have gone private will be removed.
If a moderator team unanimously decides to stop moderating, we will invite new, active moderators to keep these spaces open and accessible to users. If there is no consensus, but at least one mod wants to keep the community going, we will respect their decisions and remove those who no longer want to moderate from the mod team.
Between Monday and Wednesday of this week, the majority of popular subreddits on the Reddit site participated in a "blackout" and went private or stopped allowing new posts to be made in order to protest planned API changes that will cause the shutdown of popular third-party Reddit apps like Apollo.

The move was aimed at pushing Reddit to enact fairer pricing for developers and to give developers more time to adopt the API changes, but Reddit opted to wait out the protests rather than make adjustments.

As a result, some subreddits such as r/Apple made the decision to continue the blackout indefinitely, which means millions of Reddit users no longer have access to those communities. It seems Reddit plans to forcibly end further blackouts by removing entire moderation teams that are participating.
On Monday, Reddit CEO Steve Huffman said that the blackouts had not caused "any significant revenue impact so far" and that while there was a "lot of noise" amid the planned two-day protest, it would "pass." In an interview with The Verge today, Huffman further said that Reddit's API was "never designed to support third-party apps" and that the apps don't add much value to the site. Reddit created its API for "tools, bots and enhancements to Reddit," according to Huffman.
Huffman confirmed that the blackouts have made no change to Reddit's API pricing plan. "That's our business decision, and we're not undoing that business decision," said Huffman. Huffman said in the interview that Reddit will not force communities to reopen, which contradicts the messaging that moderators are receiving.
Reddit also just published a blog post with "key facts" about the API updates. In the post, Reddit says that "dissent, debate, and discussions are foundational parts of Reddit," and that it respects the right of its community to protest, so long as mods follow the Moderator Code of Conduct. The Moderator Code of Conduct is what Reddit is citing in messaging to moderators about moderation teams being removed from closed communities.
Moderators and Reddit users are unhappy with Reddit's decision to charge an unreasonable amount for its API, and for the short 30-day timeline that third-party developers have been given to adopt the new API fees.
Apollo developer Christian Selig determined that adopting the API would cost him $20 million per year, leading him to decide to shut down his app on June 30, a day before Reddit begins charging. As of July 1, there will be few if any third-party apps for viewing Reddit content, pushing Reddit users to either the Reddit website or the Reddit app.

 
The Jannie Genocide is apparently beginning.
And to no ones shock but the jannys themselves, this happens. Its almost like holding a entire website hostage because your volunteer work will be slightly harder is a good way to stop being a volunteer. While the reddit Admins and The site itself is gay as fuck, the moderators are infinitely worse.
 
Reddit Corp absolutely reaping what they had sown with this shit. These jannies are not interested in operating a communication platform, they're interested in censorship, power and authority. Reddit Corp liked that because they would enforce ESG ideology. Turns out jannies actually believed their own propaganda.

So who do you airdrop into the mod team this time? Will the laissez faire jannies return? I don't think so, they still have to uphold the ESG rating. Do you formally hand over control to /r/nba to the NBA, /r/apple to Apple, etc? Honestly that would probably be the for the best. No longer can people attribute janny abuse to random individuals, no, now it's an corporate-sanctioned action that can be followed up on. The nigger cattle won't notice a difference since these shitholes were already globohomo/gov/corporate controlled astroturf zones.

Man, at this rate Reddit is never going to go public. It's never a "good time", when was it originally supposed to IPO?
 
So who do you airdrop into the mod team this time?
It sounds like they are just going to give top mod to any mods in the original mod list who are willing to bend the knee. Pretty clever, since it's basically a multi-party prisoner's dilemma scenario. Most of the big subs have 10+ mods, so someone is going to defect. Then they can just find some new subjannies and teach them the ropes.

If a moderator team unanimously decides to stop moderating, we will invite new, active moderators to keep these spaces open and accessible to users. If there is no consensus, but at least one mod who wants to keep the community going, we will respect their decisions and remove those who no longer want to moderate from the mod team.
 
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