I agree that some of the megathreads could benefit from a more orderly OP detailing major events in the thread's history. Reading through a 1000+ page thread where long and detailed posts are the norm can take literal weeks, even if you're a NEET slob, which might be too much for folks who just want to chuckle to themselves about weirdos a few minutes a day.
I have to disagree with the quoted part, though. I'm still a newfag and this forum probably already has one of the most mellow and inclusive cultures you can expect from a site like this, which is one of the things I like about it. Everything you need to know rule-wise is calmly and clearly explained to you, and everything that isn't can be learned by way of the time-tested strategy of lurking the fuck moar, which works even better for this site than it does for the chans. I fail to see how you could make it even more 'inclusive' without using some coercive and speech-restricting methods, which would go firmly against the underlying philosophy of this place and would alienate the existing base far more than it would attract newcomers.
The issue at hand is the site's ratings and page-views, not what you or I personally think about some people, who say certain things and do certain things and act in certain ways.
Literally.no.one.gives.a.rats.ass, for the purposes of this discussion. The only way that our sentiments and comfort levels are relevant, are as a metric for how others
might feel when they decide if they want to keep clicking here or gtfo and never look back.
Google has openly published a manual for their quality control web editors, some 4,000 of them all over the world. So basically they have an internal rating system for websites, that is open and publicly available. You have right there, a laundry list of metrics they apply to determine if a site is low quality or high quality, based purely on the content and the mission of the site.
Our dear friends at Stormfront got knocked all the way down to the bottom of the barrel, due to the content of the site. That effectively made them invisible to potential new recruits.
Google doesn't seem to have the same appreciation or tolerance for genuine diversity as we do. So if you do a search on "
White homeland," which is one of their major themes, Stormfront doesn't even appear. But who the hell is researching a topic like that, except for people who want one? Nobody else discusses this. Except, of course, dorks like myself.
So they sacrificed visibility, for their own particular culture, since they are stuck playing by Google's rules.
I'll readily admit that I'm not knowledgeable on how websites work, but why is the SEO for the farms tanking such an apocalyptically terrible scenario? I'd understand if the site were run off of ad money, but it doesn't really make much sense to me since it (afaik) isn't.
The answer to your question:
Because it is so. No sarcasm intended.