The first sentence on the Wikipedia page for it calls it “a disputed medical condition.” Even the CIA itself has admitted that cases are not caused by “a sustained global campaign by a hostile power.” The State Department similarly released a report that it was highly unlikely the symptoms were caused by any sort of directed energy weapon. In fact, seven different US intelligence agencies released a consensus statement saying, “available intelligence consistently points against the involvement of US adversaries in causing the reported incidents.”
But the clowns on .world don’t care about things like truth or evidence, or even direct statements from the people who’s boots they have in their mouths. If it makes an enemy of the US look bad, then it is absolute truth, and anything short of complete faith and loyalty must be purged from conversation.
Rare video clip of a .world mod
Offending post
Chipping in as a former mod. We get a lot of reports. At some point, huge long run on paragraphs like this will get skimmed over. We don’t have the time or capacity to dissect every thesis that gets reported. If it throws up red flags (and this one throws up a lot), we make a judgement based on that. Sorry, but that’s how modding works.
Also chiming in to say, if banning haphazardly is a consequence of not having enough mods, then maybe they should be getting more mods.
Speaking from experiences on [email protected] and [email protected] , the vast majority of people aren’t interested in moderating.
I left the call for mods post open on the first one for weeks, only got one volunteer after two months
Ye I know, but typically if you don’t find mods like that, there’s also not a lot of traffic either to justify not taking the time, no?
The of course doesn’t take into account super-mods, i.e. people modding dozens or comms, but that’s on them really.
I used to mod r/Futurology, one of the default reddit subs. Hard to say how many actual users, but over 10M subscribed (inflated because we were a default sub). Even then we had trouble getting reliable mods who wouldn’t drop out after a month.
Are you still a mod there? Could you promote [email protected] as an alternative?
Futurology.today is run by the same team, we have tried promoting it and getting people to move, but haven’t had much luck with the inertia.
Are you able to review and unsuspend accounts there? I got suspended 3 times in about 6 weeks, and the 3rd one is just permanent. I still don’t get what I was suspended over. The team won’t tell me, and they claim it’s viewed by a human team, but I know it’s not.
Only on .today if that’s what you meant
That’s sad to hear, thanks for trying
[email protected] has 2110 monthly active users, seems quite active to me.
Doesn’t seem to have so much traffic that 4 mods can’t deal with it.
We are 3, the two first accounts are the same person. Most of the time there aren’t many reports, but then once in a while a “heated” topic comes up (usually wokism and representation in TV shows) and then you’ll get a few due to bigotry.
I just don’t know why people aren’t as interested in shows as in movies. [email protected] has 2780 monthly active users, and we have 7 mods there.
Also, besides the “dealing with the reports” aspects of being a mod, there is also a “building the community”, and for that one I’m mostly alone. Again, a bit surprising seeing how popular that topic should be. On the other hand, [email protected] has no mods at all, so maybe it’s just a trend for the whole topic.
I think it’s just a lot to do with attention. I like shows more than movies lately, but I don’t have time or inclining to sit and discuss them as well usually.
And ye, bootstrapping any comm on lemmy is fairly hard.
That could be it. Or than people want specific communities for each show rather than a generic one.
This wasn’t a huge run on paragraph, that’s just how things get displayed in the modlog.
Ah. Ignore above comment then.