Yet Another Columnist Claims Bluesky Is A Liberal Echo Chamber Because Its Users Keeping Kicking Nazis Out Of The Bar

from the what-views,-motherfucker?! dept

Editor’s note: Mike Masnick is on the board of Bluesky, and took no part in editing or reviewing this piece.

Here it is: the dumbest take to date on Bluesky v. xTwitter. There’s been plenty of stupid offered up before by bitter xTwitter users who are trying to pretend they’re not still splashing around in white nationalist dumpster juice while surrounded by bots. Their favorite coping method is to claim Bluesky users are afraid to engage in the marketplace of ideas. But all they offer is a limited market in the darkest alley in town.

None of these arguments are being made in good faith. No one criticizing Bluesky users for routinely rousting Nazis and their fans from this social media platform is making intellectually honest arguments. They’re just bitter that the people they actively dislike (and actively harassed on xTwitter) are no longer willing to slog through the sewage just to have a meaningful interaction or two with their fellow, non-bigoted human beings.

This column for… um… Commentary, written by James Meigs, at least lets you know right up front you’re dealing with a dishonest broker in the marketplace of ideas. You’ll see it immediately in Meigs’ opening paragraph:

When Bluesky opened to the wider public in 2023, more left-leaning users flooded in, many of them hoping to escape the increased visibility of conservative views on Musk’s now laissez-faire platform redubbed “X.”

I mean, it’s right there. This is yet another person who thinks people are closed-minded because they prefer not to engage with “conservative views,” while failing to acknowledge that “conservative views” is a coded term that refers to open racism, white nationalist ideology, anti-trans hatred, bigoted beliefs covering pretty much every race, color, creed, or sexuality, and a general enthusiasm for MAGA-based autocracy.

These are not “conservative views.” These are bigoted views that far too many people hold — people who think they might be perceived as rational if they use this phrase, rather than something more specific that would reveal what these “views” actually are.

The bad faith argument continues, broad-brushing Bluesky users as liberal elites, skeeting from the relative safety of their ivory towers in the general direction of the internet’s peasantry.

Having emerged from the intersectional hothouses of academia, many progressives today view policy disputes through a therapeutic lens: They see themselves—and the marginalized groups they claim to speak for—as victims of trauma. The solution to that trauma is not rigorous debate. Quite the opposite; they need protection. Exposure to dangerous speech could threaten their mental stability. So progressives now treat opposing ideas not as errors that need to be rebutted with facts, but as dangerous contagions that must be quarantined.

Bro, there has been actual trauma inflicted by social media users. It happens on every social media platform, but Bluesky’s robust moderation tools (many of which are controlled by users themselves) — including a Block button that actually works — do offer protection to people who’d rather have a pleasant online experience, rather than one routinely interrupted by harassment from ugly trolls and outright bigots who seem to feel the “marketplace of ideas” obligates the harassed to indefinitely endure harassment.

At least Meigs says there’s some “dangerous speech” out there. That he won’t equate it to the “conservative views” he name-checked earlier is disingenuous. The entry fee for social media interaction should never be subjecting yourself to bigotry and hatred. If the bigots want a playground, they’ve got several to choose from. This just sounds like the whining of bullies who are finding fewer and fewer people to push around.

After a diversion into a bunch of stuff that’s so barely worth discussing even Meigs can’t be bothered to do it any length (and that’s in an op-ed that runs more than 2,400 words) — de-platforming, Biden Adminstration allegedly demanding accounts be blocked or removed, COVID origin conspiracy theories, the banning of Trump from Twitter after the January 6th insurrection) — he goes right back into pretending xTwitter is the only place real social media interaction still takes place. And, of course, he uses phrasing that glosses over the irredeemable shithole xTwitter has become under Musk’s ownership:

When Bluesky gave them an escape hatch from the increasingly freewheeling—and sometimes raucous—debates on X, many jumped through it without looking back.

Oh yeah. “Freewheeling.” “Raucous.” Those are some mighty fine words. But they don’t fool anyone who isn’t already deep in the throes of self-delusion. There’s no “debate” on xTwitter. What’s being referred to as freewheeling, raucous debate is just a steady stream of open racism, transphobia, sexual harassment, death/rape threats, and a bunch of dudes with philosopher bust avatars declaring that everyone calling them bigots are just low-IQ liberal NPCs. And that’s if you can even get past the massive ad load, Bitcoin hucksters, and emoji-laden responses that clutter every single thread on the platform.

There’s more of this throughout the rest of it. The guy speaking on behalf of his fellow “conservatives” continues to proclaim Bluesky is the platform of intolerance and fragility — again, using phrases that refuse to acknowledge the genuine ugliness that is the day-to-day business of xTwitter.

I don’t love X’s somewhat uglier vibe, but I accept the trade-off. I’m willing to tolerate a few angry or idiotic posts in exchange for knowing that right-wing views aren’t being deliberately buried.

[…]

I suspect that the progressives who feel threatened by right-wing “hate” have simply never experienced a cultural environment where conservatives speak as loudly as liberals.

“Right-wing views.” Hate in scare-quotes. “Somewhat uglier vibe.” But who’s really threatened here? It seems to be the “right-wing view” people who are running into a wall of resistance that’s no longer going to engage in the mutual lie of “freewheeling debate.” These are the same people whose “conservative views” make them angry about preferred pronouns, sexual identity, diversity, inclusion, women having personal agency, and any flag that doesn’t have a thin blue line, MAGA logo, or swastika on it.

Once again, Meigs goes back to his core complaint: Bluesky users don’t want our “conservative views” bullshit wrecking up their mostly-pleasant Bluesky experience. And, in doing so, Meigs accidentally advertises what makes Bluesky better than its competitors.

I quickly learned that the site’s core innovation is not finding ways to facilitate thoughtful conversations. Instead, Bluesky’s secret sauce is the powerful tools it gives users to shut down voices they disagree with. Block lists—featuring the names of people you will not permit to see your posts—are public and widely shared and discussed. “People make nasty lists and lists and lists there,” a Bluesky user in Germany explained to me. Many Bluesky regulars import other users’ lists wholesale, allowing them to block hundreds of people they’ve never even heard of.

That’s the real problem Meigs has with Bluesky: it won’t give him a platform to harangue people whose ideas he disagrees with. That’s always been the case, even back when “conservatives” were complaining about being muted, blocked, or banned from (original) Twitter and Facebook. They all carry the same sense of entitlement: a firm belief that if they’ve been given a platform to speak, everyone else should be forced to listen.

And this follow-up makes it clear Meigs is willfully ignoring what has already happened on xTwitter to pretend this is a uniquely Bluesky problem:

In real-world social circles, being a total flaming, um, jerk brings social costs. But in a hermetically sealed social-media bubble, it’s a way to build your status. Bluesky adds another perverse incentive: Anyone adding nuance or pushing back against violent statements risks being ridiculed and even mass-blocked by the online community. This combination of positive and negative rewards creates a one-way ratchet, always pushing users toward extremism.

Exactly. But you only like the bubble that includes you, rather than the one that doesn’t. That’s a pretty universal human trait — resentment towards any group that excludes you. Unfortunately, it’s also a pretty human trait to spend 2,400+ words trying to turn your personal bad experience with Bluesky (if this ever even happened — there doesn’t appear to be an account linked to Meigs on the service at the moment) into a universal experience that reflects a vast majority of internet users.

What’s never even considered in this column is that people are embracing Bluesky for all the reasons you’ve chosen to treat as negatives. Everyone can curate their own experience — something that’s definitely not possible anywhere else. Both Facebook and xTwitter allow pay-to-play amplification for posts, as well as sloppy, profit-first algorithms that shove whatever these sites think will increase “engagement,” rather than assist in curation by being more attentive to what users actually want to see on their timelines. What’s absolutely insane about Meigs’ assertions above is that he’s ignoring his own complaints about xTwitter so he can pretend the real problem here is Bluesky:

If you can’t see the embed, it’s a screenshot of Meigs on xTwitter in 2019 saying:

Twitter’s goal with every change is to have us spend less time doing what WE want to (interact with the people we actually follow) and spend more time doing what Twitter wants them to do (get sucked into “trends” and #StupidHastags and viral outrage mobs).

Here’s a platform that doesn’t pull that bullshit. And Meigs shits on it because “conservative views” (you know the ones…) aren’t gaining a foothold at Bluesky.

I’m a Bluesky user. I don’t mind honest debates. But I’d much rather have a timeline I can closely control — one that gives me access to what I’m looking for and allows me to remove any detritus I come across with a couple of swift clicks — than whatever’s passing itself as “social media” elsewhere.

What’s on display here is the amazing fragility of people who can dish out tons of abuse but just can’t take it. It’s also exposing the people who are facing the uncomfortable fact that lots of internet users don’t like what they post or the people they identify with. Worse, they’re finding out they don’t like they people they identify with much either. Echo chambers aren’t great, but I’m sure people would prefer an echo chamber where most people are polite, helpful, and supportive, rather than the alternative xTwitter provides: a dark pit filled with the worst people you know. Meigs, for some reason, prefers the pit. At least there, he can soak in some tepid applause for owning the liberal snowflakes currently enjoying a site he doesn’t feel obliged to listen to him speak.

Filed Under: , , , ,
Companies: bluesky, twitter

Rate this comment as insightful
Rate this comment as funny
You have rated this comment as insightful
You have rated this comment as funny
Flag this comment as abusive/trolling/spam
You have flagged this comment
The first word has already been claimed
The last word has already been claimed
Insightful Lightbulb icon Funny Laughing icon Abusive/trolling/spam Flag icon Insightful badge Lightbulb icon Funny badge Laughing icon Comments icon

Comments on “Yet Another Columnist Claims Bluesky Is A Liberal Echo Chamber Because Its Users Keeping Kicking Nazis Out Of The Bar”

Subscribe: RSS Leave a comment
90 Comments
This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Bloof (profile) says:

Sorry republicans, you don’t get to use the N-word and still get invited to parties, that’s not how life works. You made the ‘marketplace of ideas’ a thing to try and bring back long discredited political ideologies and pseudoscience, you shouldn’t be shocked that normal people choose to shop places other than your market, and that it’s no fun being surrounded by scammers and nazis.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
This comment has been deemed funny by the community.
That One Guy (profile) says:

Re: People saw their product and decided to shop elsewhere

Conservative: Rather than silence abhorrent views I think society should be on board with the marketplace of ideas, where people are free to listen to a plethora of ideas and ‘buy’ into the ones they find convincing or agreeable.

Non-conservatives: Alright, well sorry to say but I’m not interested in what you’re selling, so I think I’ll go elsewhere.

Conservatives: How dare you, that’s not how a marketplace of any sort works!

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

There are some view points and feelings in this world that are not valid and deserve no platform. There is a huge difference between legitimate, good faith, conservative points of view and white nationalism. I hate that this is even a debate we have to have. Most people don’t want neo Nazis in their communities “just asking questions,” or peddling their great replacement crap. Republicans used to understand this, but now they just insist that white supremacist views are part of the continuum of conservatism. The republicans are such a joke, and I wish I could just laugh, but a lot of people are getting hurt because of these cowards.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

I hate that this is even a debate we have to have.

There’s really no debate here. Conservative pundits currently insisting there needs to be one are the same pundits that, not too long ago, were insisting there was nothing to debate and they were being unfairly silenced for their beliefs.

Attempting a good faith debate with them over any of this will serve no purpose; they’re not in it to come to a better more informed understanding; they’re in it to silence their opponents and gain points from their supporters.

I say this as someone who has long considered themselves to be conservative, but can’t stand white nationalism. It’s caused me to change who I spend time with, because some of these people assume I share their views and seem shocked when I inform them I’m conservative, not bigoted or a fascist. The parts of society I want to preserve are around actual values of personal and social integrity, not of making other people less than myself.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

I guess I didn’t mean so much debating with individual conservative people, but rather that these fringe views now have become mainstream and people in general need to push back more against their normalization. Like just throw the Nazis outta the bar, guys. Remember when that was not a controversial thing to do?

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

Back when those “studies” started about “conservatives” (racists) being more likely to get banned from Twitter, I used to wonder why actual conservatives weren’t taking a stand against the conflation of conservatism and racism. When you actually looked at the data, the “conservative views” they were getting banned for were mainly just saying the N word. But none of the real conservatives seemed to mind.

I used to think real conservatives didn’t mind because at least the conclusion was in their favour. The real answer, as it turns out, is that there just aren’t that many real conservatives. Closet racists are the bulk of people adopting the “conservative” label, and that’s been the case ever since they were forced into the closet about it.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

The problem with right-wingers referring to places like Bluesky as “echo chambers” is, for those right-wingers, threefold:

  1. An echo chamber is literally a chamber where only the same speech is heard over and over, and I can’t think of any place that more closely resembles such a description than right-wing online spaces.
  2. Places like Bluesky are less “echo chambers” and more a collective “living room”, and even right-wingers wouldn’t invite just anyone to come into their living room and shit where they please.
  3. The people who keep blocking/chasing off Nazis, bigots, and right-wingers in general have heard all the arguments and opinions and positions from those groups before and found them lacking, so why would they ever need to hear them again?

Ultimately, this comes down to right-wingers thinking they have, or deserve, the non-existent right of “freedom of reach”⁠—that they’re somehow owed a spot on a service like Bluesky even when that service (or its userbase) doesn’t want them there. The poor dumb bastards will never learn that no one has that right, so we’re going to keep hearing this stupid-ass take over and over again. What’s sad is that they’ll never take failures like this as a moment to introspect because doing that is anathema to their victim act.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re:

Pretty sure blue sky only wants the left.

It’s not so much that Bluesky “only wants the left”, so much as a significant chunk of the Bluesky userbase⁠—which is largely made up of people who dumped Twitter because of its embrace of Nazis, antisemites, and other such assholes⁠—doesn’t want Nazis, antisemites, and other such assholes in their presence. Why should Bluesky users be forced to put up with that bullshit?

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Bloof (profile) says:

Re:

You have no interest in joining, and that is perfectly fine, I’m not on Bluesky either as I’m happier on Mastodon as I distrust the people from the crypto space that Jack Dorsey chose to run the place.

You’re not going to be called a nazi for not wanting to join a site, you might be called one if you believe that people on a site should be forced to accept them though.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Mike Masnick (profile) says:

Re:

Pretty sure blue sky only wants the left.

Simply not true. There are plenty of people not on the left on Bluesky.

So no interest in joining, does not make me a nazi, if everybody not of the left is a nazi your seeng nazi’s under the bed.

No one said that not joining makes you a Nazi. No one believes that everybody not on the left is a Nazi. But if you’re out there doing Nazi salutes or rounding up people to put them in concentration camps or talking about polluting the blood of your nation, don’t be surprised if someone calls you a Nazi for engaging in literal Nazi behavior.

Leah Abram (profile) says:

Re: Re:

No one said that not joining makes you a Nazi. No one believes that everybody not on the left is a Nazi. But if you’re out there doing Nazi salutes or rounding up people to put them in concentration camps or talking about polluting the blood of your nation, don’t be surprised if someone calls you a Nazi for engaging in literal Nazi behavior.

Exactly. If it smells like a Nazi, it’s probably Musk.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Bloof (profile) says:

Re:

The same reason Libertarians have never built a nation from scratch, because the things they believe in don’t actually work for very long unless others have already done all the hard work building up the systems and infrastructure they need to exist yet wish to tear down.

There were multiple attempts at ‘free speech’ twitter alternatives and even with backing from billionaires like the Mercers and high profile republican influencers and politicians, and none of them attracted a worthwhile community because normies don’t actually enjoy the ambient hostility that comes with a right wing free for all. It took Elon buying the town square and flooding it with sewage for right wingers to get their dream site, and that’s becoming less and less fun for them by the day as their intended victims just up and leave and the people who remain hate them, want to sell them things or want to steal from them.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
redhill_qik (profile) says:

Re:

I think a better example would be why aren’t they using Truth Social as a positive example.

It was specifically built the right as an alternative to Twitter with the goal of “open, free, and honest global conversation without discriminating on the basis of political ideology”, so why isn’t that the shining positive example for discourse?

Kinetic Gothic says:

Re: Re:

Because it was never what it was billed as, and everyone knew it…

They started out the door with a TOS that said that you couldn’t disparage anything Trump related.

And then Trump randomly censored peoplejust for S&G on top of that.

That’s not “open, free, and honest global conversation without discriminating on the basis of political ideology”

That’s a pre-fab Trump Echo Chamber, all Trump, no lefties need apply.

So, they came, saw there were no lefties to own, and got bored..

This comment has been deemed funny by the community.
freakanatcha (profile) says:

We have to extort companies or they won

I’ll admit it.

I left the twit because it was making me feel intellectually inferior. To know any argument I might advance could be crushed with just a few keystrokes in reply by astute commenters such as Catturd or whoever translates Ultra MAGA Trump Gal’s thoughts from the original hillbilly gibberish. And others, I suspect, have some sort of relationship with Putin. Just a guess.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
UserWithNoName says:

Lazy Fair

I don’t think there’s a less appropriate term for modern day conservative advocacy or strategy than “laissez-faire.” More than ever before they advocate the government has an obligation to inject itself in a increasing number of economic sectors/individuals’ personal lives.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

autumnlover (profile) says:

Remember, it takes very little to be counted as being one of the lolipops these days. You don’t have to wear a shiny black Hugo Boss’ style lolipop dress uniform. You just have to be Professor Dawkins or Dr. Richard Stallman.

And rose people are nothing special. Why should I care about rose people and treat them in any special way? They don’t stand out and differ from non-rose people whatsoever, they’re human beings and part of homo sapiens family just like everyone else on this planet. There is nothing special about them at all.

and btw – There are four lights, not five or three. Just four.

Bloof (profile) says:

Re: Re:

‘I want to dismiss legitimate criticism of people I like by insinuating that the left calls everyone they disagree with nazis, only I don’t want to use the word Nazi because then I’d be asked to defend my claims and point at high profile examples. Like most ‘rational moderates’ I base my opinion on the behaviour the left on a screenshot of a tweets from users whose follower count matches their age that were boosted by Sargon of akkad.’

Whicker says:

While I wouldn’t call Blue Sky an echo chamber, there are active and passionate communities on there that heavily traffic in violent threats, murder fantasies, and doxing to intimidate people off the platform.

Now I won’t say this sort of behavior is condoned by BlueSky’s management – as far as I can tell this could be explained by insufficient staffing of moderators. But the net effect is you have deeply unhinged extremists that do all they can for months-on-end to intimidate people they don’t like off of Blue Sky. And they do this very visibly in the name of Progressive politics.

This comment has been deemed funny by the community.
jimb (profile) says:

You know how...

You know how, in Chinese language, the “xi” construction is pronounced “sh”? I think – I’m not a Chinese speaker, but the head guy in China, the guy Trump wishes he were, is “Chairman Xi”, and they always say ‘Chairman ‘she’, right?

So, when I talk about Musk’s Folly, I always write “X-itter”. So go ahead, say it.

Seems fully appropriate.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Phoenix84 (profile) says:

These are not “conservative views.” These are bigoted views that far too many people hold

Sounds like the same thing to me. The bigots in this case are mostly conservative, and most conservatives are bigots at this point. At this point they overlap so much they might as well be the same.

The guy speaking on behalf of his fellow “conservatives” continues to proclaim Bluesky is the platform of intolerance and fragility

Every accusation is an admission.

Twitter used to let you block users, and would warn you about content you might find offensive. You could still view it if you chose, it just wasn’t forcibly put in your face.

Block lists—featuring the names of people you will not permit to see your posts—are public and widely shared and discussed.

Now, while I’m on Bluesky, I haven’t used it much. I didn’t know it had a sharable blocklist feature.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re:

I believe trans people should have the right to participate in public life without being harassed or discriminated against. TERFs believe trans people should be pushed out of public life and either back into the closet or into an open grave.

Please tell me how the difference between those two positions is only “slight”. I insist.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

autumnlover (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

Please tell me how the difference between those two
positions is only “slight”. I insist.

Insisting that trans women should use men’s public restrooms is not “throwing them in the grave”. Remember that in many countries, becoming a “trans woman” is simply a public self-declaration, and does not require any surgeries, court decisions or hormone treatments.

Leah Abram (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2

Insisting that trans women should use men’s public restrooms is not “throwing them in the grave”. Remember that in many countries, becoming a “trans woman” is simply a public self-declaration, and does not require any surgeries, court decisions or hormone treatments.

Trans woman here. I do whatever results in the most safety, not just in my own safety, but the safety of those around me. When I present as a woman, I’ve used women’s restrooms, and there was never an issue. When I’m in the gym, I use the men’s locker room, because–and this is extremely important–I care about the safety of cisgender women!

Besides, how are people supposed to check whether or not someone has any “surger[y]” or “hormone treatment” before using the bathroom of their gender? Are you seriously suggesting cops look at people’s genitals before using the bathroom? That’s disgusting.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2

Insisting that trans women should use men’s public restrooms is not “throwing them in the grave”.

It kind of is, though. The point of bathroom edicts is to (A) effectively police who is and isn’t a “real” woman, even if that affects cisgender women who don’t look “enough” like a woman, and (B) drive trans people out of public life by making them fear so much for their safety every time they need to take a piss that they don’t go out in public. From there, imagining that trans people who feel like they can’t go out in public might take their own lives isn’t a huge leap. And that besides, if a trans person is murdered, you won’t see TERFs treating that as anything but a victory because it means one less trans person in the world.

in many countries, becoming a “trans woman” is simply a public self-declaration

Okay, and that’s relevant to the hostile-as-hell treatment of trans people by the Trump administration and Republican-controlled local and state governments…how, exactly?

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Bloof (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2

You must be thrilled that Trump is destroying anti segregation laws, huh? ‘How is forcing a minority group to use separate facilities humiliating and dehumanising?’ How could denying people basic human decency and attempting to erase them from history and public life be something that leads them to suicide?

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

autumnlover (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3

What kind of segregation you are talking about? There is no need to create “third” kind of restrooms. What prevents a man who identifies as a woman from using a public men’s restroom? Especially if it is only a “declarative” identification and all “lower parts” are fully functional? What does this have to do with humiliation, persecution and inducing self-destruction? To quote Linus Torvalds: “‘Maybe the problem is you”

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Leah Abram (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:4

Listen: many of us trans people look like cis people. If you ask trans men to go to the women’s room, you’re asking someone who looks like a man to piss and shit where the women’s room is, and same for trans women who look like cis women to piss in the men’s room.

This doesn’t even account for intersex people.

You don’t know what the fuck you’re doing by forcing us to do our business in the bathrooms of our birth sex rather than our true gender.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Bloof (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:4

‘Golly gee, why would depriving people who are not harming anyone of basic rights and the ability to live their lives in public as the person they are rather than what they were assigned by default at day one lead to bad outcomes for said minority group?’

Given the fundamental lack of empathy you display and the obsession with what is and isn’t in anyone’s pants, the problem is very much you.

Rocky (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:4

Why don’t you try dressing as a female before using men’s restrooms for a while, perhaps then you’ll understand.

It’s not just about restrooms either, it’s about singling out a specific group of people to make their life harder by denying or make it difficult for them access to various things while treating them as 2nd class citizens.

And there really is a third kind of restroom, it’s called a unisex bathroom which is common in most places were people aren’t obsessed by what kind of plumbing other people possess.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:6

No one forced them to become transperson in the first place.

“If the icky fucking queers would just act like actual human beings instead of subhuman filth, they wouldn’t get treated like the subhuman filth they are!” That’s you. That’s you in that post. Go fuck yourself with an inanimate carbon rod.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

autumnlover (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:7

Trans people are nothing special. What exactly makes them special? They are attention seekers for the most part. To quote Wikipedia “attention seeking behavior is defined in the DSM-5 as engaging in behavior designed to attract notice and to make oneself the focus of others’ attention and admiration”.

I can admire and respect you for being brilliant programmer or a writer. Poet or an actor. But for being trans person in itself? Why I should care?

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:8

Trans people are nothing special.

Trans people fight more to be who they are in one day than you’ve likely ever done in your lifetime. They fight for acceptance, for the right to be in public, for the right to be seen and treated as people. Every trans person who faces the deluge of hate from people like you and lives to see tomorrow is braver, stronger, and just plain better than you will ever be.

Your hatred is a weakness. It makes you susceptible to manipulation from those who would exploit your hatred to turn you into a weapon. It makes you easy to trick into believing the most vile things imaginable. That you still don’t see how anti-trans dipshits have cucked your brain into believing trans people need to be eradicated is your problem. Go deal with it somew…

…wait a minute.

Wait a goddamned fucking minute.

Did you come back under a new name, Hyman Rosen? Did you actually get tired of being stopped hard by the newly tightened spamfilter?

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re:9

They fight for acceptance, for the right to be in public, for the right to be seen and treated as people.

The first, yes. The second and third, no. We fight for those already extant rights to once again be recognized on a legal and social basis. But then, someone who ‘advocates for’ a minority without even stopping long enough to ask any of its members what they think is bound to get a thing or three wrong here and there.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Rocky (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:6

Volenti non fit iniuria

So you think it’s totally okay for bigots to harm people they don’t like? Or perhaps some transperson have hurt you so you now want to harm everyone of them?

Tell us, what is your criteria for accepting harm to other people who hasn’t done anything except existing? And why does it seem you don’t have a problem with that happening?

You using Volenti non fit iniuria while taking in account your argument overall, is that what you actually meant was Might makes right, there can’t be any other interpretation.

No one forced them to become transperson in the first place.

It takes someone really “special” to blame the harm that comes from the bigots on the one being harmed, it’s called victim blaming. You might read up on the concept, you might even learn something and become a better person for it.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:4

What kind of segregation you are talking about?

The kind that separates one demographic of the general populace from all the others by disadvantaging that demographic so they suffer from worse public facilities, worse access to the public sphere, and possibly even a curtailing of their civil rights compared to other groups. You might think it’s only a race thing. You would be wrong.

What prevents a man who identifies as a woman from using a public men’s restroom?

It’s telling that you refer to trans women as “men who identify as women”. But probably not in the way you think.

What does this have to do with humiliation, persecution and inducing self-destruction?

If you can’t figure out how being singled out by lawmakers and oligarchs for being a Repugnant Cultural Other to those in power, and how being targeted by supporters of those powerful people, can result in someone feeling so depressed and downtrodden and defeated that they’d rather take their own life than deal with more bullshit? You lack a working sense of empathy.

Also, your “just asking questions” schtick is pathetic. Go JAQ off somewhere else; you won’t find anyone here who will buy into your anti-trans bullshit unless they’re already anti-trans themselves⁠—and you’re all going to get flagged into oblivion anyway.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

Stephen T. Stone (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:6

I speak for myself when I say I’ll flag you. And I speak from experience when I say that bigots like you get flagged into oblivion on a regular basis by a bunch of other people here. Now that you’ve shown your ass to the regular commenters, expect your name to become the big reason your comments get flagged on sight from now on.

glenn says:

Social media needs an access test, you know, like the rides at the fair–“you must be this tall to ride” (with a gauge you stand next to). For social media it would be more IQ-related–“you must be this smart to use this site” (with a CAPTCHA-like** test you have to pass). Pass the test and you get a “license” for using all social media sites (which all require you to have the license first).

**it’s actually a psych test 😀

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Phoenix84 (profile) says:

Re:

and xTwitter is a MAGA echo-chamber.

That’s what happens when you silence opinions you don’t like, or overwhelming drown out those opinions with your own by sheer force/numbers.

Just because you can be blocked by someone that doesn’t want to listen to you doesn’t make it an echo chamber.
If you want to have a debate about taxes, or even about the Dept of Education’s efficacy, I’m more than happy to oblige. However if you just want to talk about how schools are indoctrinating kids with beliefs you don’t agree with, then sorry I don’t want to hear it. If you want a bible present in every classroom, but object to a torah or quran, your opinion is not valid.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
metasonix (user link) says:

Both you and Meigs forgot to mention something

Since he took over X/Twitter/whatever, Musk has been fooling around with user recommendations and changing “follow” lists withOUT the user’s permission.

Twice last year my X feed suddenly filled up with both his own account, and with right-wing and pro-Trump accounts I would never follow: Breitbart, Newsmax, Tucker Carlson, Posobiec, Fox, InfoWars, etc. etc. I had to remove them manually from my follow list. I’ve seen rumblings that he’s been doing it to random users, plus shadowbanning or just plain banning pro-Ukraine and NAFO accounts. Musk is a very arrogant and sleazy little boy.

Not only that, he routinely bans people who criticize him directly or say other things he doesn’t like, regardless of any TOS being violated or not.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
That One Guy (profile) says:

Because it continues to be relevant

Conservative: I have been censored for my conservative views
Me: Holy shit! You were censored for wanting lower taxes?
Con: LOL no…no not those views
Me: So…deregulation?
Con: Haha no not those views either
Me: Which views, exactly?
Con: Oh, you know the ones

(All credit to Twitter user @ndrew_lawrence.)

Terr (profile) says:

"What views are those?"

And Meigs shits on it because “conservative views” (you know the ones…) aren’t gaining a foothold at Bluesky.

To reproduce what I think is the source, for anyone who isn’t familiar with it but will probably recognize the phenomenon:

Conservative: I have been censored for my conservative views

Me: Holy shit! You were censored for wanting lower taxes?

Con: LOL no…no not those views

Me: So….deregulation?

Con: Haha no not those views either

Me: Which views, exactly?

Con: Oh, you know the ones

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Drew Wilson (user link) says:

This all tracks with everything else I’ve witnessed over the last several years. Far right wingers want a license to endlessly harass others with no repercussions. The claims that they want their own space is simply hollow. They had it with sites like Parler and Gab, but both failed because they (to paraphrase Mike Masnick I believe) broke the cycle of abuse. So, Musk bought Twitter and turned it into a Nazi bar. People got fed up with the sewage and left and the platform is now failing. So, some of the garbage people are trying to get into places like Mastodon and Bluesky to continue the cycle and ran into fierce resistance because not only will users not put up with that crap, but use the tools to drop them from conversing on top of it all.

The freedom to harass marginalized people are what the far right really care about. This has been proven time and time and time again. The whining about being blocked only serves as a more recent reminder of this. I mean, seriously, don’t like being blocked, stop being an asshole. Not that hard.

Heck, it wasn’t that long ago that I used Mastodon’s block feature on someone desperately trying to convince me that Biden is a pedophile. I didn’t even bring up Biden in the first place, but suddenly, this user started hitting me with all these obviously made up BS conspiracy theories. I declined to show interest and when the user insisted, I hit “block” because I had no interest in putting up with that crap. If that makes me a Liberal echo chamber, then I have absolutely no problem with that. After blocking that user, my feed was, once again, nice and squeaky clean and my experience continued to be quite pleasant.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

Leonard Smalls (profile) says:

All comments expressing any differint opinion bloced

Came back to see what else was going on with this article. Every comment stating any opinion other than the one in the article has been flagged and hidden.

Very indicative of the point being made.

Have fun talking to each other.

HRMMPP HRMMPP HRMMPPH (Blazing Saddles reference, but tat is probably banned too)

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Rocky (profile) says:

Re:

Every comment stating any opinion other than the one in the article has been flagged and hidden.

That’s one comment, yours. At it wasn’t really an opinion, it was an argument without supporting evidence which you can rectify by telling us what opinions are getting people banned.

Every other comment that got hidden has no real bearing on the article at all. Valis for example, is a Chinese stooge and cheerleader, and they will mostly get flagged on sight due to their previous comment history here.

If you want to state an opinion about how bad it is that BlueSky is supposedly banning people for non-liberal milquetoast opinions, you first have to establish that it actually happens because how else are we going to know if you are just making shit up or not?

Bloof (profile) says:

Re:

Funny how Conservatives supposedly love people having the freedom to pick and choose who they associate with, right up until communities choose not to put up with their bullpoop. It’s almost as if they want the freedom to censor and discriminate and others to have the freedom to shut up and be subject to their will.

You’re not censored, people can view and reply to your comments if -they- want to. Freedom of speech, not freedom of reach.

Anonymous Coward says:

Opposing views

“So progressives now treat opposing ideas not as errors that need to be rebutted with facts, but as dangerous contagions that must be quarantined.”

Absolutely not. About half my feed consists of statements from Neo-Nazis on Fox or elsewhere, or significant xeets, or reports on Mothers For Book-bans. You can read or hear the original before you dunk on it.

“Anyone adding nuance or pushing back against violent statements risks being ridiculed and even mass-blocked by the online community.”

Well, yes, I have experienced this. Every dramatic plane crash since 1/20 has been widely blamed on Trump and his people, and I have been pushing back (and widely blocked) for pointing out this is just not so; there is nothing in the NTSB reports to suggest it and in fact 2025 has so far seen fewer crashes than recent years. But more dramatic, uncritical reporting and BlueSky #TrumpsFault amplification.

Fox News made it a mission to blame everything bad on Obama or Biden. Don’t be Fox News.

Fifi (user link) says:

You know what's really funny to me?

In the Bluesky community guidelines there is nothing about discussing low taxation, free market efficiency, Christianity, traditional family life and other stuff Conservatives claim to care about, as long as you are able to discuss them in a polite, respectful, non-harrassing way without conspiracies and disinformation. Most of The Bullwark’s or The Telegraph’s content, feeds of somebody like Mitt Romney, John Kasich, Rand Paul or even this very op-ed would be okay with the app rules with no reason for removal.

Yes, they would be highly unpopular with the current left-leaning Bluesky crowd and immediately end up on a bunch of community blocklists, but there is nothing stopping them from creating their own “polite conservative” or “polite libertarian” Bluesky communities with their own custom feeds and blocklists. And there would be nothing stopping users from both sides, who do sincerely enjoy discussing opposing views, from just disabling those community blocklists and having some heated but polite policy arguments.

In the end it could be a refreshing experience for many GOP voters and a fertile ground for the optional “marketplace of ideas.”

Op-eds like this show that while mainline conservatives pay lip-service to renouncing nazis, bigots, grifters and conspiracy loons, they actually see them as useful. And when given the choice they would rather stand up for nazi hate than to face the fact that conservative policies are actually not that popular…

Add Your Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Have a Techdirt Account? Sign in now. Want one? Register here

Comment Options:

Make this the or (get credits or sign in to see balance) what's this?

What's this?

Techdirt community members with Techdirt Credits can spotlight a comment as either the "First Word" or "Last Word" on a particular comment thread. Credits can be purchased at the Techdirt Insider Shop »

Follow Techdirt

Techdirt Daily Newsletter

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Get all our posts in your inbox with the Techdirt Daily Newsletter!

We don’t spam. Read our privacy policy for more info.

Ctrl-Alt-Speech

A weekly news podcast from
Mike Masnick & Ben Whitelaw

Subscribe now to Ctrl-Alt-Speech »
Techdirt Deals
Techdirt Insider Discord
The latest chatter on the Techdirt Insider Discord channel...
Loading...