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Posted by alexandra_k on November 2, 2010, at 5:39:14
In reply to Re: more blocks » Dr. Bob, posted by alexandra_k on November 2, 2010, at 5:38:00
Thanks for your support and encouragement over the years. I understand why you feel like leaving (on the basis of what you have said) and respect your decision.
It is a shame that things have turned out this way.
But really, what did Bob expect?
Posted by ron1953 on November 2, 2010, at 10:46:57
In reply to Miss you twin, posted by alexandra_k on November 2, 2010, at 5:39:14
I think we need to hear from the "other side of the aisle". I sure would like to know their views.
Posted by ron1953 on November 2, 2010, at 16:05:00
In reply to C'mon, pro-block members, chime in, posted by ron1953 on November 2, 2010, at 10:46:57
Posted by alexandra_k on November 2, 2010, at 21:48:17
In reply to Miss you twin, posted by alexandra_k on November 2, 2010, at 5:39:14
You know it is funny...
Once upon a time Bob got it into his head that a better way to go would be to move from the current autocratic system (him in charge) to a more democratic system. I guess the thought would be that we would become more civil (according to him) if we weren't rebelling against him.
This was a change because I think prior to that he thought that our protesting against his actions prevented us turning on each other. During that time he seemed to think that it was good when we spoke out against his actions because he thought that was required in order for us to play nice with each other (a kind of coming together against a common enemy thing to do).
So... Deputies arose. Part of the democratization of babble. Only problem was that many of the deputies left or ceased being deputies or got upset with Bob because even though they were supposed to share some of the power (e.g., blocking decisions) Bob didn't actually relinquish any and thus they either had to do what he would do were he to act or... Quit or be de-deputized.
So the deputy thing rather than resulting in more democracy only resulted in creating duplicate copies of the autocrat. Reminds me of something... But best not said online.
Now we have the 'report this post' feature. I wonder who chooses whether the reports will be acted upon or not.
It is his site. He seems to want to let go (at times). But... He can't. Or won't. Or probably some combination of the above.
Still. Guess he is doing us a favor, really, because as people get better... They do indeed come to see some of this. And make the decision to move on. For their own mental health.
A way of helping prevent online addiction, to be sure.
But also a way of undermining the community that was so helpfully addictive.
Still. What ya gonna do?
Posted by alexandra_k on November 2, 2010, at 21:55:59
In reply to C'mon, pro-block members, chime in, posted by ron1953 on November 2, 2010, at 10:46:57
> I think we need to hear from the "other side of the aisle". I sure would like to know their views.
Well now, this is rather easy...
(Playing devils advocate - so to speak).
If there weren't any blocks at all then people would say things like 'I hate you you useless piece of sh*t' to each other. That would undermine the supportive aspect of this site and then posters would leave.
There are already a lot of online communities that don't have much in the way of moderation and because of the online disinhibition effect people really can be very hostile to each other.
This is a community that is supposed to be supportive. Some people here can't or don't stay in other online communities where people do say hurtful or unsupportive things to each other. Even without the online disinhibition effect many people are here because they find that others are hurtful or unsupportive IRL and they have trouble coping with that too. This place is special because it is meant to provide a sanctuary from such things.
The way in which it does so is for Bob to decide whether or not he will block people on the basis of what he decides is 'uncivil' words. Clearly if he didn't block people for up to one year for saying 'I think' instead of 'I feel' then the community would degenerate into people saying 'you useless piece of sh*t' to one another and then... Well... I guess then people would leave.
You know, the 'good' ones. The ones who Bob chooses not to pick apart their posts.
And that would be a horrible thing (for them).
Of course.
Posted by vwoolf on November 3, 2010, at 0:51:25
In reply to Re: C'mon, pro-block members, chime in, posted by alexandra_k on November 2, 2010, at 21:55:59
Believe it or not I do support blocks, and I have said so often before.
I think it is like the frame in therapy, without which it is not therapy. And like the frame in therapy, everyone hates it.
I think that if we as posters are prepared to look, we will see ourselves reflected in the way we respond here on Babble. Bob is merely representing, in a shadowy internet kind of way, something internal to ourselves. He stays so far out of Babble that we can't know what he is really thinking. And so we start to project.....The frame (or block) represents the edge between ourselves and reality, and so defines us. It's not really about Bob at all, although of course he is the one who holds the frame and so catches all the crossfire.
I still maintain that PsychoBabble is therapeutic, in a funny, laid-back kind of way, and it is this that distinguishes it from other sites, and what brings blocked posters back after even very long blocks.
But I do feel very sad when people I like are blocked.
Posted by SLS on November 3, 2010, at 6:53:06
In reply to I'm pro-block, posted by vwoolf on November 3, 2010, at 0:51:25
I am an advocate of forum moderation, including posting blocks. However, I remain uncomfortable with what I perceive to be a threshold for infractions that is too low to earn sanctions.
- Scott
Posted by ron1953 on November 3, 2010, at 9:54:40
In reply to Re: I'm pro-block, posted by SLS on November 3, 2010, at 6:53:06
I appreciate hearing from youse guys.
Are you "pro-block" because you think that blocks help make a member a "better" member, or because they get rid of members whose posts you don't like?
Posted by Dinah on November 3, 2010, at 10:40:00
In reply to A Question for Pro-block Members, posted by ron1953 on November 3, 2010, at 9:54:40
Do you see those as the only two choices?
That would be as difficult to answer as some of the political poll telephone calls I received lately.
Posted by Dinah on November 3, 2010, at 10:40:38
In reply to Re: A Question for Pro-block Members » ron1953, posted by Dinah on November 3, 2010, at 10:40:00
For *me* to answer, of course.
Posted by Dinah on November 3, 2010, at 11:20:22
In reply to A Question for Pro-block Members, posted by ron1953 on November 3, 2010, at 9:54:40
I really don't understand the opposition to blocks, per se.
If I go to someone's home, or someone's business, I expect that they will have expectations for my behavior in that home or business. If I violate those expectations, I would not be at all surprised if I were asked to leave. If I went to the home of another with the understanding that such expectations existed, I would expect the host to ask those who violate those expectations to leave.
It's not about wanting to change a poster, or about wanting to be rid of a poster. It's about having a set of rules, or expectations, for participating in a forum.
Dr. Bob is very careful about using the words only and not intent when judging whether someone is choosing not to live by the rules he set out for participation. But he also clearly uses a poster's history. Just as he is harder on incivilities in a thread where a warning has already been issued, he considers a block or pbc to be a warning, and is less lenient afterward with infractions. He likely considers that a person's prior history is a good indicator of whether or not they have an intent to comply with his requirements for posting.
Where I differ with him at times is that he doesn't consider intent when he's also considering history. To me, it was clear that Twinleaf came back with the intent to abide by site guidelines, and has tried to express her opinions in such a way as to be true to herself as well as being respectful of Dr. Bob, the guidelines, and her fellow posters. With that in mind, I think Dr. Bob should have engaged more on an explanation of where the limits lie rather than to direct threats of blocking.
My only objection to doubling of block lengths, or lengthy blocks, is that they don't even attempt to correlate with willingness to abide by site guidelines. A year's block isn't enough if a poster has no intent to participate in a positive way and abide by site guidelines when they return. A month is too long a block if a poster indicates through their attitude and their actions a willingness to learn and abide by site guidelines.
I think perhaps Dr. Bob is attempting, through his requests to have people help others avoid being blocked, to highlight the aspect of choice involved in posting. I think that it could be conveyed in a way that would be more effective and better accepted by the community, but I do understand the underlying rationale.
Dr. Bob doesn't block anyone permanently, unlike other sites. Posters are always welcome to post with the sole requirement that they abide by site guidelines. It is the poster's choice whether or not they wish to do so.
(With, again, a wish that he would be more charitable as to a person's current state of mind, as opposed to merely considering history.)
I don't see why that is such a controversial issue. The application perhaps, but I don't see a controversy behind asking people to abide by the expectations of the site, and requesting that they leave if they are unwilling to do so.
Posted by SLS on November 3, 2010, at 11:22:36
In reply to A Question for Pro-block Members, posted by ron1953 on November 3, 2010, at 9:54:40
> I appreciate hearing from youse guys.
>
> Are you "pro-block" because you think that blocks help make a member a "better" member, or because they get rid of members whose posts you don't like?Neither.
- Scott
Posted by ron1953 on November 3, 2010, at 13:10:36
In reply to Re: A Question for Pro-block Members, posted by Dinah on November 3, 2010, at 11:20:22
Dinah said, "If I go to someone's home, or someone's business, I expect that they will have expectations for my behavior in that home or business. If I violate those expectations, I would not be at all surprised if I were asked to leave. If I went to the home of another with the understanding that such expectations existed, I would expect the host to ask those who violate those expectations to leave."
I understand that argument, and it's been stated here on numerous occasions, but I don't think it applies to a supposed mental health support site. As for me, I do not assume others' expectations, which I have found is frought with hazards. Also, I wouldn't hang out with ANYBODY who would be so audacious as to tell another how to behave.
I'll give some background about my feelings regarding blocks: Like many members, I've been a mental health consumer, having spent many an hour (and dollar)in therapy and having taken countless medications, all to very limited "success". Near the tail end of my involvement with professional/drug therapy (circa 2004), I was looking for support during my separation and divorce. I couldn't locate a divorce support group, but I did find a "men's support group". When I spoke to a founding member about joining the group (which, incidentally, had been in existence for 15 years), he made it a point to warn me that the group was very dynamic and could be quite straightforward, even brutally honest. I decided to check it out. Yes, they were straightforward, and yes, they were brutal, but I got more therapeutic value in six months than I had received in years of professional "help". The other members felt the same way about the value of the group. The bonds that were formed in that group were terrific - in fact, one member remains a close friend (I left the area in 2005). The members of the group grew stronger and closer by going THROUGH stuff, not by avoiding it. Nobody ever attempted to censor anybody, and nobody was ever asked to leave. Sometimes it was loud, sometimes it was ugly, sometimes there were tears, and sometimes there were blowouts between 2 members. But there were smiles, and belly laughs, and hugs, and social stuff outside of the group, and there was GROWTH. Most of all, there was love - unconditional love.
Now, fast-forward to Oregon, where I moved to in '05. Missing my east coast group, I sought another men's group here. I found one and it turned out to be extremely bland and superficial, and not very therapeutic. Interestingly, when I was able to stir the guys up and start some REAL conversation about real personal issues (which wasn't very often), they would all enthusiastically comment on what a good meeting it was. Otherwise, the meetings were a waste of time. I was thinking about leaving the group when the following incident occurred: one of the members was recounting something very emotional to him and got a bit loud, as I might expect. However, the member whose house we were in told the talker to quiet down. Keep in mind that the host lived alone, and nobody but the group was there. Here's a guy who's trying to pour out some emotional stuff in a supposed support group, and he's told to quiet down. The look on his face said it all. I stopped attending that group after that.
I think that peer support can be of incredible benefit, but rules, conditions, admonishments, etc. undermine what's possible, creating a "walking on eggs" situation where nobody is really free to open up. Some Babble members use the word "safety" to describe some of the reasons for the civility rules and results, but I was a lot safer in the east coast men's group than here in Babble. I'm not talking about superficial safety as in no cuss words, no arguments; I'm talking about REAL safety where members would (and did) bend over backwards to help another member.
Thus are my experiences and feelings about peer support, and why I think conditional peer support is not only unhelpful, but possibly damaging.
Posted by ron1953 on November 3, 2010, at 13:35:39
In reply to Re: A Question for Pro-block Members, posted by ron1953 on November 3, 2010, at 13:10:36
I thought of the busiest board on Babble - Medication, where in a forum sponsored by a (I assume) licensed and DEA-registered physician, laypeople freely give advice on powerful medications. Doesn't sound safe to me......
Posted by Dinah on November 3, 2010, at 14:08:37
In reply to Re: A Question for Pro-block Members, posted by ron1953 on November 3, 2010, at 13:10:36
It makes sense that you would prefer an environment like the first group. It helped you a lot, and you found it beneficial. Perhaps others wouldn't have found it as beneficial, and would have found the second group more beneficial.
This is *Dr. Bob's* mental health support site. There are other sites that have different rules. No matter the purpose of the site, the host has the ability and responsibility to state the terms under which his guests are allowed to post.
Babble can't be all things to all people. It can't even be the best thing for all people, because different people have different needs.
If you get benefit from posting at Babble under site rules, then it would be worthwhile to you to follow those rules and continue to post. Following the rules at Babble is more or less the cost of admission. If the cost isn't worth it to you, then it's not. It's your choice, and you have the ability to choose the environment that suits your needs.
What you don't have the ability to do, or the power to do, is to change Babble to suit your needs. Babble is what Babble is.
Mind you, I try as much as anyone to influence Dr. Bob. I try to find new ways to present situations to him, so as to change his point of view. But anything beyond that is beyond my power.
There are those who do find the civility guidelines of Babble to their taste. Of course there are other costs of admission at Babble too. Googleability, and for a short time, the buttons to Twitter and Facebook.
Everyone has to determine if they're willing to pay the admission price to post here. Either decision is valid.
But it *is* each poster's decision, not Bob's. Bob's decisions involve setting the rules and conditions. Dr. Bob can't make our choices for us any more than we can make his choices for him.
Posted by ron1953 on November 3, 2010, at 14:33:08
In reply to Re: A Question for Pro-block Members » ron1953, posted by Dinah on November 3, 2010, at 14:08:37
"A foolish consistency is the hobgoblin of little minds, adored by little statesmen and philosophers and divines." - Ralph Waldo Emerson
Posted by Dinah on November 3, 2010, at 14:42:20
In reply to Quote, posted by ron1953 on November 3, 2010, at 14:33:08
You've been fairly consistent in your message about Dr. Bob and Babble, as far as I can recall.
I wouldn't say it indicated that your mind was small.
Although certainly I can find worse comparisons than to statesmen and philosophers.
Posted by ron1953 on November 3, 2010, at 15:00:38
In reply to Re: Quote » ron1953, posted by Dinah on November 3, 2010, at 14:42:20
> You've been fairly consistent in your message about Dr. Bob and Babble, as far as I can recall.
>
> I wouldn't say it indicated that your mind was small.
>
> Although certainly I can find worse comparisons than to statesmen and philosophers.Good point. I believe I'll take it. Bye.
Posted by muffled on November 3, 2010, at 15:27:11
In reply to Re: A Question for Pro-block Members » ron1953, posted by Dinah on November 3, 2010, at 14:08:37
> This is *Dr. Bob's* mental health support site. There are other sites that have different rules. No matter the purpose of the site, the host has the ability and responsibility to state the terms under which his guests are allowed to post.
> What you don't have the ability to do, or the power to do, is to change Babble to suit your needs. Babble is what Babble is.
> There are those who do find the civility guidelines of Babble to their taste. Of course there are other costs of admission at Babble too. Googleability, and the buttons to Twitter and Facebook.
> Everyone has to determine if they're willing to pay the admission price to post here. Either decision is valid.** exactly, which is why I left. It is NOT safe here.
The main prob is, I got settled in here and Bob *seemed* open to change, *seemed* open to considering input from posters so as to make it 'their' site too.
But sadly no.
This is not 'OUR' site as posters, but FULLY and completely BOB's site. He does what HE wishes, irregardless of what long term posters felt.
It was at this point (after MANY attempts to reason w/Bob) that I came to realize this:
Babble is NOT a community.
It is a NOT a democracy.
It is ***BOBS KINGDOM***.
Well I for one want to have some safety and freedom and ability to put my 2 cents worth in and have it *actually* considered as needed.
I feel UTTERLY POWERLESS on this site.
I HAVE NO POWER if things go awry.
NONE.
And I certainly do NOT trust Bobs judgement to be the best for us 'here' at the time, that is NOT the way he thinks. All he seems to care about is *numbers*, not us as individuals. This WAS proven out. He did not care that MANY very capeable long term posters left. He just didn't care.
That doesn't sit well w/me.
And thats why I keep posting here cuz I feel sad when I see others going down the same road as I did. Trusting, getting invested, trusting that my input had validity, etc etc. What a waste of time :(....
So ya, I post to warn others....
And FWIW, feel free to send my post here all around the web.
BE WARNED.
Posted by vwoolf on November 3, 2010, at 16:11:29
In reply to Re: A Question for Pro-block Members » ron1953, posted by Dinah on November 3, 2010, at 14:08:37
>Of course there are other costs of admission at Babble too. Googleability, and for a short time, the buttons to Twitter and Facebook.
Is that true Dinah? Have the buttons really gone? I don't see them on most posts but here and there they still seem to pop up.
I am very grateful to Bob if they have been finally removed. I think it shows a big shift on his part and a real commitment to this site.
Posted by sigismund on November 3, 2010, at 16:19:06
In reply to I'm pro-block, posted by vwoolf on November 3, 2010, at 0:51:25
Me too. Just not the way it is done here.
Posted by Dinah on November 3, 2010, at 16:36:18
In reply to Re: A Question for Pro-block Members, posted by vwoolf on November 3, 2010, at 16:11:29
It's an option now. Posters can choose to opt out of the buttons. The default is to leave them on.
Posted by Dinah on November 3, 2010, at 16:37:47
In reply to The Reality of Babble, posted by muffled on November 3, 2010, at 15:27:11
I would definitely say it is a community. *We* are the community of Babble.
It's not a democracy.
Posted by muffled on November 3, 2010, at 18:04:32
In reply to Re: The Reality of Babble » muffled, posted by Dinah on November 3, 2010, at 16:37:47
> I would definitely say it is a community. *We* are the community of Babble.
>
> It's not a democracy.Yep, the 'community' is: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nYYTLJ8YHi4
Under Bobs thumb.
Posted by ron1953 on November 3, 2010, at 18:41:37
In reply to Under Bobs thumb, posted by muffled on November 3, 2010, at 18:04:32
IMHO, an online community would require more than the handful of active members (except perhaps on the meds board) and the handful of daily posts. It's more like a teeny weeny clique.
P.S. Don't confuse "persistent" with "consistent".
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