Topic: Drafting a Politics Forum Constitution? Thoughts?
I want to make a proposition to the Politics community as a whole.
It is my opinion that the art of respectful, open debate within the IC Politics community has been largely lost. In its place, we have established a world where there are no limits to what people say, and no rules as to how they govern themselves. The Politics community has generally become a lawless bastion of meaningless discussion on the IC forums.
What's to blame? I would cite a couple issues causing such conflict.
*************The rules of the forums*************
Currently, the Politics forum is governed by the same rules and doctrines which govern the rest of the Imperial Conflict forums, with the exception that moderators will be more lenient toward content that may be considered offensive in nature. Now, I wouldn't dispute the necessity of any of these rules. In addition, I would applaud that Politics has been given the offensiveness exemption, as it ensures a greater amount of political discourse on the forums.
That being said, this created a misinterpretation on the parts of many Politics posters. Many of us took this to mean that these were the only rules of Politics, and the only things we should consider when making our posts. As a result, what could be a constructive forum for discussions of political issues has degraded to the point where only a few people make constructive posts, making efforts to actively facilitate discussions.
While I do not propose creating rules for what we can or cannot say, I do propose a different change: a set of guidelines on the ways in which we say what we say. As a simple example, assume a person desired to say that they support abortion. A good way of saying this would be "I support abortion rights." An ineffective way to convey the same idea would be "I hate abortion opponents."
*************Mod/Politics Relations**************
First, the concept of "rules" in the Politics community has slowly drifted away. When the moderators drafted the rules for the forums, they created exceptions for this forum, believing that limiting certain types of speech would hurt debate as a whole. While this was a noble effort, I believe there resulted a general sense among the community that the exceptions to rules applied to a much broader scope of discourses than was originally intended.
Second, the current enforcers of the rules are generally less inclined to enforce those rules which are broken in the Politics community. As members of this community, most of us generally read, and understand, the conversations occurring within these forums. However, I ask that you look at most of the moderators. Until recently, there was a distinct lack of a politics
forum poster in the moderator or forum moderator list.
This is empirically problematic for two reasons:
A: Moderators who do not frequent the politics forum generally try to avoid reading the forum, and thus aren't able to catch those who do violate the rules. More often, they rely on members of the Politics community finding rule violators for them. While this can be effective, it requires that those in the Politics forum believe that rule violations will be enforced, creating a regressive cycle.
B: Moderators from outside Politics who enforce rules in Politics are often cited as not understanding what they are doing due to their status as an outsider.
Now before anyone asks, I do not intend this to be an attack upon the moderators. I applaud the recent placement of Arnor back into the forum moderator community, and I fully recognize that they are doing what they can when given the tools to do so. They've consistently been extremely cooperative with me on a number of occasions, including dealing with issues on the Politics forum of varying severity. Rather, my claim is that the relationship between the moderators and the Politics community has been stained, due to a long-standing belief that the moderators don't enforce the rules.
Although Arnor's placement as a forum moderator will probably help mend the situation, it is only one step in a reevaluation of the relationship between the moderators and the Politics community. Much of the problems I cite are a result of long-lasting policies, ingrained in a long history of this forum. Thus, I believe a dramatic reinvention of the relationship needs to take place, through recognition by the community of two principles:
1: That we, as a community, have the power to influence and change the way people act in the forums, even without moderator intervention. We just need to be willing to lay down the ground rules, and step forward to seize that change.
2: The moderators are willing to cooperate with the Politics community, and want to eliminate the problematic discourse that exists within this community. However, they lack the most important tool in moderating the forums: information. We, as members of the community, can actively engage with the moderators in a way that both assists their efforts in securing our forums while allowing those in the Politics community to have some autonomy.
**************Some Background**************
First, let me start with a small personal message. Now, I've seen a few people in these forums tell about themselves, especially in Politics. Some of you have said you are physicists, and thus we should defer to you on science-related issues. Others have used other appeals to authority, revealing who they are in real life in order to give themselves credentials.
I'm not a physicist. I'm not a politician (yet). I'm not a doctor or a lawyer. I can't claim any sort of expertise in most political issues.
That being said, I do have one expertise: communication. I have spent 7 years either training, judging, or learning about the debate process. Through this, I have seen debate as it should be: a place where people of different backgrounds meet, exchange views with one another, and investigate each other's views in order to better understand the world around us. This only works when both parties come to the table with a few basic assumptions regarding their forum for discussion.
However, when it does work, it is infinitely more effective than debate under the system you and I are used to. People can discuss ideas... any ideas... without any worry of offending others once the framework for that debate has been established. I've watched people actively debate on pretty much any side of any issue, no matter how emotionally charged, and logically analyze the issue without people getting emotionally charged themselves. Issues like abortion or racism could be analyzed in depth.
We as a community tend to give some level of respect to people within their fields of study. Many of us, including myself, deferred to Lateralis and other people with science backgrounds on issues of global warming or other sciences.
I don't ask you to defer to me. In fact, I want your ideas to complete what I am starting. The only reason I say this is to assure you of one thing: what I propose is not new. In my own life, I've seen standards of ethics placed in communities of discourse, to great effect. Even in our own forums, when the Roleplay forum was still active, the RPA established a set of rules to guide effective storytelling, drastically increasing the effectiveness of their community (granted, Roleplay is dead now, but that's only because the members of RPA who fueled the forum have begun to leave IC).
**********The Proposal****************
If we want to retake the Politics forum from spammers, trolls, and flaming, I ask that you endorse my proposal to draft a Politics Forum Constitution. This Constitution would outline a number of things:
1: A recognition that we, as a community, desire certain goals when we participate in political discussion, including the accumulation of knowledge, self-expression, and freedom from a hostile environment.
2: A recognition that in order to achieve the stated goals, certain forms of expression, when they could be otherwise expressed in less damaging matters, are needlessly destructive to these goals.
3: A recognition that we, as a community, have the power through collective, organized action to limit these offenses, even when they are outside the scope of the moderator rules, to achieve the goals we desire.
4: An outline of what those powers are which we inherently possess, and a promise to utilize those powers against various offenders of the rules we establish as a community.
Remember, this is in no way meant to limit the ideas which can be expressed. This only limits the way in which we express them. Banning people from blowing up SUVs does not infringe upon the rights of the Environmental Liberation Front to speak out about environmental pollution because they could have sent the same message through nonviolent means. In just the same way, we need to analyze the different ways in which we convey the messages we want to convey, and distinguish the constructive and destructive methods, encouraging the former while punishing the latter.
************Your role*****************
I have taken much thought over the months in determining what should be on such a document, and how we should go about producing it. I am asking for a couple things:
1: Your approval. For a week, I will leave this open for both discussion and for voting. I ask that you vote on whether or not to approve my drafting of a Politics Community constitution. Remember, the first vote is not a question of what ideas would be in such a constitution. Rather, I am only asking that you ask yourself whether the writing and endorsing of a collective statement by the Politics community would be a good idea.
2: Your input. You have probably already noticed my Metadebating thread. That was meant for one purpose, and one purpose only: to determine what you, as a community, would like to see in this forum. In the future, I will be creating more threads in my Metadebating series, discussing the issues of discourse which I planned on placing within the Politics Constitution. Please be sure to read and comment on those posts. Those will be the best way to have your ideas heard regarding the specific issues within the final document.
3: Your endorsement. Assuming a significant approval has been given, and a final draft of the Constitution produced, it will still need signers. By signing the document, you are agreeing to the standards of ethics established under the document, and are agreeing to defend the Politics community against the violations others commit against the ethics of the document.
I want to note one more thing, just to be clear about what this document is: This is not binding upon those who do not sign the document. That being said, those who do endorse this document are acknowledging a statement of what they expect to see in the Politics community, and are acknowledging that they are willing to take action against those within the community. Just as Flint exercised his right to ignore people who insulted him, this is an expression that those who sign this document have a right to enforce their strength within the forum against those who violate their expectations for civil discourse.
In case you are wondering, there will be moderator involvement in this process. I do not want to overstep the boundaries of the community, conflicting with the powers of the moderators. Rather, the creation of this Constitution will allow our community to be more politically autonomous, cooperating with the moderators to shape the Politics community while reducing the need for outside moderator intervention.
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