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This is not indicative of the true reason /at all/. Sure, it may show some people's opinions on the topic of General Chat, but as Ice and I have already explained this idea would help new members identify the people who are more experienced in posting about books and can possibly offer some useful advice.SFG75 said:Kenny posted(and I have posted twice now) a few statements that give away the true nature of this proposal.
Peder said:I thought the stated purpose had more to do with inane drivel than giving good advice.
Just tryin to keep the scorecard straight,
Peder
Stewart using the term 'those who are here to talk inane drivel' does not change what this idea proposes. If you disregard the rather demeaning words which he used, you will notice that he was perfectly right. It will enable new members to differentiate between those who are here to get down to business and talk about books, and those who are more here to have fun, of whom I have nothing against. The only problem here is choice of words, which has nothing to do with the benefits of this new idea. The idea can't be too "snobbish" nor "elitist" as a mod has given it her thumbs up.SFG75 said:Very true, the "inane" comment wasn't from subsequent posters, it was posted by the person who created the entire thread in the first place. That in and of itself makes it a serious argument to consider, it isn't something that you just sweep away. Why is it that they are not clarifying their views?, and why is it that others are speaking out as to what the ultimate goal is in light of the embarrassing quotes that state otherwise?
Again, this is no more seperating the masses than the current post count isPeder said:I have never seen any good come from separating people into sheep and goats.
Stewart using the term 'those who are here to talk inane drivel' does not change what this idea proposes.
It will enable new members to differentiate between those who are here to get down to business and talk about books, and those who are more here to have fun, of whom I have nothing against.
Ah, yes, his evil "plan", because you know right from day one he has been plotting against those people who post frequently in General Chat. You're on to him, by golly. It was /never/ about suggesting something which might benefit the forum, just about his life's conquestSFG75 said:Nothing is ever implemented without intention. It's obviously what his plan intends for those whom he deems as being "inane" in nature.
I don't think that he has been active /at all/ today has he? I'm pretty sure that he wouldn't just leave things be in this thread if he saw some of the comments.If he thought his post wasn't well-worded, he would've said so by now. He hasn't, which shows what his true views are on this, no matter who tries to come behind him and clean things up a bit.
But why not make it easier on the newbies? Some people may also think that learning to use quote tags isn't that hard, but we have had a new member here recently who needed help in that area.Usually before joining, members do some lurking-I know that as it's what I did before joining. It isn't that hard to see who starts threads and who posts often in book related threads.
MonkeyCatcher said:Again, this is no more seperating the masses than the current post count is
I have no idea what kind of spread this PMing privately concept has here. But if it is a concern of the Mods I figure it's a point worthy of notice.
Peder,Peder said:if my posting profile turns out to be not what is desired -- never yet started a thread for example, not much serious book discussion either, and no non-fiction that I know of -- then I'll leave without having to be pushed. This is far from life or death for me.
/blushing very severely/Kenny Shovel said:Peder,
[words deleted, too embarrasing to be repeated - crp]
KS
Stewart said:Why, on book forums, is everyone's first line of defense when they disagree with something to call the other party elitist?
Please re-read my post. When did I ever say it happened here? I wrote:SFG75 said:Still no example of someone being led astray by PM'ing a member with a high post count??
Thus I am quite clearly talking about another forum. The point I was making was that people do seek advice from members with high post counts but that high counts were not an indication of quality or of knowlege on a certain subject.Post count is not an indication of quality. I post on a forum where there are over 7500 members and a large number of those are active. Now I can count on one hand the people whose opinions I respect. We have several users who spam the boards for want of a different word, giving out meaningless advice (I am not talking frivilous advice here - I am talking about advice that could be potentially harmful). Experienced posters know to ignore them, but new users do not - they see a high post count, assume the person knows what they are talking about and PM them for advice.