Respect other users of Backstage@EVE-Inspiracy.com. Do not make attacks, either in the forums or through Private Messages. Challenging ideas is fine, but do not attack individuals or groups. Racist, ageist, sexist, homophobic (including the use of "gay" as a pejorative) and other slurs are prohibited. Ad hominem attacks are prohibited. Challenging ideas is fine, but do not attack individuals or groups.
Above is a rule that is against namecalling. Now this alone is grounds in my mind to deal with that post.
There is more though:
FAQ - Polite Posting - Our Culture
Culture:
This forum is an OOC place for EVE roleplayers to discuss the game and roleplaying. It is a place to exchange ideas and share information. It is a place for positive, polite debate. It is a place for discussion, not arguments.
Calling people names is not polite. Neither is it positive.
Those are the things I looked at when I decided to mod the post. Now I posted that Isis is welcome to post again without the offending bit.
I'm rather certain Isis could without detracting from the message the post tries to convey.
Personal stories has nothing to do with the issue. Nor has any of my many ingame mistakes, or anyone elses for that matter.
I'm certain we can reference such things without calling those that makes such mistakes various names.
There are no "We" in this. I decided to mod this and I don't care of someones in or out of game affiliations. For me there's one thing: Is this post following the rules and spirit or not?
To ascribe me any other motivation is insulting.
Well, I didn't intend to start a multi-page thread, but I suppose I did.
Look, goons get a lot of hate. Maybe it is justified, maybe it isn't. But since I've been noting that Isis has received much flak for essentially being a goon from some quarters, it's not unreasonable to ask whether a mod's motivation is as clean and pure as might be hoped. That sort of thing is why we have a moderation discussion forum.
To be insulted by that means you should not be a mod. This forum gives a lot of power to the mods, so it also gives an area to question them. I didn't call you names, I asked if we are modding people because of their associations in-game.
This is perhaps not as inflammatory as it looks. The goons are known to be major trolls, so one might suspect trolling or insult more regularly. Not to make a moral comparison, but it's similar to how you might not want a shoplifter in your store, even if they haven't stolen from you. So, we might hate goons because they tend to be trolls. Or we might decide that everyone has a right to a blank slate here.
As to the rules, the rules prohibit ad hominem attacks, and calling groups or individuals names. But the only group Isis referenced was a possible group defined by the named behavior. This isn't an actual, concrete entity, it is no one in particular. It's like me saying "people who cross the street without looking are idiots". This isn't calling anyone or any group an idiot, it's directly defining a behavior as stupid.
When Isis states that "Are some scrublords going to get in a carrier they have no business flying? Of course...", that's not calling a person or group a name. It's indirectly referencing the stupidity of an action in the context of the probability of that action. It's similar to "are some idiots going to cross the street without looking? Of course."
But this isn't calling people - as in, you, me, or the Chicago Bulls - names. It's simply referring to an action as a stupid one. I've seen other people do it here, I've seen mods do it here. Hell, in this post:
http://backstage.eve-inspiracy.com/index.php?topic=3910.msg62722#msg62722...Morwen states that Bloodbird - very specifically, as opposed the the entirely abstract nature of Isis's post - can't act like an adult, and needs to be hand-held. That got an "ok, whatever" from everyone, including me. And yeah, mods can do whatever they want. But there's a definite disconnect between that being "sure, fine" and this being "Oh my god, Isis said the other,
other, "S" word." Since when is scrublord a "slur", anyway? Do we really want to incorporate every negative term into that infamous category? Is it really as bad as, say, a racial or homophobic slur?
And just to reiterate, getting offended that someone would question your motivation in the location established for that purpose is not entirely understandable. If you don't like anyone talking back, then don't have a forum for talking back.