I saw this post and learned about gentrification; now I wonder if there are any plans to deal with potential gentrification of Lemmygrad.
I saw this post and learned about gentrification; now I wonder if there are any plans to deal with potential gentrification of Lemmygrad.
Was a bit of a weird article, but to the point, pretty much every leftist “big tent” subreddit becomes watered down very quickly, its revolutionary edge blunted by socdems, reformists, pacifists, and western supremacists.
It’s actually incredibly easy to prevent this though: have active moderators, that remove and ban these types, and don’t value growth over marxist principles. After a while, moderation becomes less vital as the userbase downvotes the reformist posts before they see the light of day.
r/antiwork never had a revolutionary message or goal in the first place, and to say it became “watered down” wouldn’t be correct. Also if the mods didn’t like the infiltration of “casuals”, as the article calls them, that’s no one’s fault but the mods. If you run a restaurant and let people smoke in the no smoking section, its your fault.
Isn’t the main trope of /r/antiwork “my job sucks so I quit my job and got hired someplace else at 5x the wage where the boss is really cool”? Seems like a very absurd place at time.
Yeah, it had roots in the anarchist “abolish all work!” movement, but their anarchist principles won’t let them moderate tons of these “I just got a new job and life is good now!” posts.