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Culture War Roundup for the week of November 13, 2023

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This started a huge discussion though? I really disagree with this policy (as I have said many times). This person posted a useful, relevant, on topic link and it has generated a lot of discussion.

This is not a problem, and certainly is not an example of the problem you’re trying to solve with the length requirements.

I will add in my weight and also say I disagree with this policy. The link was good and sparked discussion. We've been losing comments since we moved and it's not even some iron law of moving offsite or anything, rdrama is just as lively as it was when it left reddit.

It seemed to generate plenty of speculation, not sure I'd say it generated lots of "discussion" aside from some people digging up the past allegations of abuse from his sister.

@greyenlightenment had a better post that could have been a top level post.

This is not a problem, and certainly is not an example of the problem you’re trying to solve with the length requirements.

There are not length requirements. A certain length of post is a necessary but not sufficient pass of the threshold.

My recommended structure for a top level post:

  1. Context (minimal needed, use it as a jumping off point).
  2. Observations about the context that build up to the third thing.
  3. Your viewpoint. Could be spicy, could be not. Should be built off of the observations. It will hopefully be interesting to the other people as a thing they can challenge and discuss.

How is this not literally the exact format this post followed? They posted a link, the context, (the quoted section), and then they speculated, and then also offered their viewpoint or “take” after it.

It was concise, but that is the sign of competent writing.

I am missing a viewpoint from the original post. It seems to be just context, and the smallest of observations. So small of an observation that it could be mistaken for context in a more substantial post.